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The Arts in Schools - Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation

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THEARTSSCHOOLSPr<strong>in</strong>ciples, practice and provision


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong>Pr<strong>in</strong>ciples, practice and provisionResearched and edited byDr Ken Rob<strong>in</strong>son, Professor of <strong>Arts</strong> Education,University of Warwick, and witha new Introduction 1989.Published by <strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>


© 1982 <strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>ISBN O 903319 23 3Pr<strong>in</strong>ted by BPCC Oyez Press Ltd, LondonFirst published 1982Repr<strong>in</strong>t 1982Repr<strong>in</strong>t 1983Repr<strong>in</strong>t 1984Repr<strong>in</strong>t 1985Repr<strong>in</strong>t 1987Repr<strong>in</strong>t 1989 with the addition of an IntroductionRepr<strong>in</strong>t 1990Repr<strong>in</strong>t 1993British Library Catalogu<strong>in</strong>g-<strong>in</strong>-Publication Data.A catalogue record for this book is available from theBritish Library.


Contents<strong>The</strong> Advisory CommitteeTerms of ReferenceForeword by the Chairman of the InquiryIntroduction<strong>The</strong> Issues1 Reasons for the report 2 Education and employment 3 Culturalchange 4 <strong>The</strong> need for action 5 Attitudes to the arts 6 All ofthe arts 7 <strong>The</strong> arts and education 8 <strong>The</strong> curriculum debate9 Structure of the report 10 <strong>The</strong> arts are not options 11 Notwithout precedentChapter 1 Education, school<strong>in</strong>g and the arts12 Reasons for the chapter 13 <strong>The</strong> different forms of human rationality14 <strong>The</strong> need for balance 15 <strong>The</strong> arts and aesthetic development16 <strong>The</strong> arts and moral education 17 <strong>The</strong> arts and culturaldevelopment 18 Participat<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> and appreciat<strong>in</strong>g the arts 19 'Highart' and contemporary culture 20 Ways of hav<strong>in</strong>g ideas 21 <strong>The</strong>creative m<strong>in</strong>d 22 <strong>The</strong> arts and the open society 23 Unity and<strong>in</strong>tegration 24 <strong>The</strong> objectivity of art 25 Two modes of consciousness26 <strong>The</strong> importance of balance 27 Other outcomes of thearts 28 <strong>The</strong> arts and recreation 29 <strong>The</strong> humanity of the arts30 Ends and means 31 SummaryChapter 2 <strong>The</strong> arts, creativity and the whole curriculum32 Reasons for the chapter 33 A type of <strong>in</strong>telligence 34 Featuresof creative work 35 Creative and divergent th<strong>in</strong>kers 36 Recognis<strong>in</strong>gand assess<strong>in</strong>g creativity 37 Two misconceptions 38 Quality notquantity 39 <strong>The</strong> context of creative work 40 A different view ofcreativity 41 Implications for teach<strong>in</strong>g 42 <strong>The</strong> role of the teacher43 Freedom and authority 44 SummaryChapter 3 <strong>Arts</strong> education and the cultural heritage45 Reasons for the chapter 46 Two separate issues 47 <strong>The</strong> artsand 'culture' 48 Diversity 49 Relativity 50 Change 51 Implications52 Whose culture? 53 Which heritage? 54 <strong>The</strong> selectivetradition 55 <strong>The</strong> arts and cultural education 56 Participation57 Appreciation 58 Some practical examples 59 <strong>The</strong> school as acultural exchange 60 Rais<strong>in</strong>g standards 61 Applied studies 62 Butis it art? 63 Summaryiii


Chapter 4 Provision: the arts <strong>in</strong> primary schools64 Reasons for the chapter 65 In general 66 From primary tosecondary 67 <strong>The</strong> arts <strong>in</strong> primary schools 68 What should beaimed at? 69 Visual arts 70 Music 71 Other arts 72 Whatprovision is needed? 73 Integration 74 Resources 75 Availability:a resource bank 76 Accessibility: the ethos of the school77 Expressive media 78 Variety 79 Quality 80 Adequacy81 Resourcefulness 82 What are the problems? 83 A vicious circle84 Initial tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g 85 What are the possible solutions? 86 An artselement <strong>in</strong> tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g 87 <strong>The</strong> need for specialists 88 <strong>The</strong> AdvisoryService 89 Staff consultants 90 SummaryChapter 5 Provision: the arts <strong>in</strong> secondary schools91 Reasons for the chapter 92 In general 93 <strong>The</strong> need for action94 Constra<strong>in</strong>ts on the arts 95 Liaison 96 <strong>The</strong> world of the specialist97 Timetabl<strong>in</strong>g: fragmentation 98 Integration 99 Space andfacilities 100 Attitudes 101 Exam<strong>in</strong>ations 102 <strong>The</strong> need for apolicy 103 <strong>The</strong> need for specifics 104 Co-ord<strong>in</strong>ation 105 Cont<strong>in</strong>uity106 An arts policy 107 <strong>The</strong> secondary curriculum108 <strong>The</strong> arts <strong>in</strong> the curriculum 109 <strong>The</strong> arts on the timetable110 Other possibilities: block timetabl<strong>in</strong>g 111 Creative arts departments112 Space and facilities 113 A different approach 114 <strong>The</strong>size of the school 115 Fall<strong>in</strong>g rolls 116 Short <strong>in</strong>tensive courses117 Holiday courses 118 'Third sessions' 119 Specialist centres120 A change of perspective 121 <strong>The</strong> Advisory Service 122 Curriculumtra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g 123 Senior staff 124 Speak<strong>in</strong>g from experience125 Equality of provision 126 SummaryChapter 6 Assessment, evaluation and accountability127 Reasons for the chapter 128 <strong>The</strong> need for accountability129 Two false arguments 130 Assessment 131 Evaluation132 Exam<strong>in</strong>ation 133 What k<strong>in</strong>d of assessment and accountability?134 Dlum<strong>in</strong>ative evaluation 135 Responsive evaluation 136 Pervasiveassessment 137 Informative assessment 138 Implicationsfor accountability 139 Exam<strong>in</strong>ations <strong>in</strong> the arts 140 Pass<strong>in</strong>g orfail<strong>in</strong>g 141 <strong>The</strong> element of failure 142 Arguments for exam<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gthe arts 143 Three counter-arguments 144 <strong>The</strong> need for alternatives145 Profile report<strong>in</strong>g 146 RPA and RPE 147 <strong>The</strong> need for research148 A limited case for arts exam<strong>in</strong>ation 149 Graded tests150 Some difficulties 151 Look<strong>in</strong>g ahead 152 From primary tosecondary 153 <strong>The</strong> need for <strong>in</strong>-service tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g 154 <strong>The</strong> need forpartnership 155 SummaryChapter 7 Special needsiv156 Reasons for the chapter 157 A comprehensive approach


158 Gifts and talents: exist<strong>in</strong>g studies 159 Def<strong>in</strong>itions 160 Isspecial help justified? 161 <strong>The</strong> moral case 162 <strong>The</strong> educational case163 <strong>The</strong> social case 164 For and aga<strong>in</strong>st special provision 165 Threereasons for concern 166 Help<strong>in</strong>g gifts and talents: the roles of theschool 167 <strong>The</strong> roles of the local education authority 168 Grantsand awards 169 Other needs 170 <strong>The</strong> disabled artist 171 <strong>The</strong> needfor action 172 Less able and disturbed children 173 Rais<strong>in</strong>gconfidence 174 <strong>Arts</strong> and racial m<strong>in</strong>orities 175 <strong>The</strong> need forprovision 176 Implications for the curriculum 177 Respond<strong>in</strong>g tothe challenge 178 A special problem 179 SummaryChapter 8 Children, teachers and artists180 Reasons for the chapter 181 Direct and <strong>in</strong>direct contact182 Current schemes 183 Artists <strong>in</strong> Education 184 Visits185 Residencies 186 <strong>Arts</strong> education companies 187 <strong>Arts</strong>/educationliaison: perform<strong>in</strong>g companies 188 <strong>Arts</strong>/education liaison: museumsand galleries 189 <strong>Arts</strong> centres 190 Other schemes 191 Mutualbenefits 192 Benefits for pupils: skills 193 Attitudes 194 Understand<strong>in</strong>g195 Benefits for teachers: contact 196 Material197 Benefits for artists 198 In practice 199 Choos<strong>in</strong>g an artist200 <strong>The</strong> attitude of the school 201 Preparation 202 Conduct203 Follow-up 204 Artists and teachers 205 <strong>The</strong> role of the artist206 A delicate balance 207 <strong>The</strong> role of the teacher 208 Problemsfaced by arts education companies 209 Courses of action: fourneeds 210 <strong>The</strong> need for tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g 211 <strong>The</strong> need for liaison212 Creat<strong>in</strong>g a problem 213 <strong>The</strong> need for co-operation 214 <strong>The</strong>need for evaluation 215 A general pr<strong>in</strong>ciple 216 SummaryChapter 9 Beyond the school217 Reasons for the chapter 218 Key themes 219 Practical difficulties220 Potential benefits 221 What is cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g education?222 <strong>The</strong> range of cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g education 223 <strong>The</strong> problems ofreform 224 A national commitment 225 Initial and post-<strong>in</strong>itialeducation 226 Higher education 227 General and vocationalcourses 228 <strong>The</strong> arts <strong>in</strong> vocational courses 229 General courses230 Adult education 231 Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g for the arts 232 Gett<strong>in</strong>g started233 New opportunities 234 <strong>The</strong> Weekend <strong>Arts</strong> College235 Harness<strong>in</strong>g resources 236 <strong>The</strong> Youth Service 237 SummaryChapter 10 RecommendationsAppendix 146Bibliography 158Notes 162


<strong>The</strong> Advisory CommitteeChairmanMembersPeter Br<strong>in</strong>son, Director, United K<strong>in</strong>gdom Branch, <strong>Calouste</strong><strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>John Allen, Visit<strong>in</strong>g Professor of Drama, Westfield College,University of LondonDavid Asp<strong>in</strong>, Professor of Education (Philosophy), K<strong>in</strong>g'sCollege, University of LondonEva Barnes, District Inspector, City of Manchester EducationDepartmentNorman B<strong>in</strong>ch, Staff Inspector for Art and Design, InnerLondon Education AuthorityBob Clement, Adviser for Art, Devon County CouncilDavid Dougan, Director, Northern <strong>Arts</strong>Andrew Fairbairn (alternate Maurice Gilmour), Director ofEducation, Leicestershire County CouncilMaurice Gilmour, Adviser for Drama and Movement, LeicestershireCounty CouncilMarjorie Glynne-Jones, Pr<strong>in</strong>cipal Lecturer <strong>in</strong> Music Education,Middlesex PolytechnicRobert Hedley-Lewis, Pr<strong>in</strong>cipal, London College of Pr<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>gGeoffrey Hodson, Senior Inspector of Drama, Inner LondonEducation AuthorityAlan Hutch<strong>in</strong>son, Pr<strong>in</strong>cipal, Padd<strong>in</strong>gton CollegeTrevor Jagger, Staff Inspector for Secondary Education,Inner London Education AuthorityRalph Jeffery, Staff Inspector: Art and Design, Departmentof Education and ScienceGeoffrey Mell<strong>in</strong>g, HMI, Department of Education andScienceJoan McLaren, Staff Inspector for Physical Education, InnerLondon Education AuthorityBetty Osgathorp, County Inspector for Physical Education,Kent County CouncilJoslyn Owen (alternate Bob Clement), Chief EducationOfficer, Devon County CouncilMaurice Plaskow, Curriculum Officer, <strong>Schools</strong> CouncilKenneth Rob<strong>in</strong>son, Writer and lecturer <strong>in</strong> arts educationVI


Clifford Romany, Headmaster, K<strong>in</strong>gsthorpe Upper School,NorthamptonJohn Stephens, Staff Inspector for Music, Inner LondonEducation AuthorityD Llion Williams, Director, North Wales <strong>Arts</strong> AssociationObserverOrganis<strong>in</strong>gSecretariesIrene Macdonald, Senior Education Officer, <strong>Arts</strong> Councilof Great Brita<strong>in</strong>Nicholas Usherwood until December 1980Claire Seignior from January 1981Terms of ReferenceTo consider the place of the arts as part of the school curriculum <strong>in</strong> thema<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed sector of education, and to make recommendations.vii


Foreword by the Chairman of the Inquiry<strong>The</strong> <strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>, Lisbon, operates three programmes<strong>in</strong> the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom through its United K<strong>in</strong>gdom Branch. <strong>The</strong>se cover thearts, education and social welfare. With<strong>in</strong> each programme are carefullydef<strong>in</strong>ed priorities set out and expla<strong>in</strong>ed <strong>in</strong> the Branch's annual report. <strong>The</strong>priorities vary from time to time but provide a framework for the <strong>Foundation</strong>'stw<strong>in</strong> functions of respond<strong>in</strong>g to applications and launch<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>itiativeson its own behalf.<strong>The</strong>se functions require the officers of the Branch to ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> contactwith a wide range of op<strong>in</strong>ion — from <strong>in</strong>dividual artists and social activists toelected representatives <strong>in</strong> central and local government, M<strong>in</strong>isters and othernational leaders.At one such meet<strong>in</strong>g, early <strong>in</strong> 1977, Peter Newsam, Education Officer ofthe Inner London Education Authority, and I were discuss<strong>in</strong>g the publicdebate on education, particularly references to a core curriculum and arecurrent emphasis on the three Rs. <strong>The</strong>se seemed to exclude, not only thearts, but also some of the pr<strong>in</strong>ciples upon which the idea of a general educationhad been developed <strong>in</strong> Brita<strong>in</strong> s<strong>in</strong>ce the Education Act of 1944. If ourassessment was correct, these public discussions would have profoundimplications for all education. Both of us saw the arts as a test case <strong>in</strong> thisrespect. We agreed that it was important to pursue these issues, but only ifsuch an <strong>in</strong>quiry were undertaken by an <strong>in</strong>dependent body. We had <strong>in</strong> m<strong>in</strong>da review of the national situation, draw<strong>in</strong>g on the experience and viewsof an advisory committee represent<strong>in</strong>g a cross-section of educational <strong>in</strong>terestsand responsibility.<strong>The</strong> Board of the <strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> <strong>in</strong> Lisbon approvedthe <strong>in</strong>itiation of the Inquiry and the Advisory Committee first met <strong>in</strong> September1978. Early <strong>in</strong> 1979, whilst work<strong>in</strong>g on the first draft of the report,the significance of our work seemed to be chang<strong>in</strong>g under pressure of economiesalready <strong>in</strong>troduced by the Labour Government. We appo<strong>in</strong>teda draft<strong>in</strong>g committee to assess the changes: Dr. Ken Rob<strong>in</strong>son, ProfessorDavid Asp<strong>in</strong> and Professor John Allen jo<strong>in</strong>ed Nicholas Usherwood and me.By early 1980 the effects of the Conservative Government's educationalpolicies began to be revealed as more far-reach<strong>in</strong>g than at first thought. <strong>The</strong>IX


notion of a core curriculum had run <strong>in</strong>to significant opposition. Nevertheless,the Government has issued curriculum guidel<strong>in</strong>es which have little to sayabout the arts. It has become clear, too, that the cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g cuts are hav<strong>in</strong>geffects on the quality and range of education as well as on its provision. Inshort, the context of the Inquiry has changed.We are faced now with central questions about the purposes of school<strong>in</strong>g,the balance of the curriculum and about the whole character of education<strong>in</strong> Brita<strong>in</strong>. <strong>The</strong>se have become our concerns <strong>in</strong> this report. It is addressedto Members of Parliament and to education committees, education adm<strong>in</strong>istrators,school governors, head teachers and employers — those withpower of executive action. We also seek through our arguments to <strong>in</strong>fluenceteachers and parents so as to create a groundswell of <strong>in</strong>formed public"op<strong>in</strong>ion.Underly<strong>in</strong>g our approach is a consciousness of the new world of socialrelations, of work and non-work, now be<strong>in</strong>g brought about by many factors:advances <strong>in</strong> technology, new forms of communication, the evolution ofBrita<strong>in</strong> as a multi-cultural society, economic recession, long-term structuralunemployment and so on. Our conviction is that we must develop broadernot narrower curricula <strong>in</strong> our schools, and that the arts have an importantplace with<strong>in</strong> this broad approach. We present our case for this and considerthe many implications and conclusions which follow from it.Many people have contributed to this study with help <strong>in</strong> many ways. <strong>The</strong>best acknowledgement will be if this report helps to susta<strong>in</strong> and developtheir work. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>'s particular thanks, however, are due to thedist<strong>in</strong>guished committee which has advised the writ<strong>in</strong>g of the report; tothe draft<strong>in</strong>g committee — Dr. Ken Rob<strong>in</strong>son, Professor David Asp<strong>in</strong> andProfessor John Allen — who assisted Nicholas Usherwood and me; to Dr.Ken Rob<strong>in</strong>son for the f<strong>in</strong>al draft; to Sir Toby Weaver and Professor LouisArnaud Reid for special advice; to all the many organisations and <strong>in</strong>dividualswho gave us their time and from whom we took evidence; to MillicentBowerman, the <strong>Foundation</strong>'s literary editor; to Hilary Crampton, who gavevaluable assistance, and to Claire Seignior who became secretary of theproject. Without their generous collaboration, this report would not havebeen completed.Peter Br<strong>in</strong>son1982


Introduction—1989This is not a research report <strong>in</strong> the conventional sense. It is an attempt toarticulate and give force to the deep convictions of a widen<strong>in</strong>g group ofeducators, employers, parents and politicians about the nature and scope ofcontemporary education. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> was published <strong>in</strong> 1982 and hashad an unusual success, both <strong>in</strong> general and <strong>in</strong> stimulat<strong>in</strong>g many specificpractical <strong>in</strong>itiatives to implement its recommendations. Repr<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> 1989 itseems appropriate to take stock of the report's impact to date, and to relate itsarguments to the new context for state education <strong>in</strong> the 1990s created by theEducation Reform Act (1988) and the National Curriculum.<strong>The</strong> Education Reform Act came at the end of over ten years of public andprofessional debate on the role of state education. <strong>The</strong> debate was stimulatedby a Labour Prime M<strong>in</strong>ister, James Callaghan, <strong>in</strong> his speech at Rusk<strong>in</strong> College,Oxford <strong>in</strong> 1976. This was the first major policy speech on education by anyPrime M<strong>in</strong>ister and was guaranteed to be historic for that reason alone. <strong>The</strong>speech was prompted by <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g public and political unrest about educationand was bound, for that reason, to be controversial.As the recession deepened dur<strong>in</strong>g the 1970s and as unemployment <strong>in</strong>creased,especially among young people, there was a grow<strong>in</strong>g conviction that part if notthe whole of the problem lay <strong>in</strong> the schools. This view was succ<strong>in</strong>ctly put bythe Association of Chambers of Commerce which argued <strong>in</strong> 1979 that:<strong>The</strong> school system has to teach skills essential to modern life. If it fails,school leavers will be condemned to unemployment . . . This will haveserious repercussions on our society. Deprived of sufficient skills, Britishbus<strong>in</strong>ess will fail to defeat overseas competition and unemployment willcont<strong>in</strong>ue to rise.'Economic concerns were the obvious theme of the Rusk<strong>in</strong> speech. JamesCallaghan argued explicitly that education should be more closely geared tothe needs of the labour market. To achieve this he made his controversialproposal for a statutory core curriculum <strong>in</strong> all schools. <strong>The</strong> furore that thissuggestion provoked confirmed that the real unrest <strong>in</strong> education went wellxi


eyond the immediate, needs of the economy. It was fundamentally to do withideology, with conflicts of values <strong>in</strong> education, and ultimately with the questionof who should control the curriculum. <strong>The</strong> Great Debate brought <strong>in</strong>to the openthe conflict between 'progressive' and 'traditional' styles of education whichhad been gather<strong>in</strong>g force from the late 1960s. In do<strong>in</strong>g so it drew <strong>in</strong> deeplycontested questions about standards, about discipl<strong>in</strong>e, values and politics <strong>in</strong>education.In the terms of the Great Debate the arts were at risk from two misconceptions.First, to those who argued that the ma<strong>in</strong> role of education is to prepare youngpeople for work, arts education evidently seemed unnecessary except for thoselook<strong>in</strong>g for arts jobs. Second, through the emphasis <strong>in</strong> some teach<strong>in</strong>g oncreativity, self-expression and personal development, the arts had becomeassociated with non-<strong>in</strong>tellectual activities, and therefore seemed to lie outsidethe priorities of those who argued for a return to 'traditional' academic values.<strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> report was written with four objectives. <strong>The</strong> first was toput the arts firmly <strong>in</strong>to the debate on the future of state education. Hardly anyof the many statements on the curriculum, which flowed from all quarters afterthe Rusk<strong>in</strong> speech, had mentioned the arts at all: none had dealt with them <strong>in</strong>detail. <strong>The</strong> second objective was to put the case for the arts as clearly as possibleto policy-makers at all levels. Much of the exist<strong>in</strong>g literature on arts educationhad been written for specialists of different sorts: none of it was addressedspecifically to the economic and ideological issues raised <strong>in</strong> the GreatDebate. Our third objective was to identify the real problems—practical andotherwise—that faced the full development of the arts <strong>in</strong> schools; the fourthwas to identify ways ahead.<strong>The</strong> report attracted an immediate and positive response from all sectors ofeducation and its <strong>in</strong>fluence cont<strong>in</strong>ues to grow. Head teachers, LEA officers,professional associations and politicians of all parties strongly welcomed <strong>The</strong><strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> as an essential counterbalance to much of the prevail<strong>in</strong>gargument <strong>in</strong> education. At the <strong>in</strong>itiative of Lord Beaumont the report wasdebated <strong>in</strong> the House of Lords on 5 April 1982 (Hansard, page 100). <strong>The</strong>debate drew an assurance from Lord Elton:'. . . lest there be any doubt . . . that the Government fully accept thecase that the arts are not merely a desirable but an essential componentof the education offered <strong>in</strong> schools. This means not only foster<strong>in</strong>g thetalents of the artistically gifted, important as that is, but provid<strong>in</strong>gopportunities for all pupils ... to participate <strong>in</strong> artistic activity and tolearn about the arts.'Comment<strong>in</strong>g that the school curriculum is 'first and foremost the responsibilityof local education authorities and schools' and that the government 'cannotand <strong>in</strong>deed should not dictate what they should do', Lord Elton believed thatthe report would be 'widely read and will <strong>in</strong>fluence th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g and it will do sodeservedly'. It was and, I th<strong>in</strong>k, it has.Many of the report's specific recommendations have been taken up. In theyear follow<strong>in</strong>g publication over forty local education authorities organisedmajor conferences or <strong>in</strong>-service events to publicise and consider the report,xii


and many others have done so s<strong>in</strong>ce. <strong>The</strong> report is now commonly quoted <strong>in</strong>the curriculum statements of primary and secondary schools and of localeducation authorities, and is a standard text on many teacher tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g courses.<strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> Council of Great Brita<strong>in</strong> and Regional <strong>Arts</strong> Associations have used<strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> as a basis <strong>in</strong> develop<strong>in</strong>g education policies and programmes<strong>in</strong>volv<strong>in</strong>g artists and schools.Why was the report received with such enthusiasm? It was partly because itcaught a mood and addressed anxieties which many people <strong>in</strong>side and outsideeducation were feel<strong>in</strong>g. So far as policy-makers outside arts education wereconcerned, the impact of the report was <strong>in</strong>creased because we were not mak<strong>in</strong>ga special plea for the arts at a time when curricular self-defence was a naturalreflex. On the contrary, the pr<strong>in</strong>cipal argument is that the arts represent aconception of general education which was seriously at risk <strong>in</strong> the politicalpreoccupation with economic imperatives. We related these arguments to theprevail<strong>in</strong>g political agenda show<strong>in</strong>g that this approach to education was morenot less important <strong>in</strong> chang<strong>in</strong>g social and economic circumstances.<strong>The</strong> report was well received by arts educators for the same reasons and forputt<strong>in</strong>g the case strongly on their behalf. But <strong>in</strong> present<strong>in</strong>g the case for thearts to policy-makers we also wanted to offer a particular view of the issuesto practitioners. <strong>The</strong> report did not set out to offer a new theory of artseducation, but it did attempt a new synthesis. We were concerned that somearts practice <strong>in</strong> schools was locked <strong>in</strong>to a limited conception of <strong>in</strong>dividualdevelopment through creative self-expression that ignored or marg<strong>in</strong>alised theequal importance of develop<strong>in</strong>g critical and technical skills <strong>in</strong> the arts and agrow<strong>in</strong>g understand<strong>in</strong>g of other people's work. <strong>The</strong> cultural dimension of artseducation is discussed <strong>in</strong> Chapter 3 and is a theme of grow<strong>in</strong>g importance.<strong>The</strong> report has not been without its critics, of course, and there are someserious omissions. In particular it does not deal with the implications for artseducation of developments <strong>in</strong> film and television nor with related issues <strong>in</strong>media education. It deals <strong>in</strong> a little detail with the concept of creativity, butmuch less fully with the concept of aesthetic development. <strong>The</strong>se importantissues have been taken up <strong>in</strong> other publications.<strong>The</strong> publication of <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> stimulated a wide variety of practicalprojects, many with the support of the <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>. Cheshireeducation authority sent copies of the report to all schools and followed thisup with <strong>in</strong>-service courses and its own book of good practice, Visions andIdeas (Penn 1985). Warwickshire established an <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> project toenhance the arts <strong>in</strong> the curricula of a pilot group of secondary schools anddissem<strong>in</strong>ated the results across the county. A conference to discuss the reportorganised <strong>in</strong> 1984 by the London Association of <strong>Arts</strong> Centres led to a jo<strong>in</strong>tenquiry with ILEA, GLC and Greater London <strong>Arts</strong> and to a detailed reporton <strong>Arts</strong>, Education and Community (MacDonald 1987).In 1985 the National <strong>Foundation</strong> for Educational Research (NFER) respondedto our call for a national review of the arts <strong>in</strong> teacher tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g and publishedits own major report on this subject (Cleave and Sharp 1986). Subsequentlythe NFER undertook a detailed survey and evaluation of the roles of artistsxiii


