columbus county schools arts education programs

23
Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Upload: kjones9999

Post on 04-Feb-2015

986 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

DESCRIPTION

 

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Columbus County Schools

Arts

Education

Programs

Page 2: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Columbus County Schools

• Three traditional high schools, one early college

• Eight middle schools (including three K-8 schools)

• Nine elementary schools (including three K-8 schools)

Page 3: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Columbus County Schools

• 6800 students, 19 schools• 460 teachers, no locally funded

positions• 3rd largest county (greatest distance

between two schools is 46 miles)• 96th in overall wealth• 90% Free and reduced• 51% W, 31% B, 11% H, 7 %AI

Page 4: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Arts Education Requirement

• 1992- When two attendance areas merged five high schools into two consolidated high schools, the arts graduation requirement was implemented by request of the arts educators and the support of the school board. The requirement was also implemented at the third high school, which had consolidated in 1965.

Page 5: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Arts Education Requirement

Vocal Music

Dance

Instrumental Music

Theatre

Visual Arts

Are offered at each high school to fulfill the requirement.

Page 6: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Arts Education Personnel

Each high school has 4 Arts Education teachers:

1 Dance/Theatre

1 Instrumental Music

1 Vocal Music

1 Visual Arts

These are all paid with state funds, based on ADM.

Page 7: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Middle Grades

Each 6-8 (or K-8) school offers Vocal Music, Instrumental Music, and Visual Arts daily. Each middle grades arts education teacher spends ½ day at two schools.

A child entering 6th grade can study Chorus, Band or Art everyday until they graduate high school.

Page 8: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

K-5

Art and Music are offered for 6 or 12 week periods. Two General Music and two Visual Arts teachers serve CCS’ nine K-5 schools.

Smaller schools (avg size 350 K-5 students), make daily arts classes challenging.

Page 9: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Itinerant Teachers

Board policies recognize the challenges of itinerant teaching and helps clarify realistic responsibilities for itinerant teachers.

Page 10: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Instructional Supplies

Each arts program is allocated funds from state instructional supply funds; Visual Arts and Instrumental Music receive proportionately higher amounts.

Page 11: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Additional funds are provided by:

• A $20 fee paid by each student per 9-12 arts education class

• A $5 fee paid per 6-8 arts class

Schools make every effort to collect fees, but students are never prevented from participation because of lack of payment.

Page 12: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Challenges (9-12)

• Class size - An arts requirement means larger class sizes and fewer advanced courses • Levels - Beginning students cannot be

mixed with advanced• Scheduling - has to be carefully done to

“load balance” arts teachers (ensure that each period has multiple level I arts

courses offered)

Page 13: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Challenges (9-12)• Moving all students through requirementASAP- seniors should not be taking level I arts credit • Vocal I, Instrumental I, Dance I, Theatre I, Visual Arts I ONLY should fill the requirement • Specialty classes (pottery, jazz band etc) should have I level classes as prerequisites

Page 14: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Public SupportThe truly important work happens in the classroom, but what the public sees is the basis for their support.

Page 15: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Public SupportColumbus County Schools hosts a student arts festival involving 1000 students, 6 performances, 700 pieces of artwork.

This draws 2000 audience members annually, and demonstrates the rigor and importance of arts education. This is covered extensively in the local print and broadcast media.

Page 16: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Public SupportAll arts teachers must make an effort to create performance/display opportunities. Public perception of the arts programs are formulated from these performances and exhibitions, and public visibility can help build political capital with stakeholders.

Page 17: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Arts Coordinator/SupportHaving an advocate and an organizer at the central office level is crucial. Many teacher initiatives have different implications for arts teachers, and someone needs to be sitting at the table to ensure that the specialized needs of arts programs are known. As programs grow (as they will under a requirement scenario) centralized organization is a must.

Page 18: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Sir Ken Robinson

“My contention is that creativity now is as important in education as literacy, and we should treat it with the same status.”

Page 19: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs

Sir Ken Robinson- “Do Schools Kill Creativity?”

• http://www.ted.com/talks/ken_robinson_says_schools_kill_creativity.html

Page 20: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs
Page 21: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs
Page 22: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs
Page 23: Columbus County Schools Arts Education Programs