As I have mentioned many times, the highly successful schools of Finland emphasize play, the arts, and creativity. They don’t begin teaching reading until children are in first or second grade. The Finns want school to be a stress free, joyful experience for children. And it works. The schools have been described by international organizations as the best in the world.
Stuart Egan, high school teacher in North Carolina, warns that the state is threatening to cut the arts and physical education from the elementary schools. This is crazy. Is the General Assembly’s goal to make school boring? To ruin young bodies by lack of movement?
He writes:
“A long long time ago
I can still remember how
That music used to make me smile
And I knew if I had my chance
That I could make those people dance
And maybe they’d be happy for a while
But February made me shiver
With every paper I’d deliver
Bad news on the doorstep
I couldn’t take one more step
I can’t remember if I cried
When I read about his widowed bride
Something touched me deep inside
The day the music died.”
Don McLean’s famous song “American Pie” has been the subject of tremendous amounts of explication. Websites devoted to explaining all of the lyrics and all of the rumored allusions can take a day or two to just peruse, but McLean himself has identified the “day the music died” as that day in Feb. of 1959 when a plane carrying Buddy Holly (“That’ll Be The Day”), Richie Valens (“La Bamba”), and J.P. Richardson (aka. The Big Bopper) crashed killing all three rock icons.
McLean’s song highlighted our culture’s need for music, expression, and how important it is to cultivate our sense of being by developing not just the logical left side of the brain, but the creative right side as well.
What followed in the next 15 years was possibly one of the most turbulent times in American history: the Civil Rights Movement, Vietnam, Watergate, Women’s Rights, ongoing Cold War, etc. And the music and the rest of its artistic siblings helped us to capture, reflect, express, communicate, and heal from those scars received.
And now with the current political climate on this global terrain, we may need to rely on our artistic expressions to help cope and grow from what we will experience in the near future.
How ironic that in such turbulent times our own leaders are searching for ways to quash our children’s opportunities to develop the very creative and physical skills that study after study shows make us more complete, well-rounded, and prepared for life’s situations.
A Nov. 14th report on NC Policy Watch by Billy Ball (“New rules to lower class sizes force stark choices, threatening the arts, music and P.E”) states,
“North Carolina public school leaders say a legislative mandate to decrease class sizes in the early grades may have a devastating impact on school systems across the state, forcing districts to spend millions more hiring teachers or cut scores of positions for those teaching “specialty” subjects such as arts, music and physical education” (http://www.ncpolicywatch.com/2016/11/14/new-rules-lower-class-sizes-force-stark-choices-threatening-tas-specialty-education-positions/).
First, I would make the argument that arts, music, and physical education are not “specialties” but “necessities.” In a nation that is spending more on health problems caused by obesity, the need to get kids moving and away from the television might be just as important as core subject material. Secondly, it shows a glaring contradiction to the religious platforms that many in our state government have been using to maintain office and their potential actions to eliminate part of children’s curriculum.
The predominant spiritual path in the United States, Judeo-Christianity, talks much of the need for music, dance, movement, song, and expression. I think of all of the hymns and musicals my own Southern Baptist church produced, most complete with choreography, which is odd considering that many joke about Baptists’ aversion to dancing.
Even the Bible commands “Sing to the LORD a new song; Sing to the LORD, all the earth” (Psalms 96:1), and “Praise Him with timbrel and dancing; Praise Him with stringed instruments and pipe” (Psalm 150:4).
Furthermore, the Bible often talks of the body as being a “temple of the Holy Spirit” and even commands Christians to stay physically fit. “Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you, whom you have from God? You are not your own, for you were bought with a price. So glorify God in your body” (1 Corinthians 6:19-20).
Yet, some of our GOP stalwarts who are cheering about a budget surplus are planning to “ force districts into stark choices about how to allocate their resources.” Ball continues,
“In some districts, it may mean spending millions more in local dollars to hire additional teachers. Or in other districts, officials say, leaders may be forced to eliminate specialty education positions or draw cash from other pools, such as funding for teaching assistants.”
