It is imperative that all students have access to an equitable delivery of arts education that includes dance, media arts, music, theatre, and visual arts that supports their education and well-being, taught by certified arts educators in partnership with community arts providers.

 

As teaching and learning continue to evolve, our commitment to provide rich and varied educational experiences remain strong.  The arts provide connections to a student's family, community, and to understanding our society. The arts play an important role in the lives of all students, including the traditionally underrepresented, those with special needs, and from low-income families. Here’s why:

Arts Education is key to unlocking
potential in our students.

Students prepare for career, college, and new opportunities through the arts. Self-awareness, self-efficacy, self-management and perseverance, social awareness and relationship skills are central to any arts education activity, no matter the age and ability of the student or the environment in which the learning takes place. The arts, with their strong emphasis on team-building and self-reflection, are supremely suited to ignite  and strengthen students’ interest in learning through collaboration,  while simultaneously  fostering creativity, critical thinking, and communication skills. The arts help students learn how to design and build their own lives both now and into an ever-changing future.

 Arts Education nurtures the creation of a welcoming school environment where students can express themselves in a safe and positive way.

Students and adults come together through the arts to create a healthy and inclusive school community. The arts, through a rich partnership among certified arts educators, school leaders, parents, and community arts providers, play a valuable role in helping students and their families build and sustain community and cultural connections.

Arts Education is part of a well-rounded education for all students as understood and supported by federal and state policymakers.


Student learning in the arts is recognized in federal and state policy. As defined in ESSA, “music and the arts” are part of a well-rounded education.  Every state in the nation recognizes the importance of the arts as reflected in rigorous PreK-12 state arts standards. Forty-six states require an arts credit to receive a high school diploma, and 43 states have instructional requirements in the arts for elementary and secondary schools. As noted in Arts Education for America’s Students:  A Shared Endeavor: “An education without the arts is inadequate.”

 The healing and unifying power of the arts became increasingly evident during the pandemic. We have seen and heard it play out through works of art on sidewalks, shared musical moments from porches, in plays and dance performances, and every other imaginable iteration of art making. As states and schools continue to work through post-pandemic challenges, arts education must remain central to a well-rounded education, taught by well-resourced arts educators, and fully funded to support the well-being of all students and the entire school community.

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 ENDORSEMENTS

 

Alabama Art Education Association, Statewide

Alabama Artistic Literacy Consortium, Montgomery, Statewide

Alabama Arts Alliance, Montgomery, Statewide

Alabama Conference of Theatre, Statewide

Alabama Contemporary Art Center, Mobile

Alabama Dance Educator Association, Statewide

Alabama Dance Theatre, Montgomery

Alabama Institute for Education in the Arts, Statewide

Arts Council of Thomasville

Alabama School of Fine Arts, Birmingham

Alabama School of Fine Arts, School of Math & Science, Birmingham

Bib & Tucker Sew-Op, Birmingham

Crossville Middle School

DRUM, The Program, Inc., Montevallo

Eastern Shore Art Center, Fairhope

Eastern Shore Art Association, Inc., Fairhope

Gadsden Cultural Arts Foundation, Gadsden

Greater Birmingham Arts Education Collaborative, Birmingham

Hamilton Middle School, Hamilton

Mobile Symphony Orchestra, Mobile

Phillips High School, Bear Creek

Tuscaloosa City Schools, Tuscaloosa

University of Alabama Department of Art & Art History, Tuscaloosa AL

Vulcan Park & Museum, Birmingham

 

Angela Andrews, Visual Arts Teacher, Tuscaloosa

Pamela Cevallos Amores, Assistant Professor, Department of Art and Art History, Mobile

Hungsin Chin, Chair Math & Science, Alabama School of Fine Arts, Birmingham

Dr. Brian Cocke, Festival Director, Alabama Conference of Theatre

Brien Engel, Owner/Arts Provider, Glass Harp Music/ Pine Lake, GA

Randy Foster, Executive Director, Alabama Institute for Education in the Arts, Montgomery

Cynthia Harper, Executive Director, Alabama Conference of Theatre

Benja Jackson, Administrator, Marion County Schools

Eric Marable, Jr., Program Coordinator, Greater Birmingham Arts Education Collaborative

Jennifer McCombs, Counselor, Alabama School of Fine Arts, Birmingham

Suzie Newton, Visual Arts Teacher, Crossville High School, Crossville

Angel Poer, Educator, Birmingham

Brittany Price, Teacher, Alabama School of Fine Arts

Ricky Trione, Fairhope

Reanna Watson, Academy Director, Eastern Shore Art Center Fairhope

Bryant Whelan, Executive Director, Eastern Shore Art Association, Inc.