Monthly Archives: February 2025

What does Art do to our Academics?

Briefly touched upon in my previous post, Art, and how students engage with it in the classroom, has an impact on the academic achievements met by said students. The Oregon Community Foundation (OregonCF) reported that those taking more Art classes more frequently than other students had better fluency, originality, and overall better “academic discipline”. OregonCF also found improved grades and SAT scores among students taking more Art focused classes.

The Nation Endowment for the Arts found similar correlations in their research between Art engagement and academic scores. They found improved Social Emotional Learning in younger children who participated in the Arts at an early age, and that High Schoolers who participated in the Arts had higher average grades and greater “post-graduation outcomes” than students who did not.

Marcia Gibson and Meredith Larson found in their report on the visual arts and academic achievement that along with improved social skills, younger children who read with Art integrated as a part of the story have significantly improved reading abilities when compared to their peers without Art integration. Along with this, they found education is more engaging for students of all ages when art in incorporated. Art provides another way for more students to engage with academic material, thus improving a school’s overall test scores and grades. The inclusion of Art in education is integral to making the classroom more accessible and enjoyable for all students.

What can Art in schools look like?

Art in education can look very different depending on the way in which it is approached. In a report done by The Oregon Community Foundation (OregonCF), the way art is incorporated into learning can fall into one of three categories. The first is ‘Arts Exposure’, which is described as limited or occasional art experiences. This can look like a field trip or an assembly featuring the Arts. Art Exposure causes students to become more interested in and engaged with the topic being present to them, though the OregonCF report suggests it’s most impactful on students when Art is also being discussed and explored regularly in the classroom.

The second way of bringing art to students is referred to as ‘Sequential Arts Instruction’. Sequential Arts Instruction is the act of teaching Art in Art settings, or basically ‘the art class’. Sequential Arts Instruction includes traditional art classes, like painting, drawing, preforming arts, and also non-traditional Art activities like art clubs and bands. This is the most common type of Art engagement inside of Oregon schools, and it provides kids with observation, reflective, and developmental skills. OregonCF finds that Sequential Arts Instruction also serves as an emotional outlet for students who feel anxious or stressed about traditional education (think math/science/writing/history).

The third and final category of education and Art is ‘Arts Intergration’, and it is the category that OregonCF suggests has the largest impact on students. Arts Intergration is the act of including Art-based activities in non-art classes. This looks like making historical posters for a history class, creating 3D models of atoms for a science class, or being allowed to include creative writing instead of just essays in a writing class. OregonCF and Oregon teachers praise Arts Intergration for six main reasons:

“1. The Arts makes content more accessible.

2. The Arts encourage joyful, active learning.

3. The Arts help students make and express personal connections to content.

4. The Arts build community and help children develop collaborative work skills.

5. The Arts help students understand and express
abstract concepts.

6. The Arts stimulate higher-level thinking.” (OregonCF)

While OregonCF finds this final category to be to most impactful on students when it comes to increasing engagement and grades of students, they propose that the best way for art to be included into education is to implement it wherever and whenever possible. OregonCF claims that when students are able to constantly engage with the three kinds of Art education, they see better Social Emotional Learning (SEL), improvements to the community in the school, improved patience with difficult topics, and many other academic benefits including increased SAT testing scores and grades.

Art looks different for everyone. Some prefer to sculpt, others to dance, and many just enjoy a small doodle on the edge of their notebook. By having more art in school of many different kinds and disciplines, students are able to express themselves in safe regulated ways which results in positive outcomes for the rest of their academics.

What is Sci-Art?

Sci-Art (or SciArt/Sci Art), is just as simple as its name: The combination of Science and Art. Sci-Art has been around as long as the concepts of Science and Art themselves. It’s used to create detailed anatomy diagrams, make complex graphs of theoretical sciences, and everything in between. Though the term can be used broadly to describe the creation of anything to accompany scientific ideas and findings, today it’s commonly used to describe Art with heavy themes of Science.

For those of us at OSU, think about the PRAx center and the ‘Data Crystal‘ by Refik Anadol. This piece of Art in the lobby of the PRAx combines 3D visual arts with technology. It utilizes a 3D form with shifting colors to represent the recorded sounds of the forests owned by OSU, along with this, it utilizes AI to abstract these sounds to create new things entirely. This is what Sci-Art is. The unification between Science, data, and ideas with Art, creation, and meaning. If you want to explore the topics yourself on a larger scale, check out the #SciArt on BlueSky and the SciArt Initiative page on Instagram.

Who is my URSA mentor?

Along with being my mentor during the 2025 URSA engage program, Victor is an educator and technologist who has been helping under-served K-12 students learn about STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art, and math) for 30 years. Upon looking into him, you’ll likely find his profile on the OSU extension service website. This website gives a brief introduction into the work Victor focuses on like; robotics, drones, puppets, and storytelling. It’s not too hard to also find information about Victor on his Linkedin and Instagram. These sites describe Victor’s passion and work with technology, art, and education.

Who is Leaf?

I’m a first year undergraduate student, majoring in Environmental Science at the Corvallis campus of Oregon State University! I want to use the Arts to communicate scientific fact. Writing, painting, and design are passions of mine. I wanted to join this research opportunity through OSU’s Undergraduate Research, Scholarship and the Arts (URSA) with Victor because I believe that how we interact and view art as children impacts our values and beings for the rest of our lives. I hope that throughout this program I am able to gain new perspectives about the influence that creative spaces have on children as they grow into adults. By the end of this first week I’ll hopefully have a clear and narrow research question nailed down!