<strong>in</strong> schools,and has published a range of related tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g materials for artistsand teachers (Sharp and Dust 1990). <strong>The</strong> Further Education Unit (FEU)responded to the report by mount<strong>in</strong>g its own enquiry and consultation<strong>in</strong>to Creative and <strong>Arts</strong> Activities <strong>in</strong> Further Education (FEU 1987), andcommissioned a further survey of good practice.<strong>The</strong> largest and most ambitious <strong>in</strong>itiative to come from <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong>report has been the SCDC/NCC <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> project which was launched<strong>in</strong> 1985 and concluded <strong>in</strong> Autumn 1989. <strong>The</strong> positive response to the reportfrom schools, LEAs and arts organisations was followed by many requests forpractical support to act on its recommendations. In 1983 Sir Keith Josephabolished the <strong>Schools</strong> Council, and <strong>in</strong> 1984 he established the SchoolCurriculum Development Committee (SCDC). Early <strong>in</strong> 1984, Peter Br<strong>in</strong>sonand I approached the SCDC with an outl<strong>in</strong>e proposal for a major developmentproject 'to give practical support to schools and local education authorities <strong>in</strong>develop<strong>in</strong>g the place of the arts <strong>in</strong> the education of all pupils'.SCDC was about to write to all LEAs for comment on its proposed priorities<strong>in</strong> curriculum development and <strong>in</strong>cluded <strong>in</strong> them 'an improved education <strong>in</strong>the arts'. Over seventy of the one hundred and four LEAs <strong>in</strong> England andWales replied to the SCDC circular, and of these over fifty urged that a toppriority should be given to an arts project. Given the prevail<strong>in</strong>g politicalemphasis on science and technology this was an extraord<strong>in</strong>ary mandate fromeducationalists for a broader view of national priorities.A national sem<strong>in</strong>ar helped to draw up the brief for the project which waslaunched by SCDC <strong>in</strong> September 1985. Follow<strong>in</strong>g the spirit of the report, the<strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> project was concerned with all the arts—music, dance, drama,visual and verbal arts—and it covered the whole five to sixteen age range.Over seventy LEAs and the ma<strong>in</strong> arts fund<strong>in</strong>g agencies attended brief<strong>in</strong>gs onthe proposed project and forty LEAs submitted detailed bids to be <strong>in</strong>volved.This was a remarkable level of enthusiasm, given that the project was notoffer<strong>in</strong>g any direct fund<strong>in</strong>g to the LEAs. Dur<strong>in</strong>g the three-year developmentprogramme the project's central team worked with full-time co-ord<strong>in</strong>ators <strong>in</strong>eighteen authorities to organise over three hundred programmes ofdevelopment <strong>in</strong> over two hundred primary and secondary schools. <strong>The</strong> projectbrought together development groups of teachers from all arts discipl<strong>in</strong>es toidentify common problems and to tackle them jo<strong>in</strong>tly.<strong>The</strong> work of the project spanned four of the most turbulent years <strong>in</strong> the historyof state education. Launched at the height of the teachers' <strong>in</strong>dustrial action<strong>in</strong> September 1985, it concluded <strong>in</strong> September 1989 on the eve of the<strong>in</strong>troduction of the National Curriculum. With the enactment of the EducationReform Bill <strong>in</strong> Autumn 1988, SCDC was itself abolished to be replaced bythe National Curriculum Council (NCC) which assumed responsibility for the<strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> project.One of the curiosities of the 1987 General Election campaign was the extentto which op<strong>in</strong>ion had changed on the question of a national curriculum. In1976 James Callaghan had been vilified by educationalists and oppos<strong>in</strong>gpoliticians for even suggest<strong>in</strong>g such a th<strong>in</strong>g. Ten years later, campaign<strong>in</strong>gxiv


politicians on all sides were compet<strong>in</strong>g to say who thought of the idea first.By 1987 the value of a national curriculum was almost taken for granted. <strong>The</strong>issue was, and rema<strong>in</strong>s, 'What sort of national curriculum?'From the po<strong>in</strong>t of view of this report, a national curriculum is greatly to bewelcomed. <strong>The</strong> actual provisions for the arts <strong>in</strong> the Education Reform Act are<strong>in</strong>appropriate and must be challenged. But it would be wrong to suppose agolden age for arts education existed before 1988, which the NationalCurriculum has now swept away. Our reason for publish<strong>in</strong>g the report <strong>in</strong> thefirst place was that the arts were historically undervalued and poorly providedfor <strong>in</strong> state schools. Our aim was and is to secure a full and balanced artseducation for all pupils as a matter of basic educational entitlement. This isbest done with<strong>in</strong> an agreed statutory framework <strong>in</strong> all schools. <strong>The</strong> newdifficulty is that the particular provisions of the Education Reform Act forthe arts do not go far enough, and <strong>in</strong> one respect at least are badly misconceived.<strong>The</strong> legislation identifies mathematics, English and science as core subjectsand art and music as two of the other seven foundation subjects. <strong>The</strong> <strong>in</strong>clusionof art and music with<strong>in</strong> the National Curriculum is very important and mayprove to enhance the place of all the arts <strong>in</strong> schools. In terms of the argumentspresented <strong>in</strong> this report, however, there is no reason to elevate these two areasof the arts above others, notably dance and drama. M<strong>in</strong>isters have been keento argue that drama is <strong>in</strong>cluded <strong>in</strong> the National Curriculum with<strong>in</strong> English,and dance as part of PE. This argument betrays a basic misapprehension ofthe nature and relationships of the arts <strong>in</strong> schools. Be<strong>in</strong>g aware of this, theNational Curriculum work<strong>in</strong>g group on English, under the chairmanship ofProfessor Brian Cox, concluded that 'the <strong>in</strong>clusion of drama methods <strong>in</strong>English should not <strong>in</strong> any way replace drama as a subject for specialist study'(DES 1989 Para 8.3).As we argue throughput this report, music, dance, drama, visual arts andverbal arts share similar processes and fulfil related roles <strong>in</strong> education andshould be planned for collectively as a generic area of the curriculum. <strong>The</strong>division of art and music from other arts discipl<strong>in</strong>es and the <strong>in</strong>clusion ofdrama and dance as aspects of English and PE is as <strong>in</strong>appropriate as a divisionbetween, say, chemistry and biology from the rest of science, and the <strong>in</strong>clusionof physics under maths. This is feasible, but misconceived.Sensibly, the National Curriculum identifies 'science' as a generic area of thecurriculum. <strong>The</strong> Secretary of State commissioned a specialist work<strong>in</strong>g groupto identify <strong>in</strong> detail the range and depth of science education appropriate toall pupils, draw<strong>in</strong>g on the varied knowledge and expertise of the variousscientific discipl<strong>in</strong>es (DES 1988). A similar approach is needed <strong>in</strong> the arts andachiev<strong>in</strong>g it is an urgent task. <strong>The</strong> National Curriculum is not set <strong>in</strong> stone.One of the tasks of the NCC is to keep the curriculum under review and toadvise the Secretary of State on proper revisions. A medium-term objectivemust be to ensure a more coherent provision for the arts with<strong>in</strong> an equal andcommon framework for all discipl<strong>in</strong>es.XV


Politicians are not alone <strong>in</strong> resist<strong>in</strong>g the idea of a common policy for the arts.Some arts educators resist it too. <strong>The</strong>y fear that it will lead <strong>in</strong>evitably tocomb<strong>in</strong>ed arts courses and through these to less specialist teach<strong>in</strong>g and lowerstandards of work. <strong>The</strong>re is anxiety too that schools will use such coursescynically to cut overall provision. Both of these fears have some foundation.Some schools have cut arts provision through comb<strong>in</strong>ed arts and some coursesare superficial and badly thought out. But bad practice does not deny a soundpr<strong>in</strong>ciple. Some comb<strong>in</strong>ed arts courses have generated powerful partnershipsbetween teachers, and new and compell<strong>in</strong>g opportunities for pupils. But theargument for a common policy is not only, nor even pr<strong>in</strong>cipally, to do withthe specific issue of comb<strong>in</strong>ed arts.One of the basic tenets of arts education is that the arts help to develop thewide range of pupils' abilities <strong>in</strong> education. But pupils have different abilitiesand aptitudes with<strong>in</strong> the arts themselves. Meet<strong>in</strong>g these differences calls fora whole school policy on the arts and for co-operation among arts teachers <strong>in</strong>the timetable if not <strong>in</strong> the classroom and studio.<strong>The</strong>se curricular arguments are outl<strong>in</strong>ed <strong>in</strong> this report. <strong>The</strong>y have beendeveloped <strong>in</strong> detail <strong>in</strong> the three publications of the <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> projectpublished by Oliver and Boyd under the general title <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> 5-16. <strong>The</strong>sethree publications draw on the project's national development work <strong>in</strong> schoolsfollow<strong>in</strong>g the <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> report and look closely at the new context created<strong>in</strong> schools by the Education Reform Act:1. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> 5-16: A Curriculum FrameworkGiven the many pressures on time and resources, and the wide range ofarts discipl<strong>in</strong>es to consider, schools have repeatedly called for advice onthe sorts of arts provision they might offer. This publication discussesthe central issues for curriculum plann<strong>in</strong>g and assessment and offers ageneral framework of ideas for schools to consider <strong>in</strong> develop<strong>in</strong>g theirarts policies.2. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> 5-16: Practice and Innovation<strong>The</strong> teachers tak<strong>in</strong>g part <strong>in</strong> the project documented over three hundred<strong>in</strong>itiatives to enhance provision for the arts <strong>in</strong> the curriculum. Thispublication draws from this rich reservoir of experience to discuss andillustrate approaches to a range of practical issues from curriculumplann<strong>in</strong>g to improv<strong>in</strong>g cont<strong>in</strong>uity and meet<strong>in</strong>g special educational needs.3. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> 5-16: A Workpack for TeachersCurriculum development <strong>in</strong>volves staff development. <strong>The</strong> workpackoffers ideas, resources and suggestions for organis<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>-serviceworkshops with staff <strong>in</strong> primary and secondary schools and for use <strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>itial tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g courses.<strong>The</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> report has done a great deal to focusattention on the necessity of the arts <strong>in</strong> education, and has mobilised aconsiderable amount of practical action s<strong>in</strong>ce it first appeared. Other developments<strong>in</strong> education have harmonised with the views it presents. In particularxvi


the GCSE exam<strong>in</strong>ation has addressed some of the problems of assessmentwhich we discuss <strong>in</strong> Chapter 6, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g the need for criterion referenc<strong>in</strong>gand the need to assess the practice of the arts as well as criticism and theory.<strong>The</strong> wider effects of the 1986 and 1988 Education Acts have caused all schoolsto review curriculum policies and this has created opportunities, where theirimportance is recognised, for the arts to take their proper place.As evidenced by the response to this report and the subsequent projects, thereare three important features of the national context for arts education whichgive some grounds for optimism:1. <strong>The</strong> grow<strong>in</strong>g recognition of the importance of the arts <strong>in</strong> provid<strong>in</strong>g abroad, balanced and relevant curriculum which addresses young people's<strong>in</strong>dividual aptitudes and abilities.2. <strong>The</strong> recognition of common ground between teachers of different artsdiscipl<strong>in</strong>es and the benefits of co-operation <strong>in</strong> curriculum plann<strong>in</strong>g andprovision.3. <strong>The</strong> <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g practical rapport between education and the professionalarts community.<strong>The</strong>re is too a new understand<strong>in</strong>g of the importance of the arts as part ofsocial policy outside school, especially for young people. Youth organisationsand the youth service are mov<strong>in</strong>g towards the development of arts policiesand programmes (Randell and Myhill 1989), just as arts fund<strong>in</strong>g agencieshave begun to <strong>in</strong>clude work with young people among their own priorities.Recognis<strong>in</strong>g the significance of these developments, the <strong>Gulbenkian</strong><strong>Foundation</strong> has commissioned a detailed study of the arts and young peopleto follow on <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> report.For all this, the problems fac<strong>in</strong>g the arts <strong>in</strong> schools are still profound, and <strong>in</strong>some respects are worsen<strong>in</strong>g. <strong>The</strong>re is noth<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the new situation to preventschools mak<strong>in</strong>g fuller provision than previously for the arts, and some schoolswill. <strong>The</strong> concern is that schools could equally well choose to pare provisionfor the arts to the statutory m<strong>in</strong>imum, and some schools will. <strong>The</strong> majordifficulties of attitude and understand<strong>in</strong>g which we identified <strong>in</strong> 1982 are stillendemic <strong>in</strong> the education system, and the problems of resources whichillustrate them are, if anyth<strong>in</strong>g, more serious than ever.<strong>The</strong>re are concerns about the numbers of teachers com<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>to arts education.<strong>The</strong> 1986 NFER report pa<strong>in</strong>ted a depress<strong>in</strong>gly bleak picture of teacher tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gat primary level. Too few general teachers have a clear grasp of the importanceof the arts, let alone the confidence and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g to teach them adequately.<strong>The</strong>se issues have been confronted <strong>in</strong> a jo<strong>in</strong>t report from <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> andNFER, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> the Primary School: Reform<strong>in</strong>g Teacher Education (Ross1989). <strong>The</strong> supply of specialist teachers is also caus<strong>in</strong>g alarm. One estimateus<strong>in</strong>g DES figures anticipates a shortage of two thousand music teachers bythe mid 1990s. It rema<strong>in</strong>s to be seen what effects the Education Reform Actwill have on the provision and take-up of courses <strong>in</strong> dance and drama.All this po<strong>in</strong>ts to the critical role of <strong>in</strong>-service education and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g ifteachers are to meet the challenges of education <strong>in</strong> the 1990s. <strong>The</strong> arts haveyet to be given any priority with<strong>in</strong> the national fund<strong>in</strong>g arrangements forxvii


<strong>in</strong>-service tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g. <strong>Arts</strong> educators have been <strong>in</strong>ventive <strong>in</strong> us<strong>in</strong>g other categoriesto support their work—such as multicultural and special education—but thisis not the po<strong>in</strong>t. <strong>The</strong> arts must be given priority <strong>in</strong> their own right if the workis to be susta<strong>in</strong>ed, as it must, let alone move forward as it should.For all these reasons, this new Introduction to <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> is not acelebration of a task achieved but a reaffirmation of how much is yet to bedone. <strong>The</strong> report is still all too relevant <strong>in</strong> describ<strong>in</strong>g the k<strong>in</strong>d of educationthat all young people urgently need, but that most are still to have.Ken Rob<strong>in</strong>sonUniversity of Warwickxv<strong>in</strong>


REFERENCES<strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> Project (1990)Association of Chambers ofCommerce (1979)Cleave, S and Sharp, C (1986)Department of Education andScience (1989)Department of Education andScience (1988)Further Education Unit (1987)MacDonald, I (1987)Penn, D(1985)Randell, N and Myhill, S (1989)Ross, M (1989)Sharp, C and Dust, K (1990)1. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> 5-16: A CurriculumFramework2. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> 5-16: Practice andInnovation3. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> 5-16: A Workpack forTeachersOliver and BoydEducation and EmploymentACC, London<strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong>: A Preparation to TeachNFEREnglish for Ages 5 to 16: Proposals ofthe Secretary of State for Educationand Science and the Secretary ofState for WalesDES and the Welsh OfficeScience for Ages 5 to 16: Proposals ofthe Secretary of State for Educationand Science and the Secretary ofState for WalesDES and the Welsh OfficeCreative and <strong>Arts</strong> Activities <strong>in</strong>Further EducationFurther Education Unit<strong>Arts</strong>, Education and CommunityGreater London <strong>Arts</strong>Visions and Ideas: A Report on the<strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> Cheshire <strong>Schools</strong>Cheshire County CouncilKaleidoscope: <strong>Arts</strong> Work that WorksYouth Clubs UK, Leicester<strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> the Primary School:Reform<strong>in</strong>g Teacher Education<strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong>Artists <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong>Bedford Square Pressxix


<strong>The</strong> issues1 Reasons for In the widespread discussions which have been tak<strong>in</strong>g placethe report about the school curriculum, the arts — dance, drama, music,visual arts, literature — have been given little attention. <strong>The</strong>major reports and statements from the Secretaries of State,from HMI and from the <strong>Schools</strong> Council, for one reason oranother, have <strong>in</strong>cluded only brief references to them. We considerany neglect of the arts <strong>in</strong> education to be a seriousmatter. <strong>The</strong> arts have an essential place <strong>in</strong> the balancededucation of our children and young people. This is truewhatever the social and economic circumstances of the day.In our open<strong>in</strong>g chapters we will argue the educational casefor this. We are m<strong>in</strong>dful, however, that any contemporarydiscussion of education has to be set aga<strong>in</strong>st the backgroundof three ma<strong>in</strong> issues. <strong>The</strong>se give an added urgency to ourarguments:a the profound and long-term changes <strong>in</strong> the patterns ofemployment and of unemployment, especially amongyoung peopleb the chang<strong>in</strong>g relationships between education andsociety as a whole which must result from thise the rate of cultural change <strong>in</strong> Brita<strong>in</strong>Exist<strong>in</strong>g levels of provision for the arts <strong>in</strong> education areactually be<strong>in</strong>g threatened due to:a the effects of fall<strong>in</strong>g schools rollsb cuts <strong>in</strong> public expendituree some of the demands of educational accountability<strong>The</strong> case for the arts <strong>in</strong> schools does not amount to specialplead<strong>in</strong>g. It derives from the need for a system of educationwhich takes account both of contemporary social circum-


stances and of the perennial and varied needs of children andyoung people, for a broad-based curriculum rather than onewhich is too occupied with academic learn<strong>in</strong>g.We have a general concern for the k<strong>in</strong>ds of curricula nowneeded <strong>in</strong> schools. We have a specific concern with thearts. What benefits can the arts confer on the school curriculumand what steps can be taken to realise them? We seethese general and specific concerns as <strong>in</strong>timately related <strong>in</strong> anumber of ways.2 Education <strong>The</strong> roles of schools <strong>in</strong> prepar<strong>in</strong>g children for employmentandhave been emphasised repeatedly <strong>in</strong> the current discussionsemployment on the curriculum. In the secondary school a premium isoften placed on exam<strong>in</strong>ation courses and academic qualifications.We believe this emphasis to be misplaced for threereasons.a Liv<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the presentTo see education only as a preparation for someth<strong>in</strong>gthat happens later, risks overlook<strong>in</strong>g the needs andopportunities of the moment. Children do not hatch<strong>in</strong>to adults after a secluded <strong>in</strong>cubation at school. <strong>The</strong>yare liv<strong>in</strong>g their lives now. Help<strong>in</strong>g them towards an<strong>in</strong>dependent and worthwhile life <strong>in</strong> the adult world ofthe future pre-supposes help<strong>in</strong>g them to make sense ofand deal with the experiences which they suffer orenjoy <strong>in</strong> the present. <strong>The</strong> roles they adopt later andthe employment they will seek will partly depend onwhat they become as <strong>in</strong>dividuals — what capacitiesand capabilities are developed or neglected — dur<strong>in</strong>gthe formative years of education. It follows that schoolsshould enrich and broaden children's experiencesthrough a broad and balanced curriculum. Literacy andnumeracy are an important part of education. <strong>The</strong>yshould not be mistaken for the whole of it.b Structural unemploymentWe face a future <strong>in</strong> which opportunities <strong>in</strong> many acceptedareas of employment will cont<strong>in</strong>ue to decl<strong>in</strong>e. Levels ofunemployment are especially high among young peopleand school leavers. 1 This is not a pass<strong>in</strong>g feature ofthe recession. It is the result of long-term structuralchanges <strong>in</strong> the <strong>in</strong>dustrial economies. One aspect of thisis the development of new technologies. <strong>The</strong>se threatenvery much higher levels of unemployment and redundancy<strong>in</strong> future, not only <strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>dustry but also <strong>in</strong> commerceand <strong>in</strong> the professions. 2 All this <strong>in</strong>dicates profoundchanges <strong>in</strong> the established patterns of work<strong>in</strong>g life and


stresses the need for a broad approach to educationrather than a narrow emphasis on vocational qualifications.Many young people now at schools may neverget jobs — not through lack of qualifications but throughlack of jobs. This problem is not peculiar to Brita<strong>in</strong>. It is<strong>in</strong>ternational. Whatever steps are taken to deal with this,it is clear that there must be a response with<strong>in</strong> theschools to what is tak<strong>in</strong>g place outside them. To seeeducation ma<strong>in</strong>ly as a preparation for forms of workthat are fast disappear<strong>in</strong>g is clearly short-sighted.e Academic constra<strong>in</strong>ts<strong>The</strong> emphasis on education for employment is uphold<strong>in</strong>gtraditional pressures <strong>in</strong> schools for academic atta<strong>in</strong>ment.<strong>The</strong>se tighten the grip of exam<strong>in</strong>ation courses onthe curriculum and make it resistant to change. Academicsuccess is also often pursued at the expense ofother equally important abilities <strong>in</strong> young people. <strong>The</strong>undervalu<strong>in</strong>g of these other capabilities <strong>in</strong>stils <strong>in</strong>to manypupils an undeserved sense of failure and wastes enormousreserves of talent and potential.Society needs and values more than academic abilities. Childrenand young people have much more to offer. <strong>The</strong> artsexemplify some of these other capacities — of <strong>in</strong>tuition,creativity, sensibility and practical skills. We ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> thatan education <strong>in</strong> these is quite as important for all childrenas an education of the more academic k<strong>in</strong>d and that notto have this is to stunt and distort their growth as <strong>in</strong>telligent,feel<strong>in</strong>g and capable <strong>in</strong>dividuals.3 Cultural It is not just the patterns of work<strong>in</strong>g life which are chang<strong>in</strong>g.change <strong>The</strong> general culture of our society is becom<strong>in</strong>g ever morecomplex and diverse. We live <strong>in</strong> an <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly multi-racialand multi-cultural society <strong>in</strong> which we must learn to understandand respond to other ways of see<strong>in</strong>g and do<strong>in</strong>g. Educationmust enable children to do this. We share the view ofHMI who concluded <strong>in</strong> their survey of Primary Education <strong>in</strong>England (DBS, 1978) that much more might be done <strong>in</strong>schools'. . . to make all children aware of other beliefs and toextend their understand<strong>in</strong>g of the multi-cultural natureof contemporary society.' (DBS, 1978, para 8.24)We are sure that, <strong>in</strong> the forms of education needed <strong>in</strong> thischang<strong>in</strong>g situation, the arts and the pr<strong>in</strong>ciples and methods ofteach<strong>in</strong>g they represent, will prove to be more and not less


