Arts education as vital as ever
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FLO MARTIN
On Wednesday, the Daily Pilot featured a story called “Students
captured acting up.” One of the accompanying photos showed three
teenagers watching in awe as one of the instructors in the South
Coast Repertory “Express Yourself” summer arts program stood facing
them with his arms outstretched sideways. Wonderful memories of a
similar scene I witnessed in 1976 came flooding back.
As a teacher at that time for the state-funded MGM (Mentally
Gifted Minors) program at Sonora School, I jumped at the
opportunities that the South Coast Repertory outreach program offered
to local schools. The Sonora event featured Ron Boussom, a SCR
founding member. Ron showed up in my library media center and shared
his enthusiasm for mime and face paint with about 30 giggling,
excited kids who squealed in delight at his wonderfully expressive
face and his hilarious antics.
More recently, while teaching high school French in Garden Grove,
I pitched another South Coast offering for young people: discount
tickets for educators and their students. Every other year, SCR
presents a traditional French classic. Consequently, my students and
I became repertory regulars. So many of these kids loved the theater
experience. So many told me that they would never have thought of
going to the theater on their own. So many had never even stepped
inside a theater before. And yet, so many of them, together with
hundreds of other students and teachers from other Orange County
schools, howled their way through “School for Wives,” “Cyrano de
Bergerac,” and “The Imaginary Invalid,” just to name a few.
Young people need beauty in their life. They all need art on a
regular basis. They all need music. They all need drama. And I mean
all, not just a select few who have the funds to cover the hefty
price tag attached to two weeks in an acting seminar. Thank God for
SCR organizational sponsors such as the Mika Community Development.
Where would our kids be without our support? What public funding
do our local schools have to sustain the visual and performing arts?
How many students in the Newport-Mesa School District enjoy music,
art and theater classes? How many participate in related
extracurricular activities: band competitions, school plays, mock
trial, Model United Nations, photography club? How about field trips
to the Getty or the Norton Simon or the Los Angeles County Art
museums? Here are some of the answers I found:
First, from California Arts Council: In 2001-02, the council
expanded its arts-in-education programs, and brought artists and
community arts resources into partnership with public schools. Funded
with a $10 million initiative, the council’s goal, like that of its
partners -- the California Department of Education, the California
Alliance for Arts Education, the California Arts Project and the
California PTA -- was to establish arts education in all schools in
the state. Arts education offerings in schools multiplied in every
region of the state. But because of the 2003-04 state budget cuts,
which reduced the council’s budget by almost 90%, the California Arts
Council no longer funds these programs.
Second, the Orange County Teachers Federal Credit Union’s 2004
Education Foundation provided grants to 11 literacy, six math, three
science, one gardening, and one learning-mode program. Not one single
arts program made the cut.
Sigh ...
Third, due to the Back to the Basics movement in California, many
fine arts programs are shrinking. Students simply don’t have time in
their curriculum for such “frills.” Any high school counselor will
verify this. So, what can we do to help out? On Monday, I heard
former President Clinton talk about the $5,000 tax refund he received
a few years back. I wondered: “What did you do with that money? Did
you stick it in the bank? Did you buy another toy? Did you give it to
your church or to a nonprofit service organization? Did you give it
to your local school?”
This writer sure did. She wrote out a check equaling her refund
(definitely not $5,000, though) to the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District, with a memo “for Costa Mesa High” and walked the check over
to the school. This writer also hired the jazz band from a local high
school to play for a party at her home. She once paid hard cash for a
Garfield papier-mache creation hanging in a high school display
window. Was the artist ever thrilled, not to mention the art teacher?
This writer is not patting herself on the back but simply putting
forward a few ideas on how to share a love of the arts with the
younger generation. Now, dear reader, the ball is in your court.
* FLO MARTIN is a Costa Mesa resident and faculty member at Cal
State Fullerton.
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