That’s egregious. That’s backwards. That’s forcing school districts to make decisions about whether to educate the whole child or part of the child in order to make student/teacher ratios look favorable.
That’s like going out of your way to get plastic surgery, liposuction, and body sculpting to create a new look while ignoring the actual health of your body. Without proper nutrition, sleep, exercise, mental health, and emotional support, we open doors to maladies.
When the Bible talks about a temple, it talks about the insides, not just the outsides.
Interestingly enough, many of the private schools and charter schools that receive public money through Opportunity Grants have plentiful art programs and physical education opportunities.
Wow.
What our history has shown us time and time again is that we needed music, dance, arts, and physical education to cope and grow as people and we needed them to become better students. To force the removal of these vital areas of learning would be making our students more one-dimensional. It would make them less prepared.
Don McLean released “American Pie” in 1971. It is widely considered one of the top ten songs of the entire twentieth century. Fifty-five years later, it still has relevance.
The last verse (or “outro”) is actually a tad bit haunting.
“I met a girl who sang the blues
And I asked her for some happy news
But she just smiled and turned away
I went down to the sacred store
Where I’d heard the music years before
But the man there said the music wouldn’t play
And in the streets, the children screamed
The lovers cried and the poets dreamed
But not a word was spoken
The church bells all were broken
And the three men I admire most
The Father, Son and the Holy Ghost
They caught the last train for the coast
The day the music died.”
When we elect our public servants to serve, we give them the keys to the vehicle that drives our state, a purple colored divided state that has HB2, vouchers, redistricting, Voter ID laws, underfunded public schools, and poverty.
Now imagine that vehicle being a Chevy. We don’t need to go to a dry levee.
We need to keep the music and the other “necessities.”

Like school libraries in Chicago.
There is one elementary school that has a public library on the same block as the school, but in order to bring the students there, the teacher must plan a field trip and get parent chaperones.
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Thanks for posting.
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Reblogged this on caffeinated rage.
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This is tragic if education becomes defined as only reading and math. There are several different types of intelligence, and access to the arts often unlocks talents that would otherwise remain undiscovered. Where would “Hamilton” be if Lin Manuel Miranda did not have exposure to the arts at a young age? Also, childhood obesity is on the rise from our sedentary lifestyles, and access to physical education can address and help curb this trend. As someone that taught ELLs for many years and watched them struggle so hard to fit in, some students “came alive” in P.E. Many of them were able to excel in this area. I have seen many poor ELLs get a full paid scholarships for sports. Some of my former students got scholarships for American football, soccer, and field and track, and today, they hold middle class jobs.
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research has also begun to show just how much our children are being damaged by missing out on hours of brain-developing Vitamin-D-delivering sunshine
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Thank you for the full arc of this remarkable performance.
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You’re welcome!!
Being a sophomore/junior in high school when the song came out, needless to say it was an “anthem” for many of us. Still is!
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We lost art a long time ago at the elementary level- probably a decade into ed reform. Bush’s first term.
We have a volunteer with an “art cart” and have for years.
We just lost the assistant music teacher last year. The band classes are huge now- 40 or 50 students. The parents who can afford it actually hire a public school music teacher from another district for private lessons. He works weekends.
They all have devices for “personalized learning” and constant testing, though.
Fewer and fewer human beings, but plenty of expensive, gimmicky tech garbage.
I feel bad for them. They’re being cheated and they don’t even know it because this dogma has been dominant for so long it’s all they’ve ever known.
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I saw Michelle Rhee is back in the news pontificating on public schools. I subscribe to a local Ohio newspaper that runs ads from the pricey private school Rhee attended.
They’re selling an alternative to Rhee-style ed reform. It’s all about the whole child and the joy of learning and how children are more than a score.