significant than at present.4 <strong>The</strong> need We would ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> the value of the arts <strong>in</strong> education whateverfor action the social or economic circumstances of the day. <strong>The</strong> reasonswe have given make <strong>in</strong>creased provision and respect for thema matter of urgency. For the reasons we are about to give,however, actual provision for the arts <strong>in</strong> schools, so far fromgett<strong>in</strong>g better, is fac<strong>in</strong>g serious deterioration.a Fall<strong>in</strong>g rolls<strong>The</strong> DES has estimated 3 that the decl<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong> the birthratefrom the mid-1960s and <strong>in</strong>to the 1970s will result <strong>in</strong> afall <strong>in</strong> the primary school population from 4.7 millions<strong>in</strong> 1977 to 3.3 millions <strong>in</strong> 1986. It is thought that thenumbers <strong>in</strong> secondary schools will fall from 4 millions <strong>in</strong>1977 to 2.8 millions <strong>in</strong> 1991.<strong>The</strong>re are many problems <strong>in</strong> prospect, as ProfessorEric Briault and his team (1980) have made clear. Aparticular danger is posed to the teach<strong>in</strong>g of specialistand m<strong>in</strong>ority subjects as staff<strong>in</strong>g levels need to bereduced. As some schools close down altogether, there isthe likelihood of specialist facilities and spaces fall<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>to dis-use. This affects the arts <strong>in</strong> two ways. First, theteach<strong>in</strong>g of the arts discipl<strong>in</strong>es requires specialist skills<strong>in</strong> teachers and specialist facilities: <strong>in</strong>struments, studios,and so on. <strong>The</strong> availability of these is threatened.Second, <strong>in</strong> some schools and authorities, the arts arestill seen as m<strong>in</strong>ority activities and are at particularrisk <strong>in</strong> the search for economies.b Cuts <strong>in</strong> expenditureIn February 1981 HMI reported on the effects of cuts <strong>in</strong>public spend<strong>in</strong>g on education. 4 In several passages thereport comments specifically on the adverse effects onexist<strong>in</strong>g provision for the arts. <strong>The</strong>se come through staffredundancies, reductions <strong>in</strong> part-time and peripateticteachers and through deterioration or the simple lack offacilities and equipment.A recent series of articles <strong>in</strong> the Times EducationalSupplement has also drawn attention to the damagebe<strong>in</strong>g done through retirement, redundancy and redeploymentof arts specialists both <strong>in</strong> schools and <strong>in</strong>the advisory service. In a letter to <strong>The</strong> Times, the Chairmanof the Drama Board reports that <strong>in</strong> the past 12months,'. . . no fewer than ten authorities have redeployedtheir drama staff or prematurely retired their drama


adviser. Expensive drama studios and equipment areunused whilst local amateur groups who would beglad to use them are prohibited from do<strong>in</strong>g so by thehigh cost of hire.' (<strong>The</strong> Times, 10th February 1981)Nationally the situation is bleak and becom<strong>in</strong>g bleakeras one authority after another is forced <strong>in</strong>to mak<strong>in</strong>g cuts<strong>in</strong> its budget for music, drama and the other arts. Musiceducation is gett<strong>in</strong>g savage treatment: the first victimsare often the peripatetic teachers. In Leicestershire, forexample, the Education Committee was asked to reduceby 25% its expenditure on music, drama and dance <strong>in</strong>1981/82. Such actions are not just a retrenchment <strong>in</strong>the service but a threat to its very existence.Spend<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the arts has never been profligate. Whatsuccesses have been achieved — and <strong>in</strong> the past 20 yearsespecially there have been a great many of them — haveresulted from hard work, good-will and self-help. <strong>The</strong>danger now is that spend<strong>in</strong>g cuts, which may make smallsav<strong>in</strong>gs when compared with the total education budgetof any authority, will devastate the provision for arts <strong>in</strong>education.e Exam<strong>in</strong>ations and accountability<strong>The</strong> debate on the school curriculum was prompted <strong>in</strong>part by calls for greater accountability <strong>in</strong> education. <strong>The</strong>problems here for the arts do not lie <strong>in</strong> the need foraccountability but <strong>in</strong> the forms it is so often assumed itmust take. Performance <strong>in</strong> public exam<strong>in</strong>ations is stilltaken as the ma<strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>dex of the success of a school.Any pressures to raise standards of education tendtherefore to be transmitted through the exam<strong>in</strong>ationsystem. 5 Some Boards have sought to develop moreflexible forms of exam<strong>in</strong>ation and we welcome this.Nevertheless, the overall style and content of traditionalacademic exam<strong>in</strong>ations is still a dom<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>fluence onthe curriculum of secondary schools especially. HMIdescribed some of the effects of this <strong>in</strong> their survey ofAspects of Secondary Education (DBS, 1979). Look<strong>in</strong>gat the progression of work <strong>in</strong>to the fourth and fifthyears, they state:'It was apparent that the style and ultimately thequality of work... were dom<strong>in</strong>ated by the requirements,actual or perceived, of public exam<strong>in</strong>ations.<strong>Schools</strong> are naturally anxious to secure exam<strong>in</strong>ationqualifications for their pupils. <strong>The</strong>y are also consciousof the degree to which the effectiveness of schools is


likely to be measured publicly by exam<strong>in</strong>ationresults. In consequence they tend to enter as manypupils as possible for as many exam<strong>in</strong>ations as possible;they also tend to adopt teach<strong>in</strong>g approacheswhich are thought necessary to secure exam<strong>in</strong>ationsuccess.' (DBS, 1979, p262)In practice, those activities which are not exam<strong>in</strong>ablesuffer <strong>in</strong> terms of space, staff<strong>in</strong>g, time, facilities — andstatus. As a result, more and more teachers are turn<strong>in</strong>g tothe exam<strong>in</strong>ation system to legitimise what they aredo<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the arts. We doubt the long-term wisdom ofthis for three reasons.First, many exam<strong>in</strong>ation results are given <strong>in</strong> the formof grades or percentages. Only limited aspects of the artslend themselves to this sort of mark<strong>in</strong>g. <strong>The</strong> arts are noless important for that. Second, the exam<strong>in</strong>ation systemis an uneasy mixture of a system of appraisal and one ofselection. Given the chang<strong>in</strong>g relationships between<strong>in</strong>itial education, further and higher education and theworld of work, it may be that these functions need tobe more clearly differentiated <strong>in</strong> schools. Third, we donot see that opportunities to pursue the arts <strong>in</strong> schoolsshould be limited to those with a special <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> ga<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gqualifications <strong>in</strong> them through exam<strong>in</strong>ations. Andfor those who do, we would cont<strong>in</strong>ue to question theacademic bias of many exist<strong>in</strong>g courses and schemes ofexam<strong>in</strong>ation.Although we firmly agree that the arts should beaccountable along with other aspects of education, wewant to propose some alternative strategies.d Supply and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g of teachers<strong>Arts</strong> teach<strong>in</strong>g, like all teach<strong>in</strong>g, depends for its qualityand effectiveness on the supply and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g of teachers.<strong>The</strong> reductions <strong>in</strong> teacher tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g have led to theclosure of many arts courses. <strong>The</strong> movement to an allgraduateprofession has <strong>in</strong>creased the academic pressuresand reduced the practical component <strong>in</strong> thosecourses which survive. <strong>The</strong> result is a shortage of confidentand qualified arts teachers com<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>to theprofession. <strong>The</strong> present low status of the arts, for thereasons we have given, may discourage others fromseek<strong>in</strong>g such tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g.We see a need to ensure a sufficient number and rangeof teachers with specialist skills, <strong>in</strong> the arts no less than<strong>in</strong> other areas of the curriculum. In view of the manychanges <strong>in</strong> schools and <strong>in</strong> the tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g of teachers there8


is a need, <strong>in</strong> achiev<strong>in</strong>g this, to improve the quality of<strong>in</strong>-service tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g and advisory work. We very muchregret that economies are be<strong>in</strong>g made <strong>in</strong> these two vitalareas of education and want to emphasise the dangers <strong>in</strong>this, <strong>in</strong> both the short- and the long-term, for thegeneral quality of education.e Co-ord<strong>in</strong>ation and cont<strong>in</strong>uityWe are deal<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> this report with the value of the arts <strong>in</strong>all schools, for all children. Some of the problems wehave touched on lie outside the immediate control ofschools and teachers. Some others do not. In particular,there are those which arise from a lack of co-ord<strong>in</strong>ationand cont<strong>in</strong>uity <strong>in</strong> arts education. <strong>The</strong>re are three aspectsto this. First, there is little contact between teacherswork<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> different arts — even with<strong>in</strong> the same schools.Second, there is little co-ord<strong>in</strong>ation between the threema<strong>in</strong> sectors of education, primary, secondary andtertiary, and, as a result, too little cont<strong>in</strong>uity <strong>in</strong> children'sand young people's arts education. Third, there is toolittle contact between educationalists and professionalartists. We see a need to tackle these problems ofliaison and want to propose some strategies for do<strong>in</strong>gthis and to br<strong>in</strong>g attention to exist<strong>in</strong>g ways <strong>in</strong> which thisis be<strong>in</strong>g done.5 Attitudes <strong>The</strong>se are some of the many practical problems confront<strong>in</strong>gto the arts the development of the arts <strong>in</strong> schools. Some of them are todo with a lack of resources: others are not. <strong>The</strong>y are theresult of long-established attitudes towards the arts whichdeprive them of an equitable share of the resources which doexist. To those who see education ma<strong>in</strong>ly as a preparation forwork, it may seem that the arts are unimportant for children<strong>in</strong> schools unless they <strong>in</strong>tend to make a career <strong>in</strong> them. Or, ifthey have a value, it is merely as leisure time pursuits outsidethe formal curriculum. For those who see education ma<strong>in</strong>lyas the pursuit of academic achievement, the arts may seemunimportant except for 'less able' children.We seek to correct such misconceptions. In do<strong>in</strong>g so, wewill reject any tendency to polarise the issues. We do notaccept that the quality of education can be improved only byfocus<strong>in</strong>g on high standards of literacy and numeracy througha specialised curriculum; by choos<strong>in</strong>g between, for example,science or arts, vocational qualifications or education forleisure. We reject these polarities for two reasons. First, allof these should be represented <strong>in</strong> a well-balanced curriculum.Second, each stands to ga<strong>in</strong> through be<strong>in</strong>g taught <strong>in</strong> conjuctionwith the others. As HMI have <strong>in</strong>dicated, literacy and numeracy


seem to improve when taught as part of a broad-basedcurriculum. 6We are not argu<strong>in</strong>g aga<strong>in</strong>st the pursuit of academic excellence.We are argu<strong>in</strong>g that the level of concern with this <strong>in</strong>schools is misguided, wasteful and unjustified — socially,educationally and economically. What children and youngpeople urgently need is a varied general education which seesthe acquisition of knowledge and practical skills as <strong>in</strong>tegralparts of personal development.6 All of the Our arguments <strong>in</strong> this report refer to all of the arts — music,arts dance, drama, poetry, literature, visual and plastic arts. Wedo not deal with them separately because we want to emphasisewhat they have <strong>in</strong> common — both <strong>in</strong> what they jo<strong>in</strong>tlyoffer education and <strong>in</strong> the problems they jo<strong>in</strong>tly face. Instress<strong>in</strong>g these po<strong>in</strong>ts we also recognise that there is anoverlapp<strong>in</strong>g relationship between the arts and the crafts, aswell as new possibilities <strong>in</strong> what is now known as design education.We welcome, therefore, the recent formation of theEducation Committee of the Crafts Council and their <strong>in</strong>vestigationof the teach<strong>in</strong>g of crafts <strong>in</strong> schools. We lookforward to be<strong>in</strong>g able to clarify further the nature of theserelationships <strong>in</strong> the light of their work. 77 <strong>The</strong> arts As a result of this Inquiry we see the arts mak<strong>in</strong>g vital conandeducation tributions to children's education <strong>in</strong> six ma<strong>in</strong> areas whichwe discuss <strong>in</strong> detail <strong>in</strong> the com<strong>in</strong>g chapters:10a In develop<strong>in</strong>g the full variety of human <strong>in</strong>telligencePhilosophers, educationalists and psychologists <strong>in</strong> a longtradition agree that human rationality is differentiated<strong>in</strong>to a number of dist<strong>in</strong>ctive modes of understand<strong>in</strong>g.<strong>The</strong>se are expressed <strong>in</strong> the vary<strong>in</strong>g languages of, forexample, gesture, number, deduction and <strong>in</strong>duction, ofmorals, religion and aesthetic judgement.<strong>The</strong> logico-deductive aspects of academic study areimportant. <strong>The</strong> problem is that other aspects of <strong>in</strong>telligenceare often seen as less important or even opposedto this. We emphasise the equal value of experience andachievement <strong>in</strong> these other areas of human capability.<strong>The</strong> arts are fundamental ways of organis<strong>in</strong>g our understand<strong>in</strong>gof the world and call on profound qualities ofdiscipl<strong>in</strong>e and <strong>in</strong>sight. <strong>The</strong>y must be <strong>in</strong>cluded <strong>in</strong> educationwherever schools are concerned to develop thefull range of children's <strong>in</strong>telligence and abilities.b In develop<strong>in</strong>g the ability for creative thought and actionAs the rate of change accelerates <strong>in</strong> all areas of social


life, two qualities <strong>in</strong> young people are becom<strong>in</strong>g moreimportant: those of capability and adaptability.Academic values <strong>in</strong> school are over-valued when theydistract education from the practical world <strong>in</strong> whichyoung people live and must eventually make their way.Industry and commerce want those enter<strong>in</strong>g employmentto show powers of <strong>in</strong>novation, <strong>in</strong>itiative and application<strong>in</strong> solv<strong>in</strong>g problems and pursu<strong>in</strong>g opportunities.<strong>The</strong>se are widely held to be pre-requisites for economichealth. For the grow<strong>in</strong>g numbers of those for whomconventional employment is ceas<strong>in</strong>g to be an option,these powers may be more important. Creative thoughtand action should be fostered <strong>in</strong> all areas of education.In the arts they are central.e In the education of feel<strong>in</strong>g and sensibilityNo sensible person would doubt the value of <strong>in</strong>tellectualactivity and development. <strong>The</strong> danger lies <strong>in</strong>the separation of this from other capabilities. Ma<strong>in</strong>streamWestern philosophy s<strong>in</strong>ce the 17th century hasheld that feel<strong>in</strong>gs and emotions disrupt the pursuit ofknowledge through the <strong>in</strong>tellect and should be disregarded<strong>in</strong> education. Some have argued aga<strong>in</strong>st thisthat the free expression of emotion is essential tohealthy development, and this is the value of the arts <strong>in</strong>schools. Both views divide <strong>in</strong>tellect from emotion, thusneglect<strong>in</strong>g the <strong>in</strong>timate relationships between them. <strong>The</strong>arts are not outpour<strong>in</strong>gs of emotion. <strong>The</strong>y are discipl<strong>in</strong>edforms of <strong>in</strong>quiry and expression through which toorganise feel<strong>in</strong>gs and ideas about experience. <strong>The</strong> needfor young people to do this, rather than just to give ventto emotions or to have them ignored, must be respondedto <strong>in</strong> schools. <strong>The</strong> arts provide the natural means for this.d In the exploration of valuesFeel<strong>in</strong>gs are <strong>in</strong>timately connected with values. Many, forexample, are considered as vices or virtues: lust, envy,hope, despair etc. <strong>The</strong> education of feel<strong>in</strong>g is thus concernedwith moral issues and the exploration of values.A mislead<strong>in</strong>g slogan for a national newspaper claims"Times change, values don't'. On the contrary, changes<strong>in</strong> social values are among the ways <strong>in</strong> which the chang<strong>in</strong>gtimes are registered. An education which sets out tohelp young people make sense of and contribute to theworld <strong>in</strong> which they live, must be concerned withhelp<strong>in</strong>g them to <strong>in</strong>vestigate their own values and thoseof others. Artists are characteristically concerned withsuch th<strong>in</strong>gs: with the evaluation and revaluation of the11


world around them.e In understand<strong>in</strong>g cultural change and differences<strong>The</strong> arts are characteristic expressions of any cultureand evolve as part of it. In a multi-cultural society suchas ours, schools have important responsibilities withregard to cultural education. <strong>The</strong> arts are importanthere for two reasons. First, both the practice and thediscrim<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g enjoyment of the arts <strong>in</strong>volve observation,analysis and evaluation of personal and social experience.Second, the products of the arts — plays, pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>gs,literature, music, danc<strong>in</strong>g, sculpture and so on — are<strong>in</strong>tegral parts of the social culture and are among thoseth<strong>in</strong>gs children need to experience <strong>in</strong> com<strong>in</strong>g to understandit.f In develop<strong>in</strong>g physical and perceptual skillsChildren need to be enabled, not only to have ideasabout the world, but to act <strong>in</strong> it. Natural abilities mustbe developed <strong>in</strong>to practical skills. Work <strong>in</strong> the arts canlead to the development of a range of qualities and skillswith a wide application and value.For all these reasons we see encourag<strong>in</strong>g children to work <strong>in</strong>the arts and to appreciate the work of others as of equal andcentral importance <strong>in</strong> schools.8 <strong>The</strong> We are conscious that political <strong>in</strong>terest has become focusedcurriculum on ways of cutt<strong>in</strong>g the cost of education while gear<strong>in</strong>g itdebate more closely to economic needs. <strong>The</strong> present government hasgone further down this road than any other; but cuts <strong>in</strong>spend<strong>in</strong>g and more <strong>in</strong>strumental attitudes to education havebecome part of the policy of both major parties. Consequently,the past four years have seen numerous statements,reports, reviews and manifestos about the best route foreducation to take. What attitudes to the arts have emergedfrom these papers?12a <strong>The</strong> Green PaperAmong the first of recent statements was the Government'sCommand Paper (Green Paper), Education <strong>in</strong><strong>Schools</strong>: A Consultative Document (HMSO, 1977).Although much attention is given there to 'the skills ofliteracy and numeracy, the build<strong>in</strong>g blocks of education',the document also speaks of the need for 'balance andbreadth <strong>in</strong> the curriculum for each child at school'(paras 2.13 and 2.23). Accord<strong>in</strong>gly, there is an emphasison other aims of school<strong>in</strong>g, one of which is,


'to teach children about human achievement andaspirations <strong>in</strong> the arts and sciences, <strong>in</strong> religion and <strong>in</strong>the search for a more just social order.' (HMSO, 1977,para 1.19)In our own view, teach<strong>in</strong>g people about achievementsand aspirations <strong>in</strong> the arts may amount to little morethan provid<strong>in</strong>g courses <strong>in</strong> the history and sociology ofthe arts. <strong>Arts</strong> education, as we have <strong>in</strong>dicated, <strong>in</strong>volves agreat deal more than that.b Curriculum 11—16<strong>The</strong> balance of comment was partly redressed <strong>in</strong> Curriculum11—16 (DBS, 1977 and 1979), a contribution tothe debate by a group of HMIs. <strong>The</strong>y wanted to putforward for consideration 'a much broader curriculumfor all pupils <strong>in</strong> secondary schools.' As their start<strong>in</strong>gpo<strong>in</strong>t they look to the aims and objectives which pupils'have a reasonable right to expect', given that they areobliged to be <strong>in</strong> school until they are 16. Among themost important outcomes of education they saw thefollow<strong>in</strong>g:'. .. pupils are members of a complicated civilisationand culture, and it is reasonable to argue that theyhave noth<strong>in</strong>g less than a right to be <strong>in</strong>troduced to aselection of its essential elements. Options systemsmay well prevent this from happen<strong>in</strong>g: the freedomto stop study<strong>in</strong>g history or art or music or biology at14 means that pupils are not be<strong>in</strong>g given the <strong>in</strong>troductionto their own cultural <strong>in</strong>heritance to which webelieve they have a right. No one disputes the irrefutablecase for basic skills and techniques: equallythere is a case for cultural experiences and an <strong>in</strong>troductionto values.' (DBS, 1977, p5)<strong>The</strong> HMIs go on to say that:'We see the curriculum to be concerned with <strong>in</strong>troduc<strong>in</strong>gpupils dur<strong>in</strong>g the period of compulsoryschool<strong>in</strong>g to certa<strong>in</strong> essential "areas of experience." '(DBS, 1977, p6)One of these is the 'aesthetic and creative'. <strong>The</strong>y recommendthat work <strong>in</strong> art/craft/music should form part ofthe compulsory curriculum. As far as it goes, this commandsour full support. We want to take the argumentfurther. For on what grounds are these areas of experi-13


ence essential to education? Why these rather than anyothers? And of what rights do we speak here? <strong>The</strong>seare fundamental questions <strong>in</strong> any attempt to justifycurriculum choices. We believe that the case for the artsneeds to be strengthened and it is part of our purpose toattempt this.e Recent documentsOther recent reports have also mentioned the arts.References are made and paragraphs devoted to them <strong>in</strong>Primary Education <strong>in</strong> England (DBS, 1978), but thisdoes not <strong>in</strong>clude any susta<strong>in</strong>ed discussion of the arts. InAspects of Secondary Education (DBS, 1979) there isdetailed comment on language, mathematics, scienceand personal development. That survey's brief did not<strong>in</strong>clude a consideration of the arts. In the Government'sreport on Local Authority Arrangements for the SchoolCurriculum there is detailed comment on English,mathematics, modern languages, science and religiouseducation but aga<strong>in</strong> no methodical consideration of anyof the arts. <strong>The</strong> Inspectorate aga<strong>in</strong> mentions aestheticeducation <strong>in</strong> A View of the Curriculum (1980) but theirremarks are very general. Similarly, there are scarcelyany references to any of the major art forms <strong>in</strong> the<strong>Schools</strong> Council's scenario of activities for the 1980s,Pr<strong>in</strong>ciple and Priorities (<strong>Schools</strong> Council, 1979) althoughthere are general references to the value of thearts <strong>in</strong> the the Council's more recent document, <strong>The</strong>Practical Curriculum.d <strong>The</strong> School Curriculum<strong>The</strong> statement on <strong>The</strong> School Curriculum issued <strong>in</strong>March 1981 by the Secretaries of State for Educationand Science and for Wales reiterated the need for'balance and breadth'. <strong>The</strong> paper showed a concern,which we share, that schools should respond to thechang<strong>in</strong>g social and economic circumstances. <strong>The</strong>follow<strong>in</strong>g list of broad educational aims was given, 'towhich <strong>in</strong>dividual authorities and schools might refer':i to help pupils to develop lively, enquir<strong>in</strong>g m<strong>in</strong>ds,the ability to question and argue rationally and toapply themselves to tasks, and physical skillsii to help pupils to acquire knowlege and skillsrelevant to adult life and employment <strong>in</strong> a fastchang<strong>in</strong>gworldiii to help pupils to use language and number effectively14


iv to <strong>in</strong>stil respect for religious and moral values, andtolerance of other races, religions, and ways of lifev to help pupils to understand the world <strong>in</strong> whichthey live, and the <strong>in</strong>ter-dependence of <strong>in</strong>dividuals,groups and nationsvi to help pupils to appreciate human achievementsand aspirations (DBS, 1981, p3)<strong>The</strong>re is much to agree with here, as there is <strong>in</strong> all of thepapers we have mentioned. We f<strong>in</strong>d it all the more surpris<strong>in</strong>g,therefore, that the arts should have had such scant treatment.We believe that it would be a serious matter if this were tolead to low priorities be<strong>in</strong>g given to the arts <strong>in</strong> schools asdiscussions on the curriculum go on. It is aga<strong>in</strong>st such a developmentthat we seek to mobilise, through this report, thestrongest resistance.9 Structure We have divided this report <strong>in</strong>to ten chapters. In the firstof the three we discuss the contributions of the arts to education.report In the subsequent chapters we apply these arguments to thevarious issues we have raised here.In Chapter 1 we put the general case for provid<strong>in</strong>g for thearts <strong>in</strong> the curriculum. We argue that this is a matter bothof logical necessity, if the pr<strong>in</strong>ciple of general education isaccepted, and of moral necessity given the k<strong>in</strong>d of educationwe want for our children. In Chapter 2 we look at the ideaof creativity as it applies to the arts. This idea has beengiven some priority by politicians and by employers. 8 Weargue that the nature of creative work is often misunderstood,that it has a central place not only <strong>in</strong> the arts butacross the whole curriculum and that promot<strong>in</strong>g creativethought and action is a matter of the utmost educationalimportance. In Chapter 3 we look at a controversial area <strong>in</strong>arts teach<strong>in</strong>g — the relationship between children practis<strong>in</strong>gthe arts themselves and learn<strong>in</strong>g to appreciate the work ofothers. We develop our arguments here <strong>in</strong>to a view of the artswith<strong>in</strong> cultural education. In Chapters 4 and 5 we considerthe problems and the requirements <strong>in</strong> provid<strong>in</strong>g for the arts<strong>in</strong> primary and secondary schools, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g questions oftime, staff and facilities. Chapter 6 deals with the question ofaccountability. We identify the problems <strong>in</strong> current approachesto evaluation, assessment and exam<strong>in</strong>ations, and argue the casefor new approaches. Chapter 7 considers the roles of the arts<strong>in</strong> the education of children with special needs. In Chapter 8we outl<strong>in</strong>e and discuss <strong>in</strong>itiatives <strong>in</strong> br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g together children,teachers and professional artists. We look at the pr<strong>in</strong>ciples <strong>in</strong>volvedand at some of the practical difficulties. In Chapter9 we draw out some of the implications of our arguments15


