In previous posts, we’ve touched on the idea that Art in schools currently is not accessible to students. Generally speaking, it is low-income students who are the most excluded when it comes to creative spaces, Arts integration, and STEAM in education. Despite this, if the Arts were given a fair chance in K-12 schools, education could become more accessible to low-income communities as a whole.
From personal experience, I know what limited funding looks like when it comes to public education. I grew up in rural schools that had to decide if they wanted their budget to go towards making repairs to the school or buying textbooks that weren’t from twenty years ago. It can be difficult for students to get the level of attention they need since teachers are working with so little. Students fall behind their peers in higher-income communities because teachers don’t have access to educational resources that are constantly changing. This often results in teachers sticking to one type of teaching method that excludes many students’ thought processes and preferred ways of learning.
The National Education Association (nea) finds that Arts integration might just be the answer to offering a more accessible and equitable education to low-income/low-socioeconomic (SES) students. In their article on what Arts integration looks like in classrooms, they describe how introducing the Arts in classrooms over many topics of education helps to create multiple access points to the lessons. By offering more ways to interact with lessons from many different perspectives the content is made more approachable to students who don’t learn their best in traditional ways and improves overall engagement for all students. Edutopia, a blog on modern education trends, and Education Week, a news site by and for teachers on K-12 education, both agree with the nea and report that low-SES students preform just as well if not better than their peers when given higher access to Art. Education Week describes how this creates equal opportunity in their article, and Edutopia explains how this closes a national achievement gap between low-income students and their higher-income peers, leveling the playing field in their post on closing the achievement.
The funding to create seperate Art and STEM lessons just isn’t present in low-income schools, but by intergrating the two ideas and using STEAM to teach students we can offer the Arts to our students and improve their overall education all at once.