Ed reform is like an alternate reality. The private schools these people attended don’t even endorse the methods of their own graduates. In order to escape Rhee’s ed reform you’ll need 20k a year to her private school 🙂
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Right now, the gubernatorial election is running neck and neck, with the Democratic challenger Roy Cooper currently ahead of incumbent Republican Pat McCrory. Cooper is expected to win ultimately, but if the margin is small, there will be challenges and a recount.
Does anybody know how Cooper feels about cutting the arts and P.E.? And would it even make a difference, because perhaps the General Assembly has the final say in this?
Any readers from North Carolina who could enlighten us?
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This was all part of the bait-and-switch pulled by the GOP legislature before the elections. They needed to be able to claim to have made gains in education (an issue that is always front-and-center for NC voters) and chose the class size figure (along with the average teacher salary figure) for their finagling. As they did with salaries (where they made a claim not supported by real numbers), they chose class size because they could pass this mandate and make it stick without actually having to appropriate more money in real terms. Since all teachers are essentially state employees (through their districts) and the state sets salary levels and appropriations follow for the number of teaching positions, all they had to do was re-appropriate money towards classroom teachers and away from those teaching supplementary subjects at the K-5 level and make it look like they’d done something worthwhile. The fact that it means that the districts lose money from other programs for K-5 students and have already suffered other cuts that hamper effective K-5 education (like those for teaching assistant positions made in past years) was completely glossed over and most voters aren’t yet aware of the effect the Legislature’s action are going to have. It’s just par for the course for our GOP leadership here in NC: make it look like they’re a friend of public education while doing their best to undermine any actual gains.
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“Stuart Egan, high school teacher in North Carolina, warns that the state is threatening to cut the arts and physical education from the elementary schools. This is crazy. Is the General Assembly’s goal to make school boring?”
What better way to make some children “not ready for kindergarten” an unfalsifiable proposition. Perhaps the North Caroline General Assembly has been talking with the school board members and superintendent here in Atlanta.
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I’d say the answer to both your second paragraph questions are “yes” & “yes.”
Goal for the dystopian future (now, the present): kill the minds (boring, unending teaching-to-the-test), the bodies &, thus, the souls of “other people’s children.”
No arts, no creativity= inability to imagine, to think…to question authority.
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The district where I taught in North Carolina used “specials” times as planning times for elementary teachers. No specials, no planning.
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A very common practice
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I still sing that song on my karaoke nights….it is a little bit long. for several years I played it for my 6th grade class and I helped them understand some of what it meant…lots of them tell me that was a day they remember most, several decades later. There is a song by Bob Dylan, ballad of a thin man, revolving around the mishaps of a Mr. Jones, who keeps blundering into strange situations, and the more questions he asks, the less the world makes sense to him. That is a good description of me, but I altered the lyrics to fit Michael Jones…of the Missouri state Board of education. “Something here is happening, and you know exactly what it is….don’t you…..Mr. Jones. He is a black man, so formidable with his store of knowledge, that for several years, the Post Dispatch was scared to talk to him. They worship the Bill Gates charter stuff and he doesn’t. Even now, you can compare a story pertaining to what he has to say about a public education issue in the American, or public radio, and the same story is skeletal in the PD.
nicole hannah-jones quoted him in an article about segregation in Missouri….he has the keen awareness about it that the Missouri media does not like to discuss..Wellston was also high-poverty, and Missouri’s only 100 percent black school system. State officials had called conditions in Wellston’s schools “deplorable” and “academically abusive.”
But its students were not sent to the high-performing, mostly white districts nearby. Michael Jones, a state board of education official, was blunt about the reason: “You’d have had a civil war.” One thing I have always found fascinating about him…the senator nominated him for the state board of education….his ex-wife. (she had been treated some would say harshly by the PD). My favorite interview was Mike Jones on Normandy and killing Hyenas in the St. Louis American.
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