10 <strong>The</strong> artsare notoptions11 Notwithoutprecedentfor education beyond the school. And <strong>in</strong> Chapter 10 wedraw together a number of practical recommendations forcourses of action.For the reasons which we elaborate throughout this reportwe are not prepared to concede that the arts can be optionson the curriculum which can, under pressures of time, spaceand resources, be dispensed with. We are conv<strong>in</strong>ced that theforms of creative th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g and do<strong>in</strong>g which they represent arefundamental to the curriculum along with other key discipl<strong>in</strong>es:no more than they, but certa<strong>in</strong>ly no less. We ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>that the case we make for this is soundly-based. It makessense not only with<strong>in</strong> the framework of education <strong>in</strong> all of itsforms but also with respect to the pragmatic and hard-headedrealities of the current economic and political climate.Some of these issues were the theme of a major conferenceover 20 years ago. 9 Even though they were the days of'You've never had it so good', many experts po<strong>in</strong>ted to apre-occupation <strong>in</strong> educational th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g and plann<strong>in</strong>g thatworried them quite as much as the trends of the presentworry us. In an <strong>in</strong>troductory address on Humanity, Technologyand Education^ Sir Herbert Read deplored the <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gspecialisation of education. He noted that:'In our own time that divisive process has been elaboratedand legalised <strong>in</strong>to a rigid structure of vocational education.<strong>The</strong> ideal of education is no longer the development ofthe whole man ... it is an <strong>in</strong>tensive search for special aptitudesand the development of a chosen aptitude <strong>in</strong>to aparticular technique. We are told that our survival as anation depends on this partial and specialised form ofeducation . . . ' (Conference report, 1957, p7)<strong>The</strong> view of the conference was that an education systempre-occupied with vocational ends would lead to the distortionof human <strong>in</strong>telligence and personality, mak<strong>in</strong>git lop-sided. Only through an education <strong>in</strong> all aspects ofhuman th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g and feel<strong>in</strong>g — the artistic, the scientific,the historical and the rest — could we hope to have whatH J Blackham summed up as the ideal of general education.He concluded <strong>in</strong> words whose force is all the greatertoday:'We believe that neither the contribution of the arts togeneral education, nor the place of general education <strong>in</strong>the national life has yet been properly recognised, and wewant to form a body of enlightened op<strong>in</strong>ion drawn from16


all walks of life which will br<strong>in</strong>g general public op<strong>in</strong>ion toshare our conviction and see our vision of the role of thearts <strong>in</strong> general education and the role of general education<strong>in</strong> the life of our <strong>in</strong>dustrial mass society.' (Conferencereport, 1957, p62).No better motto could be found for this Inquiry. It is allthe more poignant therefore that this is a struggle <strong>in</strong> whichwe are now, even more press<strong>in</strong>gly, engaged 20 years on.17


1 Education, school<strong>in</strong>g and the arts12 Reasons In this chapter we develop our arguments for <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g thefor the arts <strong>in</strong> the school curriculum. We see this as a matter bothchapter of logical and of moral necessity. We argue that there is adist<strong>in</strong>ct area of human experience, which we call the 'aestheticand creative', that the arts exemplify this, and that, fora number of reasons, all pupils <strong>in</strong> our schools should begiven access to them.Our arguments are of two k<strong>in</strong>ds. One rests upon a view ofwhat be<strong>in</strong>g 'educated' actually means and the sorts of knowledge,attitudes and capabilities which derive from this: theother, on the sorts of values which we associate with thisnotion of education. We beg<strong>in</strong> at the same fundamental levelon which Sir Herbert Read based his argument — the idea ofhuman rationality and <strong>in</strong>telligence <strong>in</strong> all its richness andvariety.13 <strong>The</strong> <strong>The</strong> uniqueness of human existence consists, above all,different <strong>in</strong> our capacity to appraise and communicate with eachforms of other about our various experiences of the world. We dohuman this <strong>in</strong> many different ways, through many differentrationality modes of understand<strong>in</strong>g and communication — not justone. As well as the 'language' of number, of empiricalobservation and record, of <strong>in</strong>duction and deduction, ofmorals, or religion and of transcendence, there are other'languages'. <strong>The</strong>re are, for example, the 'languages' ofgesture, posture and visual expression. Alongside all ofthese, and of equal importance, there are the 'languages'<strong>in</strong> which we express a special and quite dist<strong>in</strong>ct form ofawareness and judgement. <strong>The</strong>se are 'languages' <strong>in</strong> whichour ideas of beauty, grace, harmony, balance, harshness,stridency and ugl<strong>in</strong>ess are conceived, formulated andexpressed. We call this our aesthetic awareness and modeof discourse.18


Among these various symbolic modes of communication,by which we formulate and express our understand<strong>in</strong>gsof the world, each is dist<strong>in</strong>guishable from the rest. Eachhas its characteristic 'logic', its own 'grammar' and 'syntax'.In true language fashion, each generates its own 'literature'.Each is basic to human rationality <strong>in</strong> all its diversity.By "rationality' we do not mean merely deductive logicof discursive reason<strong>in</strong>g. We mean the many differentconventionalised ways <strong>in</strong> which, as human be<strong>in</strong>gs, wehave learned to communicate — through noises, marks,and signs — our ideas and feel<strong>in</strong>gs to other people. Someof these do not require verbal communication at all:there are whole 'languages' of mean<strong>in</strong>g which have nodirect need of words. <strong>The</strong>y are, nonetheless, exceed<strong>in</strong>glyrich and complex forms of talk<strong>in</strong>g to other people.<strong>The</strong> language' of dance is a sophisticated example ofthis.14 <strong>The</strong> Human rationality <strong>in</strong>cludes all these various forms of th<strong>in</strong>kneedfor <strong>in</strong>g, communication and action. If <strong>in</strong>dividuals fail to enterbalance <strong>in</strong>to any of these 'communities of discourse', the developmentof their rationality will be, to that extent, lop-sided.In stress<strong>in</strong>g this very po<strong>in</strong>t, W D Hudson (1973) goes furtherand remarks that someone who had no conception of beautyor of moral obligation would be, to that extent, sub-human.This is a hard say<strong>in</strong>g, but we agree with the spirit of it. Indo<strong>in</strong>g so we follow a tradition at least as old as Aristotle,who saw it as a mark of the educated person to be able torecognise the different ways <strong>in</strong> which our perceptions of theworld are organised and communicated and to understandthe various conventions and standards of judgement <strong>in</strong> eachof them. 1This thesis has recently been developed by a number ofeducationalists and philosophers, for all of whom the fundamentalpo<strong>in</strong>t is the same: that human rationality comprisesa number of different forms or modes of understand<strong>in</strong>gand communication through which we <strong>in</strong>terpret and makesense of ourselves, of others and of the world itself. For SirHerbert Read (1957) there are four; for Paul Hirst (1965)seven; for the HMIs (1979) eight; for Louis Arnaud Reid(1957) an undef<strong>in</strong>ed number of ways <strong>in</strong> which we haveknowledge. <strong>The</strong> po<strong>in</strong>t is always the same — that some understand<strong>in</strong>gof, and <strong>in</strong>, each of these is necessary if we are tohave that range of <strong>in</strong>telligences and feel<strong>in</strong>gs that enablesus 'to see life steady and to see it whole'. To be fully educated,as T S Eliot noted, is to have some sense of where everyth<strong>in</strong>gfits. 2 19


15 <strong>The</strong> arts This is the ground on which our first argument is based:and that one of these dist<strong>in</strong>ct categories of understand<strong>in</strong>g andaesthetic achievement — the aesthetic and creative — is exemplifieddevelopment by the arts: music, drama, literature, poetry, dance, sculptureand the graphic arts. 3 Not to attempt at some stage,and <strong>in</strong> some form, to <strong>in</strong>volve children <strong>in</strong> the arts is simplyto fail to educate them as fully developed, <strong>in</strong>telligent andfeel<strong>in</strong>g human be<strong>in</strong>gs. Certa<strong>in</strong>ly we must have an education<strong>in</strong> number, <strong>in</strong> science, <strong>in</strong> English and <strong>in</strong> modern languages:but we must have one <strong>in</strong> the arts as well.16 <strong>The</strong> arts A critic might remark, of course, that there are other formsand moral of rationality — pornography or witchcraft for example —education that may be quite as mean<strong>in</strong>gful as the different modes ofexperience and understand<strong>in</strong>g we have listed above. Whynot have these on the school curriculum? Provision for thearts <strong>in</strong> the school curriculum is a logical requirement ofgeneral education. We are prepared to go further than this,however, for our concern is also with schools as agencies ofcultural education (see Chapter 3). In this respect it is clearthat questions of value are also <strong>in</strong>volved. <strong>The</strong> purposes ofeducation <strong>in</strong>clude moral purposes. As Mary Warnock hasnoted:'. . . education is concerned with the right rais<strong>in</strong>g ofchildren, and with the provision for them of a goodfuture, and here if anywhere moral values appear to be<strong>in</strong>extricably <strong>in</strong>volved.' (Wamock, 1977, p41)Thus we come to a second group of arguments. Not onlydo we ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> that education <strong>in</strong> the arts is a matter oflogical necessity, we also judge it to be absolutely desirablebecause of the values which these forms of thought andaction exemplify. <strong>The</strong>re are value judgements here and weare prepared to defend them. For what we are recommend<strong>in</strong>gis a course of action that we believe will promote the welfareof our society.17 <strong>The</strong> arts Our first argument is an historical one. No proper underandstand<strong>in</strong>g of the contemporary world and of our society iscultural possible without hav<strong>in</strong>g some knowledge and understand<strong>in</strong>gdevelopment of the roots of the traditions and the <strong>in</strong>stitutions which we<strong>in</strong>herit. Our culture stands on the shoulders of all that hasgone before. For this reason, we can only fully appreciatethe mean<strong>in</strong>g of the present and grasp the possibilities of thefuture by hook<strong>in</strong>g onto the frameworks of the past. Inscience, for example, the mean<strong>in</strong>g and the significance ofE<strong>in</strong>ste<strong>in</strong> and Relativity <strong>The</strong>ory has to be seen aga<strong>in</strong>st the20


ackground of earlier systems of physics — the Newtonian,<strong>in</strong> particular. Historically speak<strong>in</strong>g, it is beyond disputethat, along with science and religion, the arts have beenamong the most potent forces <strong>in</strong> the development andshap<strong>in</strong>g of our culture and its traditions. Examples abound ofthe <strong>in</strong>terplay of all three: Chartres Cathedral might stand forthem all. This is as true of the classical world, of mediaevaltimes, of the recent cultural history of Europe, as of thewhole spectrum of movements that are fundamental elementsof our present civilisation. Not to take account of the creationsof the past would be to fail to understand some of themore powerful forces that have shaped it and added richnessand quality to an existence that would otherwise have beenas pitiable as Hobbes projected it. To have an <strong>in</strong>formed andappreciative grasp of the growth and tenor of our civilisation,our children must have some awareness and understand<strong>in</strong>g ofone of the pr<strong>in</strong>cipal forms of creation and communication <strong>in</strong>which its development may be most sharply discerned — theworld of the arts.18 Partici- This does not mean merely teach<strong>in</strong>g about the arts. Thatpat<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> and would be teach<strong>in</strong>g history or cultural anthropology. Itappreciat<strong>in</strong>g means enabl<strong>in</strong>g children to 'get their coats off and to 'do'the arts the arts themselves: us<strong>in</strong>g the arts to formulate and clarifytheir own ideas and feel<strong>in</strong>gs, while develop<strong>in</strong>g their personalpowers of creative thought and action. But there is morethan this: for among the f<strong>in</strong>est creations of the eyes andears, hands and mouths of men and women are those worksof art that have proved to be of endur<strong>in</strong>g worth — <strong>in</strong> architecture,<strong>in</strong> drama, <strong>in</strong> poetry and literature, <strong>in</strong> pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g andstatuary, <strong>in</strong> music and <strong>in</strong> dance. If the aims of educationare <strong>in</strong> part to give pupils a sense of excellence and quality <strong>in</strong>human achievement, then clearly arts teach<strong>in</strong>g will have acentral part to play <strong>in</strong> this.19 'High art' We shall have more to say on the relationship of participationand and appreciation <strong>in</strong> arts education <strong>in</strong> Chapter 3. Neithercontemporary here nor there do we accept the pre-em<strong>in</strong>ence of classicalculture ' models or of 'high art' or 'high culture' <strong>in</strong> education. <strong>The</strong>idea of excellence with which we are concerned does notrequire that, to be artistically educated, people must havea preference for a particular type of art or culture. Similarly,there is noth<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the idea of excellence that conf<strong>in</strong>es it tothe past. <strong>The</strong> arts are dynamic modes of creation and communication.<strong>The</strong>ir literatures are constantly be<strong>in</strong>g added to.<strong>The</strong>re is as much to value <strong>in</strong> some contemporary work as <strong>in</strong>some of two hundred or two thousand years ago. To th<strong>in</strong>kotherwise is to betray a predilection, possibly a prejudice,21


for certa<strong>in</strong> forms of artistic activity, rather than show acommitment to excellence itself. A work will be accepted asart only <strong>in</strong>sofar as it satisfies certa<strong>in</strong> criteria of validity andthese are neither absolute nor unchang<strong>in</strong>g. Sometimes thereare works of such power or brilliance that they establish newcriteria and promote new l<strong>in</strong>es of artistic activity, much asE<strong>in</strong>ste<strong>in</strong>'s account of space and time opened up new horizons<strong>in</strong> science.20 Ways of Our next argument follows on from this: the arts are nothav<strong>in</strong>g only for communicat<strong>in</strong>g ideas. <strong>The</strong>y are ways of hav<strong>in</strong>g ideas,ideas of creat<strong>in</strong>g ideas, of explor<strong>in</strong>g experience <strong>in</strong> particular waysand fashion<strong>in</strong>g our understand<strong>in</strong>g of it <strong>in</strong>to new forms. <strong>The</strong>ideas developed <strong>in</strong> poetry or music are not translated fromord<strong>in</strong>ary language <strong>in</strong>to poetry or music: they are essentiallypoetic or musical ideas and cannot be rendered so exactlyand clearly <strong>in</strong> any other form. Thus the arts are among theways <strong>in</strong> which we move from merely endur<strong>in</strong>g experienceto understand<strong>in</strong>g and controll<strong>in</strong>g it. 421 <strong>The</strong> <strong>The</strong>re is a further po<strong>in</strong>t here. In addition to exist<strong>in</strong>g ways ofcreative see<strong>in</strong>g, and available structures of ideas, men and womenm<strong>in</strong>d have the power and the capacity to make new patterns andstructures. <strong>The</strong>y can <strong>in</strong>novate — putt<strong>in</strong>g old ideas together<strong>in</strong> novel ways or creat<strong>in</strong>g new ones to offer new sources of<strong>in</strong>sight and illum<strong>in</strong>ation and to afford new visions of the'truth' about the world and the human condition. In thisrespect the products of creative activity <strong>in</strong> the arts exemplifyone of the key features of the aesthetic mode of discourseand awareness: the break<strong>in</strong>g apart and/or br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g together<strong>in</strong> new ways what have previously been concepts, and evencategories of a strictly conventional k<strong>in</strong>d. As Arthur Koestlerputs it:22'Every creative act <strong>in</strong>volves a new <strong>in</strong>nocence of perception,liberated from the cataract of accepted belief.' (Koestler,1959)It is this unhitch<strong>in</strong>g of normal patterns of ideas and thecross<strong>in</strong>g of exist<strong>in</strong>g boundaries of belief to form new connectionsand comb<strong>in</strong>ations that exemplifies artistic imag<strong>in</strong>ation.<strong>The</strong> visual artist does this through the media of colours,textures and shapes: the musician through organis<strong>in</strong>g sounds<strong>in</strong> timbre, pitch, rhythm and so on. Among the greatestvalues of all of the arts are the opportunities they present toapply and develop these unique human resources of creative<strong>in</strong>telligence.


22 <strong>The</strong> arts To have access to these new truths and to participate <strong>in</strong>and the their creation, one has to get 'on the <strong>in</strong>side' of the cornopenmunity <strong>in</strong> which such explorations take place and are undersocietystood. However, the world of the arts exemplifies all thevirtues that Karl Popper praised as characteristic of an'open society'. For every pa<strong>in</strong>ter, writer, musician or sculptoris permanently on trial; every exhibition, publication orperformance, it has been wisely said is far worse than anypublic exam<strong>in</strong>ation. In this community, the only aristocracyis one of excellence. It is open to all provided their workcan withstand the critical scrut<strong>in</strong>y of others. <strong>The</strong> arts, asmuch as any science are exercises <strong>in</strong> rigour and criticism ofthe most search<strong>in</strong>g k<strong>in</strong>d; every artefact or performance isopen to comment, to evaluation and re-valuation.23 Unity We have emphasised the need for balance and wholeness <strong>in</strong>and education and <strong>in</strong>dividual development. <strong>The</strong> arts are signifi<strong>in</strong>tegrationcant here <strong>in</strong> two ways. <strong>The</strong> first of these is evident <strong>in</strong> acrucial feature of the arts. Ehrenzweig (1967) refers to thisas their function of 'de-differentiation'. That is to say, <strong>in</strong>one work of art there are numerous layers of mean<strong>in</strong>g entw<strong>in</strong>ed<strong>in</strong>to one organic unity. <strong>The</strong> mean<strong>in</strong>gs of Guernica,or of Blake's Sick Rose, can only be fully understood andappreciated by attend<strong>in</strong>g to the work as a whole. 5 <strong>The</strong>activity of what has been called 'stripp<strong>in</strong>g away the layers'of the work may transform our vision of the view of theworld and of human nature that the work embodies. Thisprocess — what Broudy (1966) calls 'enlightened cherish<strong>in</strong>g'— can have another transformative effect. For attend<strong>in</strong>g toa work of art, lett<strong>in</strong>g its mean<strong>in</strong>gs emerge slowly and suffuseour own understand<strong>in</strong>g, is to undertake what Arnaud Reidcalls:'. . . to learn to address the <strong>in</strong>dividual work of art, almostas though it were a person, <strong>in</strong> what Mart<strong>in</strong> Buber hascalled the I—Thou relationship.' (Reid, 1957, p47)<strong>The</strong> arts promote a very real <strong>in</strong>tegration <strong>in</strong> our sense andappreciation of the range of mean<strong>in</strong>gs that are present <strong>in</strong>one organic whole. This characteristic of synthesis is to befound <strong>in</strong> no other mode of discourse. Elsewhere the generalthrust — <strong>in</strong> some, the whole emphasis — is more often onanalysis and dissection than on synthesis and unification.24 <strong>The</strong> <strong>The</strong> second way <strong>in</strong> which the arts are essential for balancedobjectivity development is this. Mathematics and natural sciences areof art sometimes alleged to be the only true sources of knowledge.All else — and particularly the knowledge to be found <strong>in</strong> the23


arts — is 'merely subjective" and therefore gravely suspect.This picture of knowledge is <strong>in</strong> need of radical reappraisal.Like others before us, we reject the view that the onlyvalid k<strong>in</strong>ds of knowledge are those that are open to deductivereason<strong>in</strong>g and empirical tests. <strong>The</strong> ways of gett<strong>in</strong>g knowledgeare not limited to the <strong>in</strong>tellectual, book-learn<strong>in</strong>g or scientifick<strong>in</strong>d. <strong>The</strong> aesthetic, the religious and the moral realms arequite as powerful as these others at convey<strong>in</strong>g knowledge.In our view, public education has been too devoted toparticular k<strong>in</strong>ds of knowledge at the expense of others whichare of equal importance.Our knowledge of the world is organised <strong>in</strong> many waysbecause it comes to us <strong>in</strong> many ways; not only throughlogical analysis or experiment but through <strong>in</strong>tuition andfeel<strong>in</strong>g, through direct experience and action. We want toemphasise three po<strong>in</strong>ts here. First, we are press<strong>in</strong>g for formsof education which recognise the range of such capacities <strong>in</strong>all children. We <strong>in</strong>clude the powers of deductive reason here,but we do not set it above all else as many have come to do.Second, one effect of the widespread <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> dissectionand analysis <strong>in</strong> schools has been to emphasise differencesbetween subjects. We want to see a wider recognition of whatthe different ways of know<strong>in</strong>g, <strong>in</strong> arts and sciences, forexample, have <strong>in</strong> common. Discovery <strong>in</strong> science is not 'astrictly logical performance" any more than work <strong>in</strong> the artsis simply the expression of feel<strong>in</strong>g. <strong>The</strong> scientist relies asmuch on <strong>in</strong>tuition and creative <strong>in</strong>sight <strong>in</strong> parts of his work asthe artist relies on discipl<strong>in</strong>e and application to detail <strong>in</strong>parts of his. Indeed, <strong>in</strong> talk<strong>in</strong>g about artists and scientists weare not necessarily talk<strong>in</strong>g about different people at all butabout the exercise of different capabilities exist<strong>in</strong>g with<strong>in</strong> thesame person. It is one of the tragedies of contemporaryeducation that the relationships between these capabilitiesshould have become so neglected.Third, and this will be clear by now, we are not justpress<strong>in</strong>g for the arts for their own sake <strong>in</strong> schools. Ourconcern is broader — with the development of those basichuman qualities and capabilities — <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g the power ofcreative <strong>in</strong>sight and activity and a concern with relationshipsand questions of value, which give rise to the arts <strong>in</strong> thefirst place.25 Two We noted above that the existence of more than one mode ofmodes of <strong>in</strong>telligence has been recognised by many educators andconsciousness philosophers. Further support for this is now com<strong>in</strong>g fromstudies <strong>in</strong>to the physical structure and work<strong>in</strong>gs of thebra<strong>in</strong>. <strong>The</strong>se suggest that the two hemispheres of the bra<strong>in</strong>have notably different, though related, functions. In <strong>The</strong>24


