Letter from Hannah, Age 9

May 2nd is Seattle Foundation’s GiveBIG one-day charitable giving event and we wanted to let you know that Arts Corps is over-the-moon about any gifts of any size.  Below is a letter that accompanied a donation by 9-year-old Hannah who collected funds for Arts Corps on her 9th birthday in lieu of receiving gifts for herself.  We were deeply moved and asked Hannah and her mom for permission to share our gratitude and her sentiments below.

If you feel inspired to give on May 2nd, please do so via the link to GiveBIG to Arts Corps. Your gift will be stretched further thanks to The Seattle Foundation and GiveBIG sponsors, who will match a share of every contribution.

 

 

 

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Arts Corps is not just about arts education.

The following is the address Arts Corps’ Executive Director Elizabeth Whitford delivered at the 2012 La Festa del Arte on March 29th at the Triple Door in Seattle.  

Arts Corps is not just about arts education. As it turns out, our work increasingly sits at the heart of a major tension in education—namely, a profound disagreement about what it will take to achieve equity in education.

 

Today we hear a lot of talk about the achievement gap. The achievement gap generally refers to the lower academic performance of youth of color and youth from low-income communities as compared to their middle income and white peers on standardized high stakes tests in math and reading. This disparity is real, and most definitely points to a grave concern about equity in education.

 

It is ironic, however, that the policy efforts that seek to address this achievement gap with a targeted focus on test score improvement, such as those that have dominated education reform efforts for the past 40 years and encoded in federal and local education policy, often manage to increase inequality in education.

 

Let me give you an example. I have a five-year-old son who is excited, and a little nervous, to start Kindergarten next year.

 

The school to which he is currently assigned–our neighborhood school–is situated in a low-income neighborhood in Southeast Seattle. The vast majority of students at this school come from low-income families, and they represent a diverse mix of racial, ethnic and cultural backgrounds. His school’s test scores are low, and falling, especially for those students from low-income families.

 

I was the only parent to show up to the Kindergarten tour this month. I was toured around the school by a generous and enthusiastic volunteer coordinator. It was a nice building, the students seemed quiet and well-behaved, the teachers kind, and the principal passionate about improving the school. I learned that the kids have only one 20-minute recess after lunch. They have no music or arts teacher. They have no science or environmental educator. Then I went to visit the after-school program. I asked them if it was play-based after school. “No,” they said. “We align with the curriculum. Kids do one hour of homework time after school, and then we do math and literacy activities. They get a short break to go outside.” I imagine my squiggly, enthusiastic, high-energy boy in this school. I imagine him focused on math and reading all day, 9-5 pm, with two short breaks for unstructured play.

 

So I picked up the phone and called my friend whose child attends a public school in a middle-income neighborhood of lower Magnolia. At this school, every student gets music class two times each week, 90 minutes of physical education per week and three recesses per day. Their PTA raises money to support visual arts and dance residencies and enriching after school programs. Despite this competition for classroom time, their low-income students’ test scores in math and reading increased far above the district average last year.

 

The situation at my neighborhood school is entirely related to the policies seeking to address the achievement gap. Through Title 1, our school actually has more per student funding than my friend’s school—but that funding is entirely constrained to strategies seen as most directly related to improving student performance on math and reading test scores. The after school program is likewise informed by similar funding pressures.

 

I think this example begs a new way of looking at this problem. We need to reframe the conversation to be focused on the opportunity gap rather than on the achievement gap. Because if all kids had equal opportunity in education, if all kids had a more equal education—with the same access to the rich learning environments we offer kids in higher income neighborhoods—we would have more equal outcomes for kids.

 

This is the work we are engaged in, and that the impact we are demonstrating.

 

National research has shown that low-income students at arts-rich high schools are more likely to graduate from high school and persist through college. Our own research has shown that students highly involved in Arts Corps come to school more often and perform better on the state math and reading tests.

 

This happens because our classes increase students’ critical and creative thinking skills, their persistence, and their discovery of their capacity to learn and grow their ability through effort. And it is these learning behaviors and 21st Century skills related to everyday performance that turn out to be more predictive of academic and life success than the high-stakes performance measured in our state’s standardized tests.

 

And we’re pushing further. Last year I stood here before you all and told you that we were coming through this economic downturn leaner but stronger and ambitiously moving forward. And we have done just that, launching new initiatives and drawing new investments that have brought our budget to $1 Million for the first time in our history.

 

We are partnering with The Road Map Project—a region-wide collective impact effort focused on increasing the number of students ‘on track’ to graduate from college or earn a career credential—to develop common ways of measuring growth in these key learning behaviors and 21st C skills—broadening the conversation beyond test scores. And we have been contracted by Seattle Public Schools to develop tools that district arts teachers can use to assess for student learning in these same key developmental areas.

 

Finally, I’m excited to announce today that next school year we launch the Creative Schools Initiative. Through this exciting initiative made possible by visionary gifts from the Paul G. Allen Foundation, J.P. Morgan Chase and Seattle’s own Dave Matthews, Arts Corps will be demonstrating a model for creativity-infused middle schools—with resident teaching artists teaching after school and working alongside language arts and social studies teachers in the school day to lead arts-based projects that develop students’ creative capacities and learning in both subject areas. We will carefully evaluate the impacts of this program on students’ creative capacities, learning behaviors and academic performance and share it as a model for creativity-rich schools.

 

None of these initiatives would have been possible without your support, and we are counting on you tonight to help us move them forward. We’ve been thrust into a clear leadership role on this vital educational issue. We’re ready, and because of you all tonight, we will have the capacity. Thank you for investing in our leadership.

