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Ten Lessons the Arts Teach
- [1] The arts teach
children to make good judgments about qualitative
relationships. Unlike much of the curriculum in which
correct answers and rules prevail, in the arts, it is
judgment rather than rules that prevail.
- [2] The arts teach
children that problems can have more than one solution and
that questions can have more than one answer.
- [3] The arts celebrate
multiple perspectives. One of their large lessons is that
there are many ways to see and interpret the world.
- [4] The arts teach
children that in complex forms of problem-solving purposes
are seldom fixed, but change with circumstance and
opportunity.
- Learning in the arts requires the ability and
willingness to surrender to the unanticipated possibilities
of the work as it unfolds.
- [5] The arts make vivid
the fact that words do not, in their literal form or number,
exhaust what we can know. The limits of our language do not
define the limits of our cognition. The arts teach
students that small differences can have large effects.
- [6] The arts traffic in
subtleties.
- [7] The arts teach
students to think through and within a material. All art
forms employ some means through which images become real.
- [8] The arts help
children learn to say what cannot be said. When children are
invited to disclose what a work of art helps them feel, they
must reach into their poetic capacities to find the words
that will do the job.
- [9] The arts enable us
to have experience we can have from no other source and
through such experience to discover the range and variety of
what we are capable of feeling.
- [10] The arts' position
in the school curriculum symbolizes to the young what adults
believe is important.
- Elliott Eisner,
in Beyond Creating: The Place for Art in America's Schools.
Getty Center for Education in the Arts. 1985 p. 69.
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