Psychology of Consciousness, Robert Ornste<strong>in</strong> summarisesthese f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>gs:'<strong>The</strong> left hemisphere ... is predom<strong>in</strong>antly <strong>in</strong>volved withanalytic, logical th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g, especially <strong>in</strong> verbal and mathematicalfunctions. Its mode of operation is primarilyl<strong>in</strong>ear. This hemisphere seems to process <strong>in</strong>formationsequentially. This ... of necessity must underlie logicalthought, s<strong>in</strong>ce logic depends on sequence and order . . . theright hemisphere is primarily responsible for our orientation<strong>in</strong> space, artistic endeavour, crafts, body image,recognition of faces. It processes <strong>in</strong>formation more diffusely... is more holistic and relational and more simultaneous<strong>in</strong> its mode of operation.' (Ornste<strong>in</strong>, 1975, p67)In the view of Ornste<strong>in</strong> and others, education has concentratedtoo much on the rationality of the left-hand hemisphereat the expense of the more sensuous, <strong>in</strong>tuitive andholistic aspects of consciousness and perception. We haveargued that education is not only a preparation for laterlife. But even those who do see it <strong>in</strong> those terms will f<strong>in</strong>dit difficult to deny that the pre-occupation with academic<strong>in</strong>telligence <strong>in</strong> schools is like'tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g a person for a race by constantly exercis<strong>in</strong>g oneleg while leav<strong>in</strong>g the muscles of the other leg to atrophy.'(Hemm<strong>in</strong>gs, 1980, p32)We need forms of education which recognise and cater forthe development of both modes of consciousness, to promotea much wider and richer realm of human potential. Moreovera synthesis of these would also help to br<strong>in</strong>g about'a more complete science of human consciousness with anextended conception of our own capabilities.' (Ornste<strong>in</strong>,1975,p68)26 <strong>The</strong> <strong>The</strong> arts are of vital importance <strong>in</strong> this undertak<strong>in</strong>g for theyimportance are expressions of these other forms of rationality of centralof balance importance <strong>in</strong> the balanced growth and development of thechild. 7 Without the balance that an education <strong>in</strong> both thesciences and the arts can give, we should have a societyundignified by a predilection for beauty <strong>in</strong> art and dignity<strong>in</strong> relationships. We should have, rather, a nation of be<strong>in</strong>gswith heads like computers, hands like robots and heartslike Caliban's. People know this. <strong>The</strong>y value vocationalskills. But they also demand that young people should have afirm ground<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> educational knowledge and a commitment25


to and an understand<strong>in</strong>g of certa<strong>in</strong> values: tolerance, freedom,equality and a respect for other people <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g a regard forthe excellent and a disda<strong>in</strong> for the shoddy and the secondrate.For, even if it is true that economics demand that ourpupils be schooled, it is also true that parents and societywant them educated. For all of these reasons, the schoolcurriculum must provide for development and work <strong>in</strong> thebalanc<strong>in</strong>g activities of art, music, literature, dance, drama andmovement.27 Other <strong>Arts</strong> activities have other beneficial effects. First, they canoutcomes help to develop qualities and abilities that have very practicalof the arts applications: grace, poise and balance <strong>in</strong> gesture and movement;sharpness of vision, hear<strong>in</strong>g and touch; a high degreeof co-ord<strong>in</strong>ation between hand and eye; an ability to expressoneself <strong>in</strong> precise terms. Second, the visual arts, drama,dance, and music, for example, can have valuable therapeuticfunctions <strong>in</strong> the treatment of some physical and/or emotionaldisorders (see Chapter 6). Certa<strong>in</strong>ly, the arts have been usedto beneficial effect <strong>in</strong> schemes of therapy <strong>in</strong> hospitals andcl<strong>in</strong>ics. Third, there are the opportunities they provide forre-creation of the <strong>in</strong>dividual, <strong>in</strong> giv<strong>in</strong>g him or her differentperspectives and challenges away from the pre-occupationsof the everyday bus<strong>in</strong>ess, <strong>in</strong>dustrial or domestic worlds.28 <strong>The</strong> arts We must emphasise here that we do not see the importanceandof the arts only <strong>in</strong> terms of a much-discussed need nowadaysrecreation to provide 'education for leisure'. <strong>The</strong>re are two reasons forthis. First, the arts are of central importance to humanbe<strong>in</strong>gs whatever the social and economic circumstances. <strong>The</strong>yare not to be seen simply as pastimes, whose importance<strong>in</strong>creases as the opportunities for 'real' work decl<strong>in</strong>e. Forthe reasons we have given, although they are, <strong>in</strong> an importantsense, recreative, to associate them only with leisure isto set them apart from the 'serious' aspects of life withwhich they are <strong>in</strong>timately <strong>in</strong>volved.Second, whether several million long-term unemployedmen and women will consider themselves to be leisuredrema<strong>in</strong>s to be seen. Economically and psychologically theneed <strong>in</strong> our culture to work is so deeply rooted that thelong-term consequences of unemployment on the scale now<strong>in</strong> prospect are hard to envisage. It is easier to see that theequation of less work with more leisure is simplistic. <strong>The</strong>arts are not a palliative for unemployment. By <strong>in</strong>troduc<strong>in</strong>gpupils to these possibilities <strong>in</strong> our schools, however, wemay help them to prepare more fully for future problems,opportunities and needs while open<strong>in</strong>g a wide spectrum of<strong>in</strong>terests <strong>in</strong> the present.26


29 <strong>The</strong> F<strong>in</strong>ally we come to an argument which is rarely made forhumanity the arts but which seems to us to be clearly implied by whatof the arts we have said so far. This is the potential of the arts fordevelop<strong>in</strong>g a sense of excellence and quality that can transforman <strong>in</strong>dividual's expectations of him/herself. This arises<strong>in</strong> part from the qualities of discipl<strong>in</strong>e, dedication andattention to detail that are called for <strong>in</strong> the skilful exerciseof the arts. One has only to watch an artist at work <strong>in</strong> pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g,compos<strong>in</strong>g, sculpt<strong>in</strong>g or rehears<strong>in</strong>g to know the truth of this.<strong>The</strong>re are of course moral judgements here. In advocat<strong>in</strong>gthe arts we have <strong>in</strong> m<strong>in</strong>d a style of education which is becom<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly needed: one which values the ideas of width,diversity and personal autonomy; where the outcomes aimedat are the welfare and the well-be<strong>in</strong>g of <strong>in</strong>dividuals and thedevelopment of their capacity for autonomous choice sothat they can, of their own free will and <strong>in</strong>formed judgement,decide on what a worthwhile life for them will be.Certa<strong>in</strong>ly schools have responsibilities <strong>in</strong> prepar<strong>in</strong>g childrenand young people for later life. But this is not a simplematter of coach<strong>in</strong>g them for academic qualifications. <strong>The</strong>arts can help to improve the quality of life for the <strong>in</strong>dividual.<strong>The</strong>y can also be a powerful force <strong>in</strong> promot<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>ter-personaland <strong>in</strong>ternational understand<strong>in</strong>g. Tolstoy remarked that:'Through the <strong>in</strong>fluence of real art, aided by science, guidedby religion, that peaceful co-operation of man which isnow ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed by external means . .. should be obta<strong>in</strong>edby man's free and joyous activity.' (Tolstoy, 1930)Amid the great cultural upheavals of the contemporaryworld, schools have vital roles <strong>in</strong> promot<strong>in</strong>g adaptability to,and understand<strong>in</strong>g of, the values and beliefs of others. Aswe argue <strong>in</strong> Chapter 3, <strong>in</strong> look<strong>in</strong>g at cultural education, thepractice and appreciation of the arts can become key elements<strong>in</strong> this.30 Ends and It is here that we come full circle. Technical and <strong>in</strong>dustrialmeans efficiency of which there is, now, considerable talk, is onlyworthwhile when seen for what it is: an <strong>in</strong>dispensable preconditionfor the achievement of those ends that are thereal joys and values of a tolerable and civilised way of life.<strong>The</strong>se go far beyond the demands of the production l<strong>in</strong>eand the F<strong>in</strong>ancial Times Index.In look<strong>in</strong>g at the value of any activities, we can dist<strong>in</strong>guishat least two sorts: first, those that are absolutely worthwhile<strong>in</strong> themselves; second, those that are worthwhile only <strong>in</strong>sofaras they help to br<strong>in</strong>g these other th<strong>in</strong>gs about. Many of theactivities which are demanded as basic elements of the27


school curriculum fall <strong>in</strong>to this second class of value. <strong>The</strong>yhave an <strong>in</strong>strumental value <strong>in</strong> acquir<strong>in</strong>g th<strong>in</strong>gs that arevalued <strong>in</strong> themselves. <strong>The</strong> activities of the arts fall <strong>in</strong>to thefirst class. <strong>The</strong>y are absolutely worthwhile spend<strong>in</strong>g time onfor the sake of satisfactions that are <strong>in</strong>tr<strong>in</strong>sic to them. <strong>The</strong>more far-sighted <strong>in</strong>dustrialists and politicians realised thislong ago. 6 <strong>The</strong> successes of the Workers' Education Association,of M<strong>in</strong>ers' and Mechanics' Institutes, of Adult Educationand of such places as Rusk<strong>in</strong> College further illustratethis view: that <strong>in</strong> abandon<strong>in</strong>g the arts, we should be abandon<strong>in</strong>gboth our heritage and our future and putt<strong>in</strong>g even furtherat risk the whole quality of community life. A recent editorial<strong>in</strong> the Times Educational Supplement was even moreemphatic:'Art <strong>in</strong> all its forms has been s<strong>in</strong>ce time immemorial themeans by which humans keep up their collective spiritsand make sense of each other and of their world. A humanand <strong>in</strong>telligently conceived arts education, shad<strong>in</strong>g off <strong>in</strong>a medley of other directions while reta<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g its own <strong>in</strong>alienablecharacter, is someth<strong>in</strong>g whose value only thebigoted or the very stupid could deny.' (TES, 6th February,1981)31 Summary In this chapter, we have argued that the arts are importantways of know<strong>in</strong>g the world and of <strong>in</strong>terpret<strong>in</strong>g our experiences<strong>in</strong> it. <strong>The</strong>ir <strong>in</strong>clusion <strong>in</strong> the school curriculum is anobligation of general education. We have also argued thatthis is morally desirable. Moreover, the arts are part of thefabric of our culture and civilisation and a knowledge andunderstand<strong>in</strong>g of them is essential on these grounds too. Wehave emphasised that 'do<strong>in</strong>g' the arts is as important asappreciat<strong>in</strong>g the work of others and we have challenged theidea that 'excellence' is exclusively related to any particulartype of art. We have discounted the tendency to dichotomisearts and sciences and emphasised the complementary relationshipsbetween different ways of know<strong>in</strong>g. <strong>The</strong> arts arecrucial elements <strong>in</strong> a balanced curriculum: not more norless, but certa<strong>in</strong>ly as important as other forms of knowledge.We have concluded by argu<strong>in</strong>g that the arts also enrichthe life of <strong>in</strong>dividuals and the social culture and this isimportant as an end <strong>in</strong> itself. Throughout this chapter wehave referred to the idea of creativity <strong>in</strong> the arts and <strong>in</strong>other areas of activity. In the next chapter we look at this <strong>in</strong>more detail and draw out its implications for the wholecurriculum.28


2 <strong>The</strong> arts, creativity and the wholecurriculum32 Reasons Industrialists and politicians lay great stress and <strong>in</strong>vest muchfor the energy, time and money on the promotion of creative workchapter and creative th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g. 1 <strong>The</strong>se can and should be promotedthroughout the whole school curriculum. We hold that thearts have a central role <strong>in</strong> this. In this chapter we want toclarify what we mean by creativity. Although this ideaoften features <strong>in</strong> talk about education, it has become one ofthose terms which can mean all th<strong>in</strong>gs to all people. Nevertheless,it cannot be doubted that for many people — andmany head teachers among them — there is such a th<strong>in</strong>g ascreative work and creative th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g and gett<strong>in</strong>g children toproduce it is a matter of the highest educational importance.We do not, however, share the view of some past advocatesof the arts, that this amounts to a need to encourage 'freeexpression'; that any response is acceptable from pupilsbecause it is their response; that anyth<strong>in</strong>g produced is worthwhilesimply because it has been produced. We believe itwould mark a dist<strong>in</strong>ct advance <strong>in</strong> educational concern withcreativity if it were generally recognised that:a creativity is not a special faculty with which somechildren are endowed and others are not but that itis a form of <strong>in</strong>telligence and as such can be developedand tra<strong>in</strong>ed like any other mode of th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>gb creativity is someth<strong>in</strong>g which requires discipl<strong>in</strong>e, previousexperience and a firm ground<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> knowledgeWhat then do we mean by creativity and how does it applyto the arts?33 A type of <strong>The</strong> term 'creativity' belongs to that cluster of ideas for<strong>in</strong>telligence which we use the generic term '<strong>in</strong>telligence'. 2 When wetalk of a creative th<strong>in</strong>ker, we generally have <strong>in</strong> m<strong>in</strong>d some-29


one who is <strong>in</strong>telligent but who exhibits a certa<strong>in</strong> k<strong>in</strong>d of<strong>in</strong>telligence upon which we place great value. Why is this?We can best answer this by list<strong>in</strong>g here some of the pr<strong>in</strong>cipalcharacteristics or conditions of creative activity. We identifyseven of these.34 Features First, creative work or activity obviously implies mak<strong>in</strong>g orof creative produc<strong>in</strong>g someth<strong>in</strong>g. To count as creative, however, someworkth<strong>in</strong>g more than merely mak<strong>in</strong>g or produc<strong>in</strong>g (like 'creat<strong>in</strong>ghavoc') must be <strong>in</strong>volved. Second, the work must be thepersonal achievement of the person we are call<strong>in</strong>g creative.We do not normally consider forgers, plagiarists or copiersof other people's work to be creative. Third, creative workmust be, <strong>in</strong> some way, novel, orig<strong>in</strong>al, different or dist<strong>in</strong>ctivefrom anyth<strong>in</strong>g previously created <strong>in</strong> that sphere. This canbe as true of th<strong>in</strong>gs appear<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the world for the first timeas of new comb<strong>in</strong>ations of exist<strong>in</strong>g elements. It can also bean extension or elaboration of what exists or is knownalready. For example, the actor creates, us<strong>in</strong>g the worksand structures of a playwright; a perform<strong>in</strong>g musician creates,us<strong>in</strong>g the work of a composer and so on. At all events,creative work must, <strong>in</strong> some way, break new ground. Fourth,we would only apply the term 'creative work' to the productsof conscious and deliberate activity rather than to those ofchance, luck or serendipity.<strong>The</strong>se are our first four conditions of creative activity.We will consider the rest as we go on. We must note herethat these are also some of the characteristics looked for <strong>in</strong>creative th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g by early researchers <strong>in</strong> their analysis ofcerta<strong>in</strong> mental qualities or activities.35 Creative In the previous chapter we noted -that some educators andand philosophers have long recognised the existence of differentdivergent modes of <strong>in</strong>telligence. Psychologists too had seen that there isth<strong>in</strong>kers another k<strong>in</strong>d of <strong>in</strong>telligence dist<strong>in</strong>ct from the one which wasmeant to be measured by such IQ tests as the StanfordB<strong>in</strong>et, the WISC or the Moray House. 3 Complet<strong>in</strong>g such testsrests on an ability to give the right set of answers to setquestions rely<strong>in</strong>g largely on deductive reason and operat<strong>in</strong>gwith<strong>in</strong> conventional structures of ideas. This requires a typeof th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g sometimes called 'convergent'. 4<strong>The</strong> other type of <strong>in</strong>telligence was divergent, nonconventionaland open-ended. Rather than the ability tooperate with<strong>in</strong> the set patterns and structures of conventionalth<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g, it showed <strong>in</strong>genuity, <strong>in</strong>ventiveness, unconventionalityand the ability to <strong>in</strong>novate and to solve problems. <strong>The</strong>obvious question was, how do we recognise and assess thisability?30


36 Recognis- Some of our conditions for creative work do not present<strong>in</strong>g and much of a problem. We can recognise easily enough whetherassess<strong>in</strong>g someth<strong>in</strong>g is the result of an <strong>in</strong>dividual's own conscious andcreativity deliberate work and whether it constitutes an addition toexist<strong>in</strong>g knowledge or accomplishments. <strong>The</strong> psychologists,however, had emphasised the centrality of <strong>in</strong>novation andunconventionality. How were these to be tested?It was perhaps <strong>in</strong>evitable that some psychologists shouldth<strong>in</strong>k it proper, <strong>in</strong> test<strong>in</strong>g for creativity, to look for someth<strong>in</strong>gthat could be counted. One of their criteria for creativity,therefore, was the sheer quantity of ideas produced. <strong>The</strong>more unusual uses for a brick, the more words end<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>'-tion', regardless of mean<strong>in</strong>g, the more ways of describ<strong>in</strong>ga parcel one could produce, the more creative one wasreckoned to be. <strong>The</strong> other criterion related to the unconventionalityof what was produced. This led to a high premiumbe<strong>in</strong>g placed upon the fanciful and the fantastic. Such th<strong>in</strong>gsas 'skid-proof face cream' and pictures of 'square cows . . .and peopled with round-bellied, neckless mums and dads' 5are often seen by such people as evidence of creative th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g.37 Two Of course such th<strong>in</strong>gs may be features of creative work, butmiscon- they are at best only partial <strong>in</strong>dicators of creativity. Someceptionsth<strong>in</strong>g other than mere quantity or mere unconventionalityis required. Part of the deficiency <strong>in</strong> the psychologists'approach comes we believe from the common misconceptionthat there is, as we have said, actually some separate mentalfaculty responsible for creative work whose absence orpresence <strong>in</strong> a person can therefore be measured. A secondmisconception associated with this (as we also noted) is thatsome people have this faculty or capacity for creative th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>gand that others do not. We hold both of these assumptionsto be wrong for two reasons. First, it makes no sense totalk of creativity as a general capacity: it is seen <strong>in</strong> relation tospecific activities — writ<strong>in</strong>g, pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g, compos<strong>in</strong>g, philosophyor whatever. It does not follow that because a person isclearly creative <strong>in</strong> one particular sphere he or she will, forthat reason, be equally creative, or even at all creative <strong>in</strong>others. Second, creativity can only be usefully discussed notmerely as a mental capacity but <strong>in</strong> relation to what a persondoes or produces. Talk about different degrees of creativityhas to be related to the criteria by which these products andactivities can be assessed <strong>in</strong> the public forum by those withthe knowledge and ability to make <strong>in</strong>formed judgementsabout them. Among these criteria will be the quality of thework produced — our fifth condition — and the contextwith<strong>in</strong> which it is produced — condition six.31


38 Quality Quantity by itself is <strong>in</strong>sufficient, <strong>in</strong>deed almost irrelevantnot as a criterion of creativity. J S Bach wrote a large numberquantity of cantatas, but we remember them because they weregood ones. Similarly, if we were assess<strong>in</strong>g the creative achievementof Hem<strong>in</strong>gway or Emily Bronte aga<strong>in</strong>st that of IanFlem<strong>in</strong>g or Georgette Heyer, the raw number of works<strong>in</strong>volved would be a comparatively m<strong>in</strong>or consideration. 6Generally, however, we do also look for the ability to produceworks of a high standard on more than one occasion.Our seventh condition of creative work then is consistency. 1But essentially the work must be judged as be<strong>in</strong>g good ofits k<strong>in</strong>d. It must come up to and possibly surpass the acceptedstandards of excellence <strong>in</strong> its own sphere. It is <strong>in</strong> this respectthat the context of creative work is particularly important.39 <strong>The</strong> In describ<strong>in</strong>g someth<strong>in</strong>g as creative we are judg<strong>in</strong>g it <strong>in</strong>context of relationship to particular standards of achievement. Whatcreative those standards are and how we apply them depends uponwork the sphere of activity <strong>in</strong> question. Creative work is possible<strong>in</strong> all the various modes of thought and action of whichhuman be<strong>in</strong>gs are capable. It makes just as much sense totalk of creativity <strong>in</strong> science, eng<strong>in</strong>eer<strong>in</strong>g, mathematics andphilosophy as <strong>in</strong> the arts. It is not only artists, writers,musicians and dramatists who are creative, but also thosewho put up hypotheses <strong>in</strong> science; who work out alternativegeometries; who advance new <strong>in</strong>terpretations ofhistory; who develop new accounts of mean<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> philosophy.All of these may be creative accord<strong>in</strong>g to the conventionsand standards obta<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g with<strong>in</strong> the area of workconcerned and <strong>in</strong> terms of the conditions we have outl<strong>in</strong>edhere. For this reason and <strong>in</strong> terms of our general educationalpr<strong>in</strong>ciples, it is not enough to, promote creative activity onlywith<strong>in</strong> one or other part of the curriculum. <strong>The</strong> need andthe opportunities for creative activity must be seen as centralto all work <strong>in</strong> schools.40 A Our view of creativity is radically different from some ofdifferent those commonly put forward <strong>in</strong> education. We make noview of apologies for this. We believe that our analysis well accordscreativity with the standards and criteria of judgement ord<strong>in</strong>arilyapplied <strong>in</strong> call<strong>in</strong>g a person's work creative and that theseshould apply <strong>in</strong> school. Furthermore, it generates someuseful guidel<strong>in</strong>es for the promotion of creative activity byall teachers.41 Implic- First, our analysis suggests that there is no necessary conationsfor nection between IQ and creativity; or between divergent,teach<strong>in</strong>g unconventional and fantastic th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g and really creative32


work <strong>in</strong> the worlds of bus<strong>in</strong>ess, <strong>in</strong>dustry, commerce, scienceand the arts.Creative work has to stand on the shoulders of previouswork and understand<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the discipl<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong> question. In allof them we have to do the hard work of learn<strong>in</strong>g the grammarand syntax of the various modes of understand<strong>in</strong>g as part ofour attempts to make advances or <strong>in</strong>novations with<strong>in</strong> them.This is no less true of the arts than of the sciences. We haveto learn to walk before we can run, much less fly. One hasonly to watch the efforts of dancers warm<strong>in</strong>g up, of actorsliv<strong>in</strong>g themselves <strong>in</strong>to a role, of pa<strong>in</strong>ters' close attentionto s<strong>in</strong>gle strokes, of musicians struggl<strong>in</strong>g to f<strong>in</strong>d the rightsound, and the long hours of practice for all to realise thatorig<strong>in</strong>al work, brilliance, even genius, <strong>in</strong> the arts requires asmuch discipl<strong>in</strong>e, control and patience, knowledge and visionas that of any eng<strong>in</strong>eer, historian or scientist struggl<strong>in</strong>g tosolve a problem, f<strong>in</strong>d the evidence or falsify a hypothesis.But as James Gribble remarks:'We do not try to get children to th<strong>in</strong>k up scientifichypotheses or put themselves <strong>in</strong> the shoes of historicalpersonages or pa<strong>in</strong>t pictures <strong>in</strong> order to develop theircreativity or imag<strong>in</strong>ative ability. For what we mean bydevelop<strong>in</strong>g creativity or imag<strong>in</strong>ative ability is gett<strong>in</strong>gthem to perform these varied tasks as well as they areable.' (Gribble, 1969, p!03)42 <strong>The</strong> role <strong>The</strong> role of the teacher <strong>in</strong> the arts is at once vital and comofthe plicated. <strong>The</strong> task is not simply to let anyth<strong>in</strong>g happen <strong>in</strong>teacher the name of self-expression or creativity. Neither is it toimpose rigid structures of ideas and methods upon thechildren. <strong>The</strong> need is for a difficult balance of freedom andauthority. In pr<strong>in</strong>ciple, everybody can be enabled to developtheir knowledge and skill to a po<strong>in</strong>t at which they canbecome <strong>in</strong>novators. <strong>The</strong>ir do<strong>in</strong>g so depends on their <strong>in</strong>terestand commitment to, and on the extent and quality of theirexperience <strong>in</strong>, the work <strong>in</strong> question. Some of them will be,or will become better than others <strong>in</strong> some areas of work —both <strong>in</strong> what they produce and <strong>in</strong> the skills they develop.This is what is implied <strong>in</strong> the concept of giftedness (seeChapter 7). It will still need a solid basis of teach<strong>in</strong>g andlearn<strong>in</strong>g accord<strong>in</strong>g to the pr<strong>in</strong>ciples we have outl<strong>in</strong>ed ifsuch gifts are to develop fully. In each of the arts, it is, asRyle (1967) remarked, the teacher's job to show the pupilsthe ropes. It is up to the pupils to climb them. And <strong>in</strong> somecases, as he wisely added, teachers must realise that theirpupils may be able to climb faster and higher — sometimesmuch higher — than they can.33