 

 

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A call to action from an Arts Corps’ parent…

This piece was written by Eba Yao-Hilario, mother of an Arts Corps’ student and a former board member in response to the issue covered in an article by Jen Graves in the Stranger’s SLOG. This piece is republished with the permission of the author.  

 

Social Responsibility and Us

ArtsCorps is a nonprofit youth organization that practices social responsibility. It needs our strength and support.

We can refuse to believe that the underlying problems of children in schools, along with society at large, are actually based on social and economic hazards. Children of all income families are being pushed to excel in grades but go home to an empty or violent home with no one else to talk to. What good are high grades or great paying jobs when there is no one to share them with?  What is the purpose of these if we have no joy? Where is the motivation to study when nurture and compassion have been replaced by demands and adult greediness? Have we made the competitive industrialization of society more important than the young human?

The basic needs of the human being, if neglected, can lead to much higher costs to society’s pockets.

If we do not nurture our youth with compassion, then we are sending them signals of shackles. There are not that many programs that could boast of providing after-school programs of interest to the youth or a place where they feel welcomed, where they have someone to talk to or share their dreams with. Places of joy are not easy to find. We should rejoice when we do find them. We should share in the joy that some children can get respite from the cares and demands of the world, from the bad or good grades, from the boredom, from the neglect, and from the loneliness.

An established, highly effective youth program, ArtsCorps, has been filling a need in society. Now, ArtsCorps needs our voices heard.  ArtsCorps should matter to us, as educated, productive, and busy people who know that investing in the youth now will pay off, rather than be a burden, in the future. They can be healthy, well balanced, and have great relationships. And become entrepreneurs.

Please, support ArtsCorps in continuing its valuable programs.

Eba Yao-Hilario

Mother of ArtsCorps student

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2012 La Festa del Arte Trailer

Music Natural Alucinação © Show Brazil Records, opening photo © Susie Fitzhugh, show photos by Scott Wellsdandt, end photo by Joshua Trujillo Photography

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When my entire world opened up… by Kathy Hsieh

This piece was written by Kathy Hsieh in response to an article by Jen Graves in the Stranger’s SLOG and is republished with the permission of the author.  

I’m saddened and angered at such short-sighted thinking from the Office for Education. As a person of color who grew up in Seattle and received all of my education through the Seattle Public Schools, it was the arts that had the most significant impact on my life. Period. School was okay for me. I never really looked forward to it. I got good grades. But it was just something I was expected to do. I had always excelled in math and I loved to read on my own, but that had nothing to do with anything I was getting from school. It wasn’t until 7th grade when I had the opportunity to take an arts class that suddenly I looked forward to going to school each day. And that was huge – actually wanting to attend school each day. The arts classes actually made me excited about my science classes. In biology, when we looked through the microscope, we had to draw what we saw and my Science teacher marveled at the detail of my scientific drawings.

Kathy Hsieh, far left, pictured with Masumi Hayashi-Smith and Katie Tupper in ReAct's The Joy Luck Club. Photo by Rick Wong

When I got to high school however, imagine my disappointment when I realized there was no visual arts offering in the entire curriculum. Fortunately my 9th grade honors language arts teacher announced auditions for an after-school play. Since I had no other arts opportunity available, I auditioned and got a part. And that’s when my entire world opened up. I loved theatre. And it was theatre that finally made me passionate about school. Suddenly history came alive for me as I sought out books and opportunities to read and research more about the historic time periods of the plays we were doing. Having always been painfully shy, I gained immense confidence in doing public presentations which helped me in class debates. Our school didn’t have a budget for theatre, so those of us acting in the shows had to learn how to creatively get costumes and props and sets. I remember we needed a tree for one show and two of us went around our neighborhood and offered to prune people’s trees after school for next to nothing. We were able to fashion a tree for the set from the branches we had pruned and had some money to buy props with. For costumes, we went to a local vintage shop and offered to give them free ad space in our program in exchange for loaning us costumes. All of these ideas we came up with on our own – it was some of the best business training I’ve ever had.

School, which had always been so-so, was now exciting. I was finally using my creativity and imagination. I now had a desire to read more, research more, study more because all of it really helped me be a better theatre artist. I ended up getting a 4.0 GPA, with all honors classes, being my high school valedictorian, a Hugh O’Brien Youth Leader, a Washington Scholar, a National Merit Scholar and won full scholarships to attend college. And I know for a fact that none of that would have been possible if I had not had the opportunity to participate in the after school theatre program at my high school.

So can you statistically measure whether the arts had a direct impact on my test scores? Probably. But what I value the most, is that even though my Seattle Public School education had such limited arts opportunities, the two I was exposed to inspired me to want to learn, helped me develop self-confidence, and engaged me with others in such a dynamic way that I was finally able to grow out of my shyness. But maybe the Office for Education doesn’t care about those things and only wants programs that teach students how to take tests and if students score well, what does it matter if anything that might inspire, develop and engage them to be holistic, happy and fulfilled human beings are cut completely from their education?

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If You Want Your Outcome, You’re Looking At It

Testimonial from Arts Corps Alumni & current teaching artist at March 13th Mayor’s Town Hall about why Arts Education is vital.

Read more about how this issue is unfolding locally at following links:

https://slog.thestranger.com/slog/archives/2012/03/13/is-this-what-we-voted-for-arts-organizations-deemed-unqualified-for-education-levy-money-theyve-been-getting-for-years-while-mayor-hosts

https://westseattleblog.com/2012/03/happening-now-mayors-town-hall-youngstown

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