43 Freedom Two further po<strong>in</strong>ts must be stressed. First, teachers mustand avoid giv<strong>in</strong>g the impression that only their views count. Ifauthority we want to promote <strong>in</strong>dependent, critical and creativeth<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g, we shall be work<strong>in</strong>g aga<strong>in</strong>st ourselves if we try toachieve these th<strong>in</strong>gs by methods of teach<strong>in</strong>g which stifle<strong>in</strong>itiative and promote the acceptance of some authoritarianfiat of a body of elders or establishment. If the stress is uponconformity of response and acceptance of established ideas,we can hardly expect the emergence of critical and creativework as a direct result. <strong>The</strong> balance is difficult to strike.<strong>The</strong> teacher must promote the application and discipl<strong>in</strong>ewhich underp<strong>in</strong> all creative work but allow for the newdepartures <strong>in</strong> th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g and do<strong>in</strong>g by which it is characterised.<strong>The</strong>re is a difference then between what we may call teacher<strong>in</strong>puts which may need to be closely structured and theteacher's responses to what the children produce as a result,which ought to be flexible and open-ended. This br<strong>in</strong>gs usto our second po<strong>in</strong>t. To encourage creative work we mustput a premium on the pupils' own orig<strong>in</strong>al ideas wheneverpossible; sett<strong>in</strong>g them to use these either to produce newwork or new <strong>in</strong>terpretations, or to propose novel approachesto the solution of problems for which their exist<strong>in</strong>g knowledgeor skills provide only partial or <strong>in</strong>adequate solutions.We are talk<strong>in</strong>g here not only about the arts but alsoabout, work throughout the curriculum. If we wish to developyoung people's creative capabilities, we would do well toheed the results of research 8 which argues that only <strong>in</strong> classroomswhere there is an emphasis on self-directed and self<strong>in</strong>itiatedwork — keep<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> m<strong>in</strong>d the pr<strong>in</strong>ciples we havediscussed — will there be any departure from the pressuresof conformity, convention and repetition that characteriseso much work <strong>in</strong> our schools at present.<strong>The</strong>se pressures are particularly acute where the rigidrequirements of certa<strong>in</strong> types of public exam<strong>in</strong>ations andthe teach<strong>in</strong>g methods associated with them act as stultify<strong>in</strong>gconstra<strong>in</strong>ts upon pupils' sense of <strong>in</strong>itiative.Downey and Kelly summarise some apposite conclusionsby Torrance which might provide helpful guidel<strong>in</strong>es here.34'Torrance's suggestions are that teachers should be respectfulof children's unusual questions and ideas, show<strong>in</strong>gthem that these ideas have value. <strong>The</strong>y should provideopportunities for self-<strong>in</strong>itiated learn<strong>in</strong>g and for periodsof non-evaluated practice, <strong>in</strong>dicat<strong>in</strong>g that whatever childrendo may be of some value and is not constantly go<strong>in</strong>g tobe assessed by some absolute criterion of correctness setup by teachers. This emphasises not only the need tovalue children <strong>in</strong> then: own terms, by acknowledg<strong>in</strong>g the


worth of common sense knowledge they br<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>to theclassroom, but also acknowledges the importance offreedom and flexibility to develop and grow. <strong>The</strong>se seemto be not only the cornerstones of cognitive and creativedevelopment but also part of what is meant by education.'(Downey and Kelly, 1979, p78)And it is with education that we are concerned here.44 Summary Let us reiterate our basic premises. <strong>The</strong>re are various k<strong>in</strong>dsof th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g and various k<strong>in</strong>ds of <strong>in</strong>telligence. None of themhas a prior or self-evident right to dom<strong>in</strong>ate the others <strong>in</strong>the school curriculum. <strong>The</strong>re is more than one mode ofthought and action. Accord<strong>in</strong>gly, there is more than onemode of creative thought, work and productivity and thereare no grounds for the elevation of, for example, the sciencesover the arts either <strong>in</strong> the policies or plann<strong>in</strong>g of the schoolcurriculum. <strong>The</strong> development of creativity needs a soundbase <strong>in</strong> knowledge and skill but also teach<strong>in</strong>g methods whichare flexible and open-ended so that it can emerge and flourish.Pupils must be encouraged to test out ideas which are novel,unusual, even eccentric and iconoclastic. Creative work isnot merely a question of play<strong>in</strong>g with th<strong>in</strong>gs, of randomnessand chance. It has much to do with serious and susta<strong>in</strong>edeffort, often at the highest levels of absorption and <strong>in</strong>tensity.This <strong>in</strong>volves respect for standards and aim<strong>in</strong>g purposefully,often at great expense of time and effort, at produc<strong>in</strong>g workof high quality. We regard these efforts of discipl<strong>in</strong>e, knowledgeand <strong>in</strong>itiative as of fundamental importance on theroad to achiev<strong>in</strong>g the autonomy and maturity of adulthood.In the next chapter we relate these arguments to the needfor the arts with<strong>in</strong> cultural education.35


3 <strong>Arts</strong> education and the cultural heritage45 Reasons <strong>The</strong> concern with practical work <strong>in</strong> the arts is at odds withfor the what many people seem to th<strong>in</strong>k teachers should be do<strong>in</strong>g.chapter This has done much to h<strong>in</strong>der the development of the arts<strong>in</strong> schools. <strong>The</strong>re are two problems. First, there is the viewthat <strong>in</strong> gett<strong>in</strong>g pupils to participate <strong>in</strong> the arts and do theirown work, teachers are renounc<strong>in</strong>g the 'ma<strong>in</strong> job' of pass<strong>in</strong>gon 'high art'. Second, there is a common misunderstand<strong>in</strong>g —which is at the heart of it — about what 'participation' <strong>in</strong>the arts means. Both participation and appreciation havetheir places as complementary aspects of arts teach<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>cultural education. In this chapter we set out to clarify theserelationships.46 Two In the last chapter we criticised some <strong>in</strong>terpretations ofseparate 'creativity' <strong>in</strong> schools. Nevertheless we were speak<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>issues full support of pupils do<strong>in</strong>g the arts for themselves. It isequally important to help them to understand and appreciateboth traditional and contemporary works of art. It would bea narrow vision of arts education which only saw importance<strong>in</strong> pupils' own work and saw no need for them to understandthe work of others, or the history which lies beh<strong>in</strong>d the artof today. It would be just as extreme to picture artistssitt<strong>in</strong>g apart from society creat<strong>in</strong>g works of art for us allsimply to wonder at. <strong>The</strong> relationship between 'participation'and 'appreciation' <strong>in</strong>volves two separate issues which oftenbecome confused. <strong>The</strong> first is to do with the notion of'culture' and the mean<strong>in</strong>g of cultural education; the secondis to do with the relationship between 'process' and 'product'<strong>in</strong> arts activities.47 <strong>The</strong> arts For some people 'the arts' and 'culture' are virtually <strong>in</strong>terand'culture' changeable terms. Be<strong>in</strong>g brought up <strong>in</strong> a 'cultural environment',for example, has been def<strong>in</strong>ed as liv<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> a home36


where there are 'books on the shelves, parents who listen tomusic and visit the theatre'. 1 This is the sense <strong>in</strong> which weare apt to refer to people as be<strong>in</strong>g 'cultured'. This view ofculture is <strong>in</strong>adequate for a proper understand<strong>in</strong>g of culturaleducation. <strong>The</strong> arts are only one aspect — albeit an importantone — of the life of any community. To talk of itsculture is to connote the whole network of habits, beliefs,customs, attitudes and forms of behaviour which hold ittogether as a community. Even to talk of the culture of asociety is mislead<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>sofar as each section, group, or classwith<strong>in</strong> a society has vary<strong>in</strong>g cultural forms and values. Thislarger view of culture suggests three features of the culturesof <strong>in</strong>dustrial societies which need to be taken <strong>in</strong>to account<strong>in</strong> education: those of diversity, relativity and change.48 Diversity Modern <strong>in</strong>dustrial societies are diverse <strong>in</strong> their cultures.'Culture' is not the same as 'nationality'. To possess British,French or American nationality provides little guide to aperson's cultural identity. Brita<strong>in</strong>, for example, does nothave, and never did have, one s<strong>in</strong>gle, common culture. Italways has been a patchwork of overlapp<strong>in</strong>g cultures: arich mixture of regional, racial and class differences — differences<strong>in</strong> language, values, religion, political and cultural<strong>in</strong>terests. <strong>The</strong>re may be a dom<strong>in</strong>ant culture but it would bewrong to take it now for the British culture.49 Relativity A second feature of modern <strong>in</strong>dustrial societies is the relativityof their cultures. Children are not born with a cultureas they are born with brown eyes. <strong>The</strong>y are born <strong>in</strong>to aculture and for as long as they live <strong>in</strong> it they are underpressure to live by it. Cultural differences <strong>in</strong> language, dress,behaviour and religion often reflect profound differences <strong>in</strong>ways of see<strong>in</strong>g the world and <strong>in</strong>terpret<strong>in</strong>g its mean<strong>in</strong>g.Events which may be steeped <strong>in</strong> significance with<strong>in</strong> oneculture may have no significance <strong>in</strong> another.50 Change Advanced <strong>in</strong>dustrial cultures are also <strong>in</strong> a cont<strong>in</strong>uous state ofchange. Indeed, the word 'culture' implies organic growthand development. 2 Individuals who <strong>in</strong>herit cultural ideasand values also contribute to them, evaluat<strong>in</strong>g and chang<strong>in</strong>gthem. Cultures evolve. <strong>The</strong> most strik<strong>in</strong>g l<strong>in</strong>e of evolution <strong>in</strong>the past 20 years or so has been towards an unprecedentedmix<strong>in</strong>g of cultures across and with<strong>in</strong> national boundaries.51 Impli- <strong>The</strong> idea that arts teach<strong>in</strong>g is a simple matter of pass<strong>in</strong>g oncations 'the cultural heritage' is a mislead<strong>in</strong>g simplification. Incontrast to the diverse, relative and evolutionary nature ofculture as it actually exists, a picture is conjured up of a37


universally valued archive of stable treasures. <strong>The</strong> arts teacheris seen as a k<strong>in</strong>d of guide around this archive. If one entersthe archive, however, and applies the idea of evolution notonly to the present but also to the past, the question becomesnot only whether or not children should be encouraged tounderstand the work of great artists — we have no doubtthat they should — but also which artists should be selectedand by whose criteria do we call them great? Those whotalk of the cultural heritage usually have <strong>in</strong> m<strong>in</strong>d a comparativelynarrow range of work favoured by particularsections of one culture — their own. This view of culturemisrepresents the real mean<strong>in</strong>g and significance of culturaleducation.52 Whoseculture?<strong>Schools</strong> have no monopoly on education. From the momentthey are born children live under constant pressure to see theworld accord<strong>in</strong>g to this set of values rather than that, and tobehave <strong>in</strong> these ways rather than those. Consciously andunconsciously they absorb and reflect their culture throughthe people they meet, the clothes they wear, the music theylisten to and the stories they tell. <strong>The</strong>re is no question ofchildren turn<strong>in</strong>g up for school without a culture and be<strong>in</strong>gthere to acquire one: nor of teachers grant<strong>in</strong>g or withhold<strong>in</strong>gculture. As Levitas puts It:'What is transmitted to children, deliberately and unconsciously,by people, by their surround<strong>in</strong>gs, by events,and what is acquired by them is their culture. Hav<strong>in</strong>g allbecome carriers of the culture of their society, theyconsolidate for each other <strong>in</strong> their play and other forms ofpeer group <strong>in</strong>teraction, that culture. Thus it follows thatteach<strong>in</strong>g, to be effective, must have regard for culturealready acquired.' (Levitas, 1974, p7)Often children live with<strong>in</strong> one culture, while school, forthe most part, represents another. We are th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g here notonly of the many ethnic cultures which British schools nowserve, but also of positive counter-cultures, <strong>in</strong>stanced forexample by Paul Willis (1978) <strong>in</strong> his account of attitudes tcschool among work<strong>in</strong>g-class boys. This culture is not justdifferent from the predom<strong>in</strong>antly white middle-class valuesof formal education, but often directly at odds with them.In talk<strong>in</strong>g about the cultural heritage then, whose culturedo we have <strong>in</strong> m<strong>in</strong>d?53 Whichheritage?In re-exam<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g the concept of the cultural heritage we arenot deny<strong>in</strong>g the need to understand the past nor the powerof historic works of art to communicate to people today, nor38


the vitality of artistic traditions. Raymond Williams describesthree levels <strong>in</strong> the general def<strong>in</strong>ition of culture. <strong>The</strong>se beardirectly on the idea of the cultural 'heritage'."<strong>The</strong>re is the lived culture of a particular time and place,only fully accessible to those liv<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> that time andplace. <strong>The</strong>re is the recorded culture of every k<strong>in</strong>d of artto the most everyday facts: the culture of a period. <strong>The</strong>reis also, as the factor connect<strong>in</strong>g lived culture and periodcultures, the culture of the selective tradition.' (Williams,1971,p66)54 <strong>The</strong> We live <strong>in</strong> a perpetual present tense. Our knowledge ofselective other periods can never match their vast complexity astradition they were experienced and understood at the time. Ourevaluation and perception of them is both partial and highlyselective. As Williams po<strong>in</strong>ts out, most specialists <strong>in</strong> a periodknow only a part even of its written records.'One can say with confidence for example that nobodyreally knows the n<strong>in</strong>eteenth century novel: nobody hasread, or could read, all its examples over the whole rangefrom pr<strong>in</strong>ted volumes to penny serials. <strong>The</strong> real specialistmay know some hundreds . . . (but) a selective process ofa quite drastic k<strong>in</strong>d is at once evident and this is true ofevery field of activity.' (Williams, 1971, p66)<strong>The</strong> selective tradition <strong>in</strong> this way rejects 'considerableareas of what was once a liv<strong>in</strong>g culture'. (Williams, 1971, p68)Consequently what we <strong>in</strong>clude and acknowledge <strong>in</strong> thetradition is always open to change and revision. This isnot only because of the discovery of new <strong>in</strong>formation or newworks, it is also often because of changes <strong>in</strong> our contemporaryvalues. Individuals long forgotten or overlooked may bere-<strong>in</strong>terpreted as key agents of cultural progress because ofa shift <strong>in</strong> current fashion or political outlook. <strong>The</strong> strongsentiment and self-assurance of Raphael, for example, endearedhim to many Victorians as the central figure <strong>in</strong> theRenaissance. <strong>The</strong>re are those today who th<strong>in</strong>k more ofMichaelangelo — for his restless self-doubt — and buildtheir image of the period around him. In these ways thecultural tradition <strong>in</strong> all areas of social life can be seen as a'cont<strong>in</strong>ual selection and re-selection of ancestors'. Andevery selection from the past is also an <strong>in</strong>terpretation of it.55 <strong>The</strong> arts Education needs to take account of this important diversityand of cultures, of their organic patterns of growth and of theculturaleducationrestlessness of their traditions. A cultural education, there-fore, is one which39


a helps pupils to understand cultural diversity by br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>gthem <strong>in</strong>to contact with the attitudes, values and <strong>in</strong>stitutionsof other cultures as well as explor<strong>in</strong>g theirownb emphasises cultural relativity by help<strong>in</strong>g them to recogniseand compare their own cultural assumptions andvalues with these otherse alerts them to the evolutionary nature of culture and thepotential for changed encourages a cultural perspective by relat<strong>in</strong>g contemporaryvalues to the historical forces which moulded them56 Partici- <strong>The</strong> arts are important here for two reasons. First, the propationcess of practis<strong>in</strong>g the arts is <strong>in</strong> itself partly one of observation,analysis and evaluation of one's own experiences<strong>in</strong> relation to other people's. It has become common <strong>in</strong>education to talk of the importance of develop<strong>in</strong>g children's'<strong>in</strong>dividuality'. Although we endorse this, it must also berecognised as a value judgement <strong>in</strong> itself. Some culturesvalue <strong>in</strong>dividuality less. In those which accept it, the notionof 'self-expression', especially through the arts, is sometimesl<strong>in</strong>ked directly with the development of <strong>in</strong>dividuality. Butexpressive activity <strong>in</strong> the arts <strong>in</strong>volves more than express<strong>in</strong>gwhatever subjective state a person happens to be <strong>in</strong> at thetime. Mere expression without reflection and evaluationneed not lead to an understand<strong>in</strong>g of the nature of personalfeel<strong>in</strong>gs nor of the social values and acquired attitudes which<strong>in</strong>fluence them. It need carry people no nearer to understand<strong>in</strong>gthemselves. Individuality requires self-knowledge.And know<strong>in</strong>g what we are — and what we may become —has much to do with understand<strong>in</strong>g the social and culturalcontext of which we are a part; observ<strong>in</strong>g, analys<strong>in</strong>g andevaluat<strong>in</strong>g it. Cultural education is <strong>in</strong>quisitive and so is thepractical process of the arts. Participation — practis<strong>in</strong>g thearts — is important for that reason.57 Appreci- Second, many of the products of the arts — plays, pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>gs,ation literature, music, danc<strong>in</strong>g — are <strong>in</strong>tegral features of thesocial culture. For this reason they are among those th<strong>in</strong>gswhich pupils need to experience and understand if they areto make sense of their culture. Works of art have a specialsignificance because they are so <strong>in</strong>timately concerned withproblems of perception and understand<strong>in</strong>g. To come toknow a work of art is to grapple personally with the ideasand values which it represents and embodies. By giv<strong>in</strong>gform to their own perceptions, artists can help us to makesense of ours. Appreciation — understand<strong>in</strong>g and becom<strong>in</strong>gsensitive to the work of other people — is important <strong>in</strong>cultural education for that reason.40


58 Some Participation and appreciation are complementary aspects ofpractical arts education: not one or the other, but both. As the followexamples<strong>in</strong>g three examples from music teach<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> different schools<strong>in</strong>dicate, they can provide a rich comb<strong>in</strong>ation.a A large Junior School <strong>in</strong> the Midlands. <strong>The</strong> teacher has a scalepost for music and is <strong>in</strong>volved exclusively with musical activities.<strong>The</strong>re are two lessons each week for each class and a number of extracurriculargroups — orchestra, choirs, brass group and recorder consort.Three classes are timetabled, second years, fourth years andthird years, for a 35 m<strong>in</strong>ute session <strong>in</strong> the hall. <strong>The</strong> other lesson eachweek is taken <strong>in</strong> the classrooms* and focuses on s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g and listen<strong>in</strong>gactivities. A wide range of classroom <strong>in</strong>struments, with a large proportionof pitched percussion, is arranged round the sides of the hall.Three clar<strong>in</strong>ets and a flute arrive with the third year. <strong>The</strong> teacher cuesthem <strong>in</strong> to the situation with comments such as 'When you make yourmusic today you might f<strong>in</strong>d it helpful to th<strong>in</strong>k about some of theth<strong>in</strong>gs we noticed and talked about last tune', or 'I know some of youwant to spend more time on your piece from last week, and otherswant to practise the piece they've completed so that we can record(tape) it.' <strong>The</strong> children organise themselves, collect the <strong>in</strong>strumentsand beaters and stands they need, and set up <strong>in</strong> spaces round theroom. <strong>The</strong> groups <strong>in</strong>clude a xylophone duet, a flute trio, a solo xylophoneplayer, metallophone and drum, a qu<strong>in</strong>tet with two descantrecorders, onej treble tambour<strong>in</strong>e and triangle, a clar<strong>in</strong>et trio, a drumquartet, and a vocal duo. Tfap work beg<strong>in</strong>s at once. It <strong>in</strong>volves muchdiscussion and exchange of ideas <strong>in</strong> words, <strong>in</strong> play<strong>in</strong>g and <strong>in</strong> demonstrat<strong>in</strong>g;<strong>in</strong>struments are changed for ones which suit a particularpurpose better. <strong>The</strong> time spent on <strong>in</strong>vent<strong>in</strong>g and amend<strong>in</strong>g, and onpractis<strong>in</strong>g what has been <strong>in</strong>vented, varies from group to group. Somegroups are writ<strong>in</strong>g their musio down. <strong>The</strong> teacher moves from group togroup, jo<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> discussion, putt<strong>in</strong>g alternative views, always mak<strong>in</strong>gmore than one suggestion so that the children consider which onemight be helpful, demonstrat<strong>in</strong>g a particular technique when it isneeded.At a signal from the.teacher the room quietens. 'Well listen to asmuch music as we can. Remember if you want to comment on themusic, not to put your hand up till the players have f<strong>in</strong>ished.' Aftereach group has played the teacher offers comment of value 'I th<strong>in</strong>kwhat you adde.d today did make your music more <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g; welldone.' <strong>The</strong> listeners also offer comments and the teacher leads a criticalappraisal of many of the pieces. This provides opportunities for foster<strong>in</strong>gthe development of skills and concepts and for us<strong>in</strong>g technicallanguage.'Can you remember his start<strong>in</strong>g note? S<strong>in</strong>g it.''Can you play his xylophone pattern on your glockenspiel?''Can you play his pattern and vary the dynamics — we've had thatword before — what does it mean?''How many beats (hi a bar) did it have?''What was John's part? ... Yes, he played the same pattern all the waythrough. <strong>The</strong> word we use <strong>in</strong> music for a repeated pattern like that isOS-TIN-A-TO ... Did anybody else have an ost<strong>in</strong>ato <strong>in</strong> their piece?"41


Child: "<strong>The</strong>y said it was a march, but there aren't four beats (<strong>in</strong> a bar)only three.'Teacher: I've got a record of a march by a composer called Hoist —let's see how he organises his sounds.'This was followed by an analysis of the <strong>in</strong>strumentation, the plan(form) and the beats.<strong>The</strong> children's response shows that follow<strong>in</strong>g the events<strong>in</strong> a piece of music with their ears is as natural to them asfollow<strong>in</strong>g the progress of the ball <strong>in</strong> a football field withtheir eyes. Work<strong>in</strong>g out pieces shows how much learn<strong>in</strong>ghas taken place <strong>in</strong> skill, perception and understand<strong>in</strong>g andhow sensitive they are to music's feel when they are play<strong>in</strong>gand when they are listen<strong>in</strong>g.b Alan had shown very little <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> music lessons <strong>in</strong> the firstyear of the secondary school. Some of the first term was spent with theclass look<strong>in</strong>g at different ways of notat<strong>in</strong>g sounds. It was obvious whenlisten<strong>in</strong>g to some twentieth century music that the composers, out ofnecessity, had to <strong>in</strong>vent new systems of notation. <strong>The</strong> teacher showedthem examples of such notation ma<strong>in</strong>ly taken from Karkoschka, which<strong>in</strong>cludes examples of graphic scores. Alan asked if he could borrow thebook. He took it home and when he returned it the follow<strong>in</strong>g week hepresented a score which he had drawn with different colours represent<strong>in</strong>gdifferent <strong>in</strong>struments. <strong>The</strong> teacher suggested that he organise a group ofpeople to play this score and provided the <strong>in</strong>struments and occasionaladvice. <strong>The</strong> music lessons were one hour and ten m<strong>in</strong>utes long each week<strong>The</strong>re followed about six weeks concentrated work. As the piece beganto take shape there was pressure on the <strong>in</strong>dividuals with<strong>in</strong> the group toplay their parts accurately. New ways of play<strong>in</strong>g were <strong>in</strong>vented to helpproduce particular tone colours and dynamics. <strong>The</strong> <strong>in</strong>dividuals <strong>in</strong> thegroup were quick to criticise but eventually realised that criticism had tobe constructive if the result was to be worthwhile. When performed thispiece lasted about n<strong>in</strong>e m<strong>in</strong>utes — an <strong>in</strong>dication of the concentration<strong>in</strong>volved. <strong>The</strong> rest of the teach<strong>in</strong>g group had been busy on other projectsbut f<strong>in</strong>ally came together to listen and comment on each other'sperformances. At a parents' even<strong>in</strong>g later that year, Alan's father toldthe teacher how they had been, at Alan's request, to a concert where awork by Ligeti was performed. <strong>The</strong>y had also been asked by Alan tobuy some record<strong>in</strong>gs of this composer's music. Alan himself had nevermentioned this to the teacher and his parents were not <strong>in</strong> the habit ofgo<strong>in</strong>g to concerts. He had persuaded them after see<strong>in</strong>g a notice on themusic notice-board.This experience underl<strong>in</strong>es the sort of concentration andcontrol demanded by effective arts work. It confirms alsothe absence of any real divid<strong>in</strong>g l<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>ciple or <strong>in</strong> factbetween personal creative work and the struggle to understanda f<strong>in</strong>ished piece. <strong>The</strong>re is <strong>in</strong>stead a rich relationshipbetween the two. Alan's score began from attempts tounderstand the Karkoschka text. But the piece which resultedemerged through his jo<strong>in</strong>t efforts with other members of thegroup to realise his orig<strong>in</strong>al idea. A develop<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong>42


composition and composers was for him just one of theresults.e <strong>The</strong> pupils of a third year secondary boys class have been to aperformance of Purcell's Dido and Aeneas. As part of this experiencethe music teacher planned a project which <strong>in</strong>volved the pupils <strong>in</strong>consider<strong>in</strong>g and discuss<strong>in</strong>g the plot and then devis<strong>in</strong>g their own musicto reflect the tensions and conflicts with<strong>in</strong> the story. <strong>The</strong> pupils'performance <strong>in</strong> their own classroom was not one of Purcell's music,but of their own <strong>in</strong>terpretation of the plot. <strong>The</strong>ir understand<strong>in</strong>g ofthis and of Purcell's music was enhanced by this experience.Each of these examples is of music teach<strong>in</strong>g. Comparableexamples could be taken from each of the arts and for eachof them the central po<strong>in</strong>t is the same: that mak<strong>in</strong>g music,compos<strong>in</strong>g and perform<strong>in</strong>g, danc<strong>in</strong>g, dramatis<strong>in</strong>g, writ<strong>in</strong>gand mak<strong>in</strong>g images is <strong>in</strong>separably l<strong>in</strong>ked to, and enriched by,learn<strong>in</strong>g about music, dance, drama, literature and art: andvice versa. To opt for one at the expense of the other willimpoverish both.59 <strong>The</strong> <strong>The</strong>re is another aspect to this. <strong>Schools</strong> are neither islandsschool as a nor cultural ghettoes. <strong>The</strong>y are shot through with the valuescultural of the surround<strong>in</strong>g cultures. A very wide range of culturalexchange traditions and expectations is likely to be represented <strong>in</strong> alarge comprehensive school. For this reason schools arebest seen not as transmitters of culture but as complexcultural exchanges. We hold that the arts have a greaterpart to play <strong>in</strong> (his than they do at present and, <strong>in</strong> do<strong>in</strong>gso, can enhance greatly the life and atmosphere of theschool itself.In a large multi-racial school <strong>in</strong> Leeds, for example, the drama andart teachers worked with the children on an adaptation of Alex Haley'sdocumentary novel about Black America, Roots. Haley had spent12 years research<strong>in</strong>g his own cultural background <strong>in</strong> Africa. <strong>The</strong> pupils<strong>in</strong>terpreted his research through movement, African dance, scripteddialogues and costume. <strong>The</strong> <strong>in</strong>tention throughout was to 'reflect thes<strong>in</strong>cerity of Haley's commitment to foster<strong>in</strong>g black pride and consciousness'.<strong>The</strong> result<strong>in</strong>g production, Kambi Bolongo, was given aspart of a festival of art, music and drama at the school which also<strong>in</strong>cluded exhibitions of pupils' draw<strong>in</strong>gs, pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>gs, photography,pr<strong>in</strong>ts and ceramics. <strong>The</strong> festival attracted friends and relatives fromthe surround<strong>in</strong>g communities whose own cultural traditions stretchedacross East Africa, the West Indies, the Indian sub-cont<strong>in</strong>ent, the FarEast: and Yorkshire.Many of the children at the school are first generation immigrants.<strong>The</strong> drama and art staff were well aware of the implications for suchchildren .of the differ<strong>in</strong>g cultural pressures from home, the school andfrom their friends. Consequently, a pr<strong>in</strong>cipal aim <strong>in</strong> all their arts work,and exemplified <strong>in</strong> the festival, has been to help the children 'f<strong>in</strong>d43


their cultural identity'. Haley's book was chosen not just to providean anthropology lesson on Black America, nor just for its qualitiesas literature. It was chosen because the issues it explores and thequestions it seeks to answer are directly related to those which concernthe children. In understand<strong>in</strong>g his exploration they beg<strong>in</strong> their own.On the way they may learn a great deal, too, about Black America,someth<strong>in</strong>g of the literature and the mak<strong>in</strong>g of plays, and <strong>in</strong> this wayhelp to re-draw the cultural l<strong>in</strong>es of the local community. Not one northe other but all of these. This is the power and value of the arts.<strong>The</strong> way <strong>in</strong> which participation and appreciation comb<strong>in</strong>e with<strong>in</strong>cultural education is implied <strong>in</strong> the words of one of the teachers <strong>in</strong>volved<strong>in</strong> this project when he commented, 'Yes, we can explore Roots. Butwe share the experience of be<strong>in</strong>g here <strong>in</strong> Leeds now. Let us explore thatas well'.60 Rais<strong>in</strong>g Foster<strong>in</strong>g the relationship between process and product <strong>in</strong>standards the arts can also help to improve the quality of all aspectsof the work. In a number of authorities there is a grow<strong>in</strong>gpractice of hold<strong>in</strong>g youth arts festivals. An important functionof these is to let children and young people see andrespond to each other's work and develop expectations ofwhat is possible. <strong>The</strong> annual festival of Young People's<strong>The</strong>atre held <strong>in</strong> Leeds for the past four years provides auseful example of this. <strong>The</strong> festival is organised by theLeeds Educational Drama Association. Here the Inspectorof <strong>Schools</strong> (Drama) describes the orig<strong>in</strong>s and functions ofthe festival.<strong>The</strong> festival evolved naturally as a result of work go<strong>in</strong>g on with<strong>in</strong>education and with<strong>in</strong> the professional theatre <strong>in</strong> Leeds. This is not<strong>in</strong>tended to be a model, but simply to illustrate what seems appropriateto Leeds at the moment.Orig<strong>in</strong>s<strong>The</strong> Manager of the Grand <strong>The</strong>atre, Leeds, went to see a schooldance production, and was impressed by the quality of the work andoffered his theatre to the educational establishments so that theywould try to reach a wider audience. This worried me and other colleaguesbecause, at that time, we felt that non-educational criteriawere be<strong>in</strong>g imposed on school work and he was try<strong>in</strong>g to fill his theatreat a slack time of the year. We were wrong — he had, and has, a real<strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> the development of drama for learn<strong>in</strong>g, as well as dramafor future audiences. This festival has developed from this. <strong>The</strong> follow<strong>in</strong>gyear saw the establishment of the Leeds Educational Drama Association.Its executive committee <strong>in</strong>cludes teachers, advisers, electedmembers of the City Council, and managers and directors of all theprofessional theatres <strong>in</strong> the city. <strong>The</strong> representation on this committeeis deliberately political. It was felt that development of all aspects ofdrama would be best served by a composite body embrac<strong>in</strong>g education,local government and the professional theatre.<strong>The</strong> festival now takes place <strong>in</strong> July at the Grand <strong>The</strong>atre, theFamous City Varieties, Leeds Playhouse, Leeds Civic <strong>The</strong>atre, andthree of the local authority's community theatres. In 1979 the festival44


embraced the National Festival of Youth <strong>The</strong>atres when 14 Youth<strong>The</strong>atre Groups from all over Brita<strong>in</strong> jo<strong>in</strong>ed the Leeds Festival andperformed <strong>in</strong> the city's major theatres and participated <strong>in</strong> a week ofworkshop sessions led by national figures such as Henry Liv<strong>in</strong>gs, CicelyBerry, Willie Hobbs, Sue Little and others. In 1981, 56 groups participated,<strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g four who will offer street theatre <strong>in</strong> shopp<strong>in</strong>g prec<strong>in</strong>cts<strong>in</strong> the centre of town. 3,000 youngsters, approximately, will participateand audiences are likely to run at around 15,000, most of whomwill be young people.Why a Festival?<strong>The</strong> reason for the festival rema<strong>in</strong>s as orig<strong>in</strong>ally envisaged by theManager of the Grand <strong>The</strong>atre, that is, to provide a showcase to awider audience of the type of performance work that can be seen <strong>in</strong>schools and Youth <strong>The</strong>atre Groups. <strong>The</strong> work varies from establishedto orig<strong>in</strong>al (improvisation-based) pieces, from opera, rock shows andmusicals, to anthology (art, poetry, dance, text, improvisation) programmesfrom primary and middle schools. Through this we aim todevelop and heighten the drama experience of youngsters with<strong>in</strong> theeducation service, to l<strong>in</strong>k the curriculum work with performance <strong>in</strong>a professional theatre and the experience which this br<strong>in</strong>gs to youngsters,and for groups to share their work with others, often from differentbackgrounds and cultures.Achievements<strong>The</strong>se are difficult to assess. As a public relations exercise thefestival is clearly a success and is now an official part of the civiccalendar. <strong>The</strong> youngsters clearly learn much from work<strong>in</strong>g with professionals<strong>in</strong> professional theatres and <strong>in</strong> workshops with tutors fromthe professional theatre. However, one still feels that the processes ofpreparation with<strong>in</strong> the schools and youth theatre groups are the mostvaluable learn<strong>in</strong>g areas, yet, these areas must be heightened by theyoungsters' realisation that they will eventually perform <strong>in</strong> a wellequipped,professional space.In conclusionMany people have reservations about festivals of drama for youngpeople, even of non-competitive ones such as this <strong>in</strong> Leeds. At onestage I had the same reservations, but <strong>in</strong> the light of the experienceof the last six years and the credibility that the festival has given todrama with elected members, headteachers, and officers of the Authority,I am conv<strong>in</strong>ced that, at any rate for Leeds, this annual festival is help<strong>in</strong>gto develop the quality of drama <strong>in</strong> the Authority.61 Applied It is important to see the arts, not as separate and differentstudies from children's other experiences <strong>in</strong>side and outside schools,but as emerg<strong>in</strong>g from them and as provid<strong>in</strong>g a means ofenrich<strong>in</strong>g and mak<strong>in</strong>g sense of them. If this approach isadopted the arts will be found to have two k<strong>in</strong>ds of value<strong>in</strong> their curriculum. First, they are valuable <strong>in</strong> their ownright, as we have shown. Second, they have a range of explicitapplications across the curriculum. This is the caseparticularly <strong>in</strong> the areas of cultural studies and, <strong>in</strong> the visualarts, <strong>in</strong> media studies. <strong>The</strong> <strong>in</strong>fluence of the media on modern45


life and on perceptions and values canhardly be over-estimated.Yet schools give comparatively little attention to study<strong>in</strong>gthe ways <strong>in</strong> which visual images <strong>in</strong>fluence behaviour. <strong>The</strong>reare experiments <strong>in</strong> this field and the term 'mak<strong>in</strong>g andread<strong>in</strong>g of images' has been used generally to describe someof them. <strong>The</strong> term embraces both art history, <strong>in</strong> the moretraditional sense, and the use of images and symbols <strong>in</strong>contemporary culture: that is, <strong>in</strong> both the child's immediatelocal culture and <strong>in</strong> the broader network of national and<strong>in</strong>ternational cultures. In this area art education beg<strong>in</strong>s tooverlap with other curriculum work <strong>in</strong> social studies, andenvironmental and urban studies. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> CouncilProject, 'Art and the Built Environment', for example, hasbeen concerned to f<strong>in</strong>d ways of establish<strong>in</strong>g more criticalattitudes to the visual quality of the built environment byencourag<strong>in</strong>g a more outward-look<strong>in</strong>g approach to the teach<strong>in</strong>gof the visual arts and a more balanced foundation forenvironmental education, which has tended to be dom<strong>in</strong>ateduntil now by geographical, scientific and sociological modesof enquiry. Some of the materials are now available. 362 But is <strong>The</strong> concern with process as well as product, and the use ofit art? the arts across the curriculum, have led some people toquestion whether what children are do<strong>in</strong>g is art at all orjust some general form of expressive activity. If it is art,is there not a considerable difference between children's artand adult art?<strong>The</strong>re is a difference between process and product <strong>in</strong> thearts. This does not mean there is a necessary difference <strong>in</strong>the quality of children's and adults' art. <strong>The</strong> general processeswhich children experience <strong>in</strong> arts education are potentiallyat least the same as those of any practis<strong>in</strong>g artist: thoseof <strong>in</strong>quiry, expression and creation. Only if this processproduces a formal product, tangible or <strong>in</strong>tangible, can thequestion arise whether or not it is art. In that event, anywork, whoever produces it, has to be judged for itself. And<strong>in</strong> mak<strong>in</strong>g the judgement and describ<strong>in</strong>g someth<strong>in</strong>g as art weare partly describ<strong>in</strong>g our personal response to it. If adultartists can elicit such a response, so too, can children. If welet them.63 Summary In this chapter we have been concerned with the relationshipsbetween participation and appreciation <strong>in</strong> the arts <strong>in</strong> schools.We have argued for a broad conception of 'culture' and arecognition of diversity, relativity and change with<strong>in</strong> them.We have questioned the notion of a s<strong>in</strong>gle culture or a stableheritage which we must pass on to children and have emphasisedthe importance of relat<strong>in</strong>g past and contemporary46


cultures and of see<strong>in</strong>g this process as dialectical. We haveillustrated this relationship between participation and appreciationwith a number of examples. We then consideredthe ways <strong>in</strong> which the arts can be <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> the necessaryattempts by schools to take account of their own culturalsett<strong>in</strong>gs and elaborated this by look<strong>in</strong>g at the valuable role oflocal arts festivals. <strong>The</strong> uses of the arts as ways of approach<strong>in</strong>ga variety of work <strong>in</strong> cultural studies across the curriculumwere highlighted and we concluded by argu<strong>in</strong>g that childrencan thus be enabled both to use the processes of the arts fortheir own ends and to produce works of art <strong>in</strong> their ownright. In the next two chapters we look at what provisionis required for this <strong>in</strong> schools.47


4 Provision: the arts <strong>in</strong> primary schools64 Reasonsfor thechapter65 Ingeneral48We have discussed what, <strong>in</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>ciple, the arts have to offereducation. In this and the follow<strong>in</strong>g chapter we considerwhat sort of provision — staff, resources, time etc — isneeded. We look at some of the problems <strong>in</strong>volved andpropose some strategies for deal<strong>in</strong>g with them. How canschools provide the opportunities to put the pr<strong>in</strong>ciples ofarts education <strong>in</strong>to practice?We beg<strong>in</strong> with three general observations. First, althoughwe are discuss<strong>in</strong>g the value of the arts for all children, notall children will be <strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong> all the arts. <strong>The</strong> task is toprovide adequate opportunities for different <strong>in</strong>terests toshow themselves and to develop. This calls for flexibleprovision.Second, patterns of provision, necessarily, will be differentaccord<strong>in</strong>g to the vary<strong>in</strong>g needs, <strong>in</strong>terests and aspirations ofpupils, the demands of different art forms and the circumstancesof different schools. Consequently, we are th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>ghere only of general guidel<strong>in</strong>es.Third, many factors <strong>in</strong>fluence provision <strong>in</strong> schools — theavailability of staff, build<strong>in</strong>gs, materials and so on. In addition,there are the many problems be<strong>in</strong>g caused by fall<strong>in</strong>g rolls andby cuts <strong>in</strong> public spend<strong>in</strong>g. Some problems result from alack of resources; others are due to exist<strong>in</strong>g attitudes <strong>in</strong>schools which give the arts a poor share of the resourceswhich are available.<strong>The</strong>re are many schools where the arts flourish. In everycsse the head teacher and other staff appreciate and supportthem. In those schools where head teachers th<strong>in</strong>k the artsare marg<strong>in</strong>al, they suffer, whatever the economic circumstances.Token provision for the arts can be useless — and thereis a vicious circle here. Where the arts are poorly provided


for <strong>in</strong> schools, children will not benefit from them <strong>in</strong> theways we have described. Consequently, other members ofstaff, parents and governors will not see their real value.As a result, they will cont<strong>in</strong>ue to be poorly provided for.<strong>The</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> Council Project on Drama Teach<strong>in</strong>g: 10—16described this as a 'cycle of constra<strong>in</strong>t'. 1 In everyth<strong>in</strong>g wesay, therefore, we must assume a will<strong>in</strong>gness, among headteachers <strong>in</strong> particular, to break this cycle and give the artsa realistic chance of success.66 From We are look<strong>in</strong>g separately at primary and secondary schools,primary to for two reasons. 2 First, because the k<strong>in</strong>ds of provision theysecondary need and the problems <strong>in</strong>volved are different. Where thecurriculum of the primary school is teacher-based, that ofthe secondary school is teachers-based. 3 This <strong>in</strong>volves morecomplicated patterns of organisation.Second, because there are shifts of emphasis <strong>in</strong> arts teach<strong>in</strong>gbetween primary and secondary schools which we willdiscuss as we go on. Although we are separat<strong>in</strong>g them here,we see a press<strong>in</strong>g need to develop more thorough methods ofco-ord<strong>in</strong>ation and liaison between primary and secondaryschools — as much <strong>in</strong> the arts as elsewhere.<strong>The</strong> arts are natural forms of expression and communication.Part of the job of education is to develop thesenatural capacities <strong>in</strong>to practical capabilities. This shouldbeg<strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong> the primary school — if not before, <strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>fant education— and be extended through the secondary school,as a cont<strong>in</strong>uous process. Too often, for reasons we willconsider, there is almost no cont<strong>in</strong>uity here. As a result,there can be a considerable waste of time, resources andopportunity.6 7 <strong>The</strong> arts We share the view of HMI 4 that work <strong>in</strong> the arts <strong>in</strong> many<strong>in</strong> primary primary schools is disappo<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g. In some cases childrenschools do very little work <strong>in</strong> the arts. This may be because someteachers, as one survey has argued, do not put a high priorityon creative work. 5 In some schools, where there is artsprovision, children are work<strong>in</strong>g too far with<strong>in</strong> their owncapabilities — those <strong>in</strong> the top of the primary school stilldo<strong>in</strong>g work of which they were capable much earlier. Sometimesthis is because teachers' expectations of them are toolow and the work lacks direction. At other times, it is becausethe work is over-directed and gives children little room toexercise their creative powers <strong>in</strong> the ways we have described(Chapter 2). <strong>The</strong>re is often, for example <strong>in</strong> the visual arts, arepetitious series of exercises or fill<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> of collage outl<strong>in</strong>essupplied by the teacher.In look<strong>in</strong>g at the arts <strong>in</strong> primary schools we will considerfour questions:49


a What should be aimed at?b What provision is needed?e What are the problems?d What solutions are there?68 What Primary teachers have two broad responsibilities <strong>in</strong> the arts.should be <strong>The</strong> first is to establish them, as soon as possible, as part ofaimed at? the daily habit of education. Young children have a natural<strong>in</strong>terest and pleasure <strong>in</strong> movement and rhythm, hi shapes andcolours, <strong>in</strong> mak<strong>in</strong>g sounds, <strong>in</strong> imitation and <strong>in</strong> talk. <strong>The</strong>se arethe beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>gs of the arts. From the first, children should beencouraged to see these <strong>in</strong>terests as important parts of theschool day.Second, the teacher must promote <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g confidenceand competence <strong>in</strong> these activities. In Chapter 2 we criticisedsome views of creativity, argu<strong>in</strong>g that arts education amountsto more than the mere expression of ideas and feel<strong>in</strong>gs. Aschildren develop it becomes important for them to controlthe media of the various forms of expression and to deepentheir understand<strong>in</strong>g of the processes <strong>in</strong>volved. Explor<strong>in</strong>g thepotential of materials and the freedom of spontaneousexpression are important stages <strong>in</strong> the development ofartistic competence and enjoyment. <strong>The</strong>re comes a po<strong>in</strong>t,however, when the ability to control these processes tochosen ends becomes equally important if they are not tobreed a sense of <strong>in</strong>competence and eventually of frustration.Eliot Eisner has noted, of development <strong>in</strong> the visual arts,for example, that from the ages of two to thirteen thereseems to be a regular and predictable development <strong>in</strong> the waychildren create the illusion of space <strong>in</strong> their draw<strong>in</strong>gs. Beyondthirteen, these graphic skills seem to reach a plateau ofcompetence so that those who have no <strong>in</strong>struction tend todevelop further skills at a very slow rate. As a result,50'. . . the draw<strong>in</strong>gs of most adults cannot be easily differentiatedfrom those of young adolescents. It is not surpris<strong>in</strong>gthat this should be true. Draw<strong>in</strong>g and pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>gare, after all, the products of complex skills and, likemost complex skills, they do not develop from simplematuration . .. S<strong>in</strong>ce most adolescents do no formalwork <strong>in</strong> the visual arts .. . there is no reason to expectthem to develop highly sophisticated graphic and pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>gtechniques on their own.' (Eisner, 1976, p!2)Primary school teachers work with young children dur<strong>in</strong>gtheir most formative years when they have an enormouscapacity to absorb new experiences. But they do not developthe complex skills of any of the arts 'from simple maturation'.


<strong>The</strong> natural pleasure and versatility which children have <strong>in</strong>learn<strong>in</strong>g, at this stage, give teachers the opportunity and, weth<strong>in</strong>k, the responsibility both to produce work of a highstandard throughout the primary school and to give a firmfoundation of attitudes, skills and understand<strong>in</strong>g for allsubsequent work <strong>in</strong> the arts. What this <strong>in</strong>volves will varybetween the arts. We can take as two examples, the visualarts <strong>in</strong> general, and music.69 Visual In the visual arts, the curriculum from 5—11 should enablearts children to:a experiment with different media — watercolour, crayon,paper, cloth, clay etcb explore different techniques, tools and modes of manipulation<strong>in</strong> each — modell<strong>in</strong>g, brush-work etce understand the basic ideas of, for example, tone, colour,texture and contrast, and, eventually, of more complicatedideas of, for example, balance, focus and proportiond beg<strong>in</strong> to respond to a variety of styles and forms ofvisual art, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g differences between cultural forms(eg Western, Oriental, African) and between historicalperiods (eg primitive, ancient, mediaeval, modern)e develop an awareness of the use of visual symbols toconvey ideas and feel<strong>in</strong>gsf develop an awareness of design — the relationshipsbetween materials, forms and functions of objectsand constructionsg develop powers of observation and description 670 Music An overall aim of music <strong>in</strong> the curriculum from 5—11 is toenable children to use and to understand sound as a mediumof expression and communication. This will <strong>in</strong>clude enabl<strong>in</strong>gthem to:a experiment with, and develop skills <strong>in</strong>, produc<strong>in</strong>gsounds with:— the voice— a variety of musical <strong>in</strong>struments— other means of sound productionb work <strong>in</strong> a variety of group<strong>in</strong>gs, large and small, us<strong>in</strong>g allof thesee discrim<strong>in</strong>ate and use timbre, pitch, <strong>in</strong>tensity, rhythmand duration, with <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g accuracyd use conventional and accepted musical forms andstyles as well as experiment<strong>in</strong>g with otherse beg<strong>in</strong> to respond to a variety of styles and forms of51


composition — Western and non-Western — and toappreciate their use and appropriateness <strong>in</strong> differentsituationsf develop <strong>in</strong>dividual <strong>in</strong>terests and abilities <strong>in</strong> mak<strong>in</strong>gand appreciat<strong>in</strong>g music71 Other Similar lists could be drawn up for each of the arts <strong>in</strong> thearts primary school. Among them all, as between these two,there will be considerable overlap. <strong>The</strong>re are two commonemphases: to give children a broad <strong>in</strong>troduction to the richvariety of media, techniques and forms of expressive andcreative activity, and to aim cont<strong>in</strong>ually to raise their levelsof competence and atta<strong>in</strong>ment <strong>in</strong> us<strong>in</strong>g and understand<strong>in</strong>gthem.72 What In primary schools, children work for most of the day withprovision the same teacher. Unlike work <strong>in</strong> secondary schools —is needed? except where certa<strong>in</strong> spaces, such as the hall, are needed —there is no organisational need to establish fixed periods oftime for the arts. Certa<strong>in</strong>ly, there is no educational need todo so. Indeed, separate timetabl<strong>in</strong>g can place artificial boundariesaround activities which, with young children especially,should be seen as an <strong>in</strong>tegrated part of day-to-day experience.<strong>The</strong> most important need is for teachers themselves torecognise and respond to the opportunities for expressive andcreative work which cont<strong>in</strong>ually arise <strong>in</strong> the primary school.<strong>The</strong>re are two central questions here: those of <strong>in</strong>tegrationand of resources.73 Integral- <strong>The</strong> arts <strong>in</strong> the primary school need to be conceived of, andion organised, as an <strong>in</strong>tegral part of every school day. <strong>The</strong> factthat one teacher is concerned with almost the whole of thechild's daily curriculum makes this a real possibility. <strong>The</strong>reare three aspects to this.First, the arts have to be def<strong>in</strong>ed very generally at thisstage to embrace a wide range of expressive activity <strong>in</strong>movement, pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g, music, dramatic play<strong>in</strong>g and so on. Amajor value of these activities, from the earliest days ofeducation, is <strong>in</strong> promot<strong>in</strong>g the use of imag<strong>in</strong>ation, orig<strong>in</strong>ality,curiosity and a sheer pleasure <strong>in</strong> do<strong>in</strong>g and learn<strong>in</strong>g.Second, <strong>in</strong> talk<strong>in</strong>g about the aesthetic and creative modeof discourse <strong>in</strong> Chapter 1, we noted that this embraces morethan the arts. Look<strong>in</strong>g through a microscope at an <strong>in</strong>sect'sw<strong>in</strong>g; exam<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g shells and fossils, plants and the localenvironment can be rich sources of aesthetic experience. <strong>The</strong>arts are the characteristic ways <strong>in</strong> which we record andreflect upon these experiences. Aesthetic experience, likecreativity, should be fostered throughout the curriculum,52


as well as <strong>in</strong> the arts.<strong>The</strong> third po<strong>in</strong>t ste<strong>in</strong>s from this. It is to emphasise the<strong>in</strong>ter-discipl<strong>in</strong>ary nature of the primary school curriculum —work <strong>in</strong> one mode of activity stimulat<strong>in</strong>g, and be<strong>in</strong>g stimulatedby, work <strong>in</strong> another. <strong>The</strong> value <strong>in</strong> talk<strong>in</strong>g of modes of activityand understand<strong>in</strong>g rather than of separate subjects, is partly<strong>in</strong> underl<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g that the same th<strong>in</strong>gs can be seen and understood<strong>in</strong> a variety of ways, geographically, biologically,historically — aesthetically. Work <strong>in</strong> drama or dance is aslikely to lead to a use of reference books as to further work<strong>in</strong> other art forms: for example, to explor<strong>in</strong>g topics relatedto ritual, festivals, other civilisations. This may lead <strong>in</strong> turnto poetry or music.In <strong>in</strong>ter-discipl<strong>in</strong>ary work, there is always a danger ofsacrific<strong>in</strong>g depth for variety. We will return to this later. Wewant to emphasise here that good primary school practice isbased on teachers recognis<strong>in</strong>g the opportunities to fertilisework <strong>in</strong> one part of the curriculum with work <strong>in</strong> another.<strong>The</strong> unify<strong>in</strong>g and <strong>in</strong>tegrat<strong>in</strong>g aspects of the arts, which wediscussed <strong>in</strong> Chapter 1, give them a particular value <strong>in</strong> thisrespect.74 Resources <strong>The</strong>re is a tendency to th<strong>in</strong>k of resources <strong>in</strong> terms of expensiveequipment — projectors, video, hi-fi etc. Althoughthese can enhance good arts teach<strong>in</strong>g, they are not essentialto it. In th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g about resources for the visual arts <strong>in</strong> theprimary school, the Art Committee of the <strong>Schools</strong> Councilmake the central po<strong>in</strong>t that we should be conscious both ofthe scale of the child's world and of his/her relationship to it.<strong>The</strong> child, for whom everyth<strong>in</strong>g is new and to be explored,becomes absorbed <strong>in</strong> th<strong>in</strong>gs that adults have come to overlookor take for granted:'Watch a young child play<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> a ra<strong>in</strong>-filled gutter, look<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong> a pond, study<strong>in</strong>g a grasshopper or dissect<strong>in</strong>g a plant. . .often of most importance to the child is what is possiblefor him or her to hold <strong>in</strong> a cupped hand.'(<strong>Schools</strong> Council,1981a, p9)In schools where there is work of quality, teachers arealways sensitive to the nature of this relationship betweenthe child and the world and to the need to create an environmentwhich feeds curiosity:'. .. an environment where rocks and shells, creaturesand bones, grasses and earth are considered togetherwith the vast range of man-made th<strong>in</strong>gs which surroundand fasc<strong>in</strong>ate the child as fundamental resources for53


learn<strong>in</strong>g.' (<strong>Schools</strong> Council, 1981a, plO)In all of the arts, these 'fundamental resources for learn<strong>in</strong>g'are of two sorts: first, objects and experiences which excitethe imag<strong>in</strong>ation and act as a stimulus for learn<strong>in</strong>g; and,second, the media through which children can formulate andexpress their responses to them.75 Avail- <strong>The</strong> stimuli for expressive and creative activity are plentiful.ability: a <strong>The</strong> school needs to make them both available and accessibleresource bank to children. <strong>The</strong>y can be made available through the organisationof a resource bank. For the visual arts, the <strong>Schools</strong>Council suggest that this might <strong>in</strong>clude:'— rocks, stones, fossils— stuffed animals, birds, sk<strong>in</strong>s and parts of animalssuch as bones, owl pellets, horns, claws, w<strong>in</strong>gs,feathers, mounted butterflies, moths— dried objects such as twigs, tree roots, pressed flowers,leaves, everlast<strong>in</strong>g flowers, seed boxes— objects of the sea: coral, shells, sand, crab cases andclaws, starfish, sea urch<strong>in</strong>s, lobster pots, fish nets,cork floats, driftwood— dolls, dolls' cloth<strong>in</strong>g, old or new— old or modern mach<strong>in</strong>e parts: ball bear<strong>in</strong>gs, cogs,wheels, nuts, bolts, screws, tools— scrap metal bits and pieces . . .'(<strong>Schools</strong> Council, 1981a, p23—25)<strong>The</strong> provision of a dress<strong>in</strong>g-up box or cloth<strong>in</strong>g rail and abox of hats and shoes can also be a rich stimulus, withyounger children, for dramatic play<strong>in</strong>g.76Accessibility:theethos ofschoolIf such th<strong>in</strong>gs are available, they must also be accessible tochildren. Display is an important factor here — <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>gthe display of children's own work as a resource for eachother. <strong>The</strong> way <strong>in</strong> which work and other material is displayedand arranged <strong>in</strong> a school is more than a matter ofconvenience: it is a reflection of the atmosphere and attitudeswhich prevail there.'Whatever the type of school and wherever resource materialis displayed, it needs to be presented <strong>in</strong> a way that willencourage children to stop and th<strong>in</strong>k. It should be excit<strong>in</strong>g,unexpected and stimulat<strong>in</strong>g ... it should be presentedwith as much visual sensitivity as the staff of a school canprovide, and ... provide ... an ever-chang<strong>in</strong>g environment<strong>in</strong> which to work'. (<strong>Schools</strong> Council, 1981a, p30)54


In these respects, the arts and the provision of resourcesfor them are to do with the whole ethos of a school.77 Expressive Resources to stimulate learn<strong>in</strong>g and enquiry can be dist<strong>in</strong>mediaguished from the media — pa<strong>in</strong>t, clay, sound, movement —through which children formulate and express their responses<strong>in</strong> the arts. Different arts use different media to addressdifferent modes of perception: visual, aural, tactile, k<strong>in</strong>aesthetic.Three requirements <strong>in</strong> provision here are forvariety, quality and adequacy.78 Variety <strong>The</strong> case for variety of provision is implicit <strong>in</strong> our generalargument. As we noted <strong>in</strong> Chapter 2, it does not follow thatbecause a person is creative <strong>in</strong> one realm of activity he orshe is equally, or at all, creative <strong>in</strong> others. We all tend toshow creative abilities <strong>in</strong> relation to particular problems ortypes of activity which engage our curiosity and for whichwe have a 'feel'. <strong>The</strong> creative musician is not necessarily acreative pa<strong>in</strong>ter or dancer and need not f<strong>in</strong>d these other artspersonally reward<strong>in</strong>g. <strong>The</strong> person who is 'at home' work<strong>in</strong>gwith clay may feel awkward work<strong>in</strong>g with pa<strong>in</strong>t and so on.It is common, however, to hear some children describedas hav<strong>in</strong>g no imag<strong>in</strong>ation or creative ability. We f<strong>in</strong>d this apessimistic and despair<strong>in</strong>g attitude. It is unlikely that anychild is actually bereft of these th<strong>in</strong>gs. It is far more likelythat he or she has not found — and has not been helped tof<strong>in</strong>d — the areas <strong>in</strong> which his her own creative abilities lie.This is not surpris<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> schools where the curriculumtreads a narrow path of 'basic skills'. If schools are concernedwith develop<strong>in</strong>g the full variety of human <strong>in</strong>telligence andcapabilities, they must provide for the many ways <strong>in</strong> whichthis is likely to show itself from one child to the next.Provid<strong>in</strong>g for one art form <strong>in</strong> the belief that one does aswell as another is not enough.79 Quality All work is improved by good tools and materials. Resourcesneed not be expensive but that does not mean that materials— pa<strong>in</strong>t, paper, clay, <strong>in</strong>struments etc — need only be secondrate. High standards of achievement <strong>in</strong> the arts will be encouragedwhen children work — as adults would wish to —with media that enhance rather than <strong>in</strong>hibit their attemptsat expression and communication.80 Adequacy Although there is no need to prescribe the amounts of timeto be spent on the arts <strong>in</strong> primary schools, it is essentialthat the time allowed is adequate for the task <strong>in</strong> hand. <strong>The</strong>55


perform<strong>in</strong>g arts — music, dance and drama — are key exampleshere.Unlike, say, pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g or modell<strong>in</strong>g, the perform<strong>in</strong>g artsonly exist as events <strong>in</strong> time. When the music, the dance orthe drama ends, there is no object left to see or touch. To beseen or heard aga<strong>in</strong>, it must be done aga<strong>in</strong>. Time is thus oneof the central media of the perform<strong>in</strong>g arts. <strong>The</strong> way <strong>in</strong>which it is used <strong>in</strong> a piece of work is crucial both to itsmean<strong>in</strong>g and its aesthetic qualities. This applies equally, <strong>in</strong>dance and drama, to the use of space.Giv<strong>in</strong>g some time to the arts, or some space, is not necessarilyenough. Provision must be sensitive to the particularways <strong>in</strong> which the creative process makes use of these til<strong>in</strong>gs,and to the need for work to develop both with<strong>in</strong> the schoolday and from one day to the next.81 ResourcefulnessTo summarise, the effective teach<strong>in</strong>g of the arts <strong>in</strong> primaryschools depends upon:a the active encouragement of expressive and creativeactivity <strong>in</strong> all areas of the curriculumb a stimulat<strong>in</strong>g classroom environment and a readysupply of <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g resourcese the availability of suitable materials for the task <strong>in</strong> handd the careful use of space and time to allow for thedevelopment of a variety of activities by <strong>in</strong>dividualsand by groupse careful preparation of work and the expectation of highstandards of atta<strong>in</strong>ment with<strong>in</strong> the capabilities ofeach childf co-operation and co-ord<strong>in</strong>ation between staff<strong>The</strong> most important resource of any school is its teachers:the most important, quality of any teacher is resourcefulness.<strong>The</strong>re are very few organisational problems <strong>in</strong> develop<strong>in</strong>g thearts <strong>in</strong> primary schools. <strong>The</strong>ir success or otherwise leansheavily on the attitudes and resourcefulness of the class andthe head teacher. It is important to comment on some ofthe problems which arise <strong>in</strong> relation to this.82 Whatare theproblems?<strong>The</strong> most common obstacle to effective arts teach<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> theprimary school is a lack of confidence among teachers,comb<strong>in</strong>ed with — or result<strong>in</strong>g from — a feel<strong>in</strong>g that theythemselves are not 'artistic'. Of the many possible reasonsfor this, we will consider two: the <strong>in</strong>fluence of teachers'own education at school and the deficiencies of <strong>in</strong>itialtra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g courses.56


83 A vicious Teachers are themselves a product of the educational procirclecesses whose imbalance we have been criticis<strong>in</strong>g. If theyfeel ill at ease <strong>in</strong> the arts and unable to organise these essentialexperiences for children, it may be because they weredenied them as children. This strengthens our argumentabout the long-term dangers of lop-sided educational priorities.For the cycle is self-perpetuat<strong>in</strong>g. Teachers are amongthe successes of the education system. It is not surpris<strong>in</strong>gthat they tend to ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> the practices which nurtured theirsuccess and to limit their <strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong> the areas whichthey themselves were educated to neglect.84 Initial Initial tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g for primary school teachers is often deficienttra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> two ways: either it <strong>in</strong>cludes no compulsory arts elementat all, or students only practise the arts at their own level,with little guidance <strong>in</strong> apply<strong>in</strong>g them to work with specificage groups. Educational theory tends to compose a separatepart of the course. <strong>The</strong> new patterns of degree courses havenow brought an even greater emphasis on theory. This islead<strong>in</strong>g to a further neglect of practical and applied courses,despite the obvious need for balance. This makes the currentoutlook bleak for improv<strong>in</strong>g the arts <strong>in</strong> primary schoolsthrough exist<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>itial tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g courses. While teachersthemselves have little experience, low expectations and evenless confidence <strong>in</strong> the arts, these will cont<strong>in</strong>ue to be passedon to children.85 Whatare thepossiblesolutions?We see a need for three k<strong>in</strong>ds of action here:a the <strong>in</strong>clusion of a compulsory arts element <strong>in</strong> all <strong>in</strong>itialtra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g courses for primary school teachersb the appo<strong>in</strong>tment of teachers with specialist arts tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong> primary schoolse the development of school-based <strong>in</strong>-service tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>the arts86 An arts If the long-term prospects of the arts <strong>in</strong> primary schools areelement <strong>in</strong> to improve, three provisions need to be made <strong>in</strong> the coursestra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g of all students on <strong>in</strong>itial tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g courses as general classroomteachers. Mak<strong>in</strong>g due allowance for the differences <strong>in</strong> availabletime, we see these as equally necessary elements <strong>in</strong> theprofessional studies sections of both BEd and PGCE courses.— General theoretical studies which encourage an appreciationof the importance of the arts <strong>in</strong> the balanceddevelopment of the child.— Opportunities for students to work at their own level <strong>in</strong>a variety of art forms comb<strong>in</strong>ed with guidance on57


techniques and resources for work<strong>in</strong>g with different agegroups.— Opportunities to develop personal <strong>in</strong>terests and practicalabilities <strong>in</strong> a chosen area of the arts.It follows, <strong>in</strong> all cases, that the use of the arts should beencouraged <strong>in</strong>, and be <strong>in</strong>cluded <strong>in</strong> the assessment of, allperiods of teach<strong>in</strong>g practice. We are not call<strong>in</strong>g here for allstudents to be tra<strong>in</strong>ed, aga<strong>in</strong>st other wishes, as arts specialists.We are urg<strong>in</strong>g that they be made aware, as part of theirformal studies, of the importance of the arts and of thepossibilities they present for enrich<strong>in</strong>g and enliven<strong>in</strong>g thewhole curriculum. We believe that no conscientious tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gfor primary schools can leave these th<strong>in</strong>gs to chance.87 <strong>The</strong>need forspecialists<strong>The</strong> <strong>in</strong>sistent problem with specialist tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g is that therelatedness of the various parts of the curriculum, and thepossibilities for <strong>in</strong>ter-discipl<strong>in</strong>ary work, are easily overlooked.Nevertheless, the <strong>in</strong>adequacy of a good deal ofarts teach<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> primary schools does call for more teacherswith specialised knowledge and skills to be appo<strong>in</strong>ted. Thiswould certa<strong>in</strong>ly help to raise the quality of work <strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>dividualclassrooms. What of the quality of work <strong>in</strong> the school as awhole?88 <strong>The</strong> We have emphasised the high quality of work <strong>in</strong> manyAdvisory schools and authorities. <strong>The</strong> work of the Advisory ServiceService has always played a key role here. <strong>The</strong> Adviser provides avital means of communication between schools and betweenthe different sectors of education across an authority. This isessential for the co-ord<strong>in</strong>ation of resources and policies andalso for the provision of appropriate <strong>in</strong>-service tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g.Recognis<strong>in</strong>g that many primary teachers do not feel equippedby their general tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g to teach dance, for example, theInner London Education Authority (ILEA) has sought toprovide <strong>in</strong>-service tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g and support through:58a courses on specific aspects of dance — from s<strong>in</strong>glesessions to courses extend<strong>in</strong>g over several weeksb arrang<strong>in</strong>g for teachers of dance to visit schools towork with the class teachere occasional secondments of advisory teachers from aschool to work on particular dance projectsd arrang<strong>in</strong>g for selected dance groups to visit and work<strong>in</strong> schoolse enabl<strong>in</strong>g teachers to take groups of pupils to selecteddance performances <strong>in</strong> public theatres


<strong>The</strong> ILEA provides a comparable service <strong>in</strong> other artforms, as of course, do a number of authorities. <strong>The</strong> valueof Advisers and of Advisory Teachers stems from theirprovid<strong>in</strong>g a dissem<strong>in</strong>ation of ideas throughout an authority.<strong>The</strong> tendency, <strong>in</strong> some authorities, to re-deploy AdvisoryTeachers to work full-time <strong>in</strong> one school, to make redundancieswith<strong>in</strong> the service, or to leave posts vacant, forwhatever reason, is very much to be regretted, therefore,and poses a grave threat to standards of provision <strong>in</strong> thearts. We believe that a strong Advisory Service is both themost effective and least expensive way of improv<strong>in</strong>g thequality of teach<strong>in</strong>g. We strongly urge that the ma<strong>in</strong>tenance,and wherever possible the development, of the AdvisoryService should be seen as an essential safeguard for thefuture of the arts <strong>in</strong> schools.89 Staff <strong>The</strong> two ma<strong>in</strong> ways <strong>in</strong> which the quality of the arts <strong>in</strong> primconsultantsary schools — and we ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>, of the curriculum as a whole— can be improved are by:a rais<strong>in</strong>g the general levels of teachers' competence andconfidence <strong>in</strong> the artsb pursu<strong>in</strong>g opportunities for <strong>in</strong>ter-discipl<strong>in</strong>ary workSome schools are attempt<strong>in</strong>g to do this by designat<strong>in</strong>gteachers as consultants, who pass on specialist skills andknowledge to the rest of the staff. This role should be seenas complementary to, rather than <strong>in</strong>stead of, the work ofthe Advisers. <strong>The</strong> teacher <strong>in</strong> the school can help other membersof staff on a day-to-day basis on matters affect<strong>in</strong>g work withtheir own classes. This can be done through:a adviceoffer<strong>in</strong>g ideas on how to develop particular schemes ofwork through the arts, and how to extend, and deepenthe quality of, arts activities already <strong>in</strong> handb assistancework<strong>in</strong>g alongside colleagues for specific lessons oractivitiese coursesorganis<strong>in</strong>g short practical sessions for staff on aspectsof their own specialism — use of materials, basic concepts,etcSuch teachers can also provide an element of more specialisedactivity with older children <strong>in</strong> the primary school whoare ready for more demand<strong>in</strong>g work <strong>in</strong> the arts.Two further po<strong>in</strong>ts should be made. First, although we59


are th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g particularly of the arts, specialists <strong>in</strong> any area ofwork could fulfil such a role for colleagues. <strong>Arts</strong> specialistshave much to ga<strong>in</strong> from other discipl<strong>in</strong>es.Second, there are obvious difficulties <strong>in</strong> the managementof such an arrangement. Apart from those which might arisefrom teachers work<strong>in</strong>g with other classes, other staff mayf<strong>in</strong>d it hard to accept a colleague <strong>in</strong> such a role.<strong>The</strong>re are, however, as we have suggested, many possiblebenefits which make such schemes worth support<strong>in</strong>g —certa<strong>in</strong>ly as an area of experiment. A benefit worth mention<strong>in</strong>gis the valuable experience this can give teacher/consultantsthemselves, not least as a preparation for further responsibility.It can provide an important means of professional developmentand the appearance of those with arts backgrounds <strong>in</strong>positions of responsibility <strong>in</strong> primary schools is a developmentwe would very much welcome.90 Summary In this chapter we have looked at the general requirementsand problems <strong>in</strong> provid<strong>in</strong>g for the arts <strong>in</strong> primary schools.We have emphasised the need for <strong>in</strong>tegration of the arts<strong>in</strong>to the primary school curriculum and the need for cont<strong>in</strong>uityof provision between primary and secondary schools.In the next chapter we cont<strong>in</strong>ue this discussion <strong>in</strong> look<strong>in</strong>gat questions of provision <strong>in</strong> the secondary school.60


5 Provision: the arts <strong>in</strong> secondary schools91 Reasons In this chapter we consider how opportunities can be proforthe vided for children to pursue the arts <strong>in</strong> secondary schools.chapter We look at some of the major constra<strong>in</strong>ts on this work atpresent. We ask what can be done and suggest some strategies.92 In In some schools, and <strong>in</strong> some authorities, the arts are wellgenera/established and make a vital contribution both to <strong>in</strong>dividualeducation and to the quality of school life <strong>in</strong> general. Itwould be wrong to suggest otherwise. It would be equallywrong to suppose that this is the case <strong>in</strong> all schools or <strong>in</strong> allauthorities.In the previous chapter we discussed the cycle of constra<strong>in</strong>tswhich can affect the arts <strong>in</strong> primary schools. Insecondary schools these can be more severe and more difficultto remedy. A constant reason for this is that the secondaryschool curriculum is teachers-based (Bernste<strong>in</strong>, 1971)and its organisation is considerably more complicated. <strong>The</strong>reare, <strong>in</strong> addition, the problems <strong>in</strong> staff<strong>in</strong>g and facilities result<strong>in</strong>gfrom cuts <strong>in</strong> public spend<strong>in</strong>g and fall<strong>in</strong>g rolls. <strong>The</strong> effectsof these have been monitored by a number of <strong>in</strong>dependentsources. 1 <strong>The</strong>se have drawn attention to worsen<strong>in</strong>g pupilteacherratios, longer hours for teachers and a reduction <strong>in</strong>the range of subject options. <strong>The</strong>re is also evidence thatexam<strong>in</strong>ation courses tend to be protected at the expense ofnon-exam<strong>in</strong>ation courses and of courses for 'less able' children.All levels and areas of education are be<strong>in</strong>g affected bycuts <strong>in</strong> book-stocks, equipment and specialist materials. Inthese circumstances we can expect the gap to widen betweenthose areas where parents can be generous to education andcan afford to give schools substantial help, and those wherefamilies are less well-off. <strong>The</strong> arts have never been lavishlyprovided for <strong>in</strong> schools as a whole. Given this general backgroundof deteriorat<strong>in</strong>g provision, the danger now is that61


they will suffer disproportionately <strong>in</strong> future.93 <strong>The</strong> need We see a need for three general forms of action. First, morefor action research is needed <strong>in</strong>to the effects of cuts and fall<strong>in</strong>g rollson arts provision <strong>in</strong> specific schools and areas. If an effectivelobby is to be ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed <strong>in</strong> the corridors of educationalpower, it must be supported by evidence of the problemsoccurr<strong>in</strong>g daily <strong>in</strong> schools.Second, prevail<strong>in</strong>g attitudes to the arts need to be tackled.Many adm<strong>in</strong>istrators, head teachers, parents, teachers andpupils, have failed to see the value of the arts — <strong>in</strong> manycases, we believe, because of their own <strong>in</strong>different experiencesof them at school. This pattern of <strong>in</strong>difference must bebroken.Third, the pr<strong>in</strong>ciples we have discussed <strong>in</strong> support of thearts must be applied to schools and translated <strong>in</strong>to positiveaction to change the specific circumstances <strong>in</strong> which thework takes place.We will suggest guidel<strong>in</strong>es for the forms this action mighttake <strong>in</strong> respect of:a the curriculum and the timetableb space and facilitiese staff<strong>in</strong>g and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gd attitudes94 Constra<strong>in</strong>tsonthe artsWe can identify five common areas of constra<strong>in</strong>t on the arts<strong>in</strong> secondary schools:a co-ord<strong>in</strong>ationb timee space and facilitiesd attitudese exam<strong>in</strong>ations and assessment95 Liaison <strong>The</strong>re is a lack of co-ord<strong>in</strong>ation and cont<strong>in</strong>uity <strong>in</strong> arts education:first, between the primary and secondary and tertiarysectors; second, between teachers work<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> differentarts <strong>in</strong> the same school. Teachers <strong>in</strong> secondary schoolsoften know noth<strong>in</strong>g of what children have done, <strong>in</strong> theirown specialist areas, at primary school. Some children willhave done a good deal of dance, drama and music, othersvery little. All tend to be treated as beg<strong>in</strong>ners <strong>in</strong> the firstyear of secondary school at a time when, given effectiveliaison, they could already have achieved a great deal <strong>in</strong> thearts. In some arts — <strong>in</strong> dance, for example — time lost <strong>in</strong>younger years can never be replaced. In others, such asdrama, children who have not had appropriate experience62


<strong>in</strong> primary schools can develop a self-consciousness towardsexpressive work which can take a considerable time to overcome<strong>in</strong> secondary schools.96 <strong>The</strong> world Co-ord<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g the secondary school curriculum is greatlyof the complicated by the specialisation of staff and departments.specialist Professional identities tend to be closely tied to subjectareas. <strong>The</strong> problem for the arts, as <strong>in</strong>deed for the rest of thecurriculum, is that teachers tend to see curriculum issueslargely, and sometimes exclusively, <strong>in</strong> terms of their ownspecialism — as the unique problems of music, drama and soon. When resources are limited or the talk is of cut-backs, theresult is often a balloon debate over which of the arts is mostimportant. What music gets, drama or dance is apt to lose andvice versa. This is one of the ways <strong>in</strong> which the case for, andthe value of, the arts becomes dissipated <strong>in</strong> practice.97 Time- Timetabl<strong>in</strong>g for the arts is often <strong>in</strong>appropriate, lead<strong>in</strong>g totabl<strong>in</strong>g: either fragmentation or too much <strong>in</strong>tegration. <strong>The</strong> artsfragment- curriculum can become fragmented <strong>in</strong> two ways. Music,ation drama, dance and visual arts are often timetabled, likeother 'subjects', <strong>in</strong> short periods of 30—40 m<strong>in</strong>utes. Thiscan seriously reduce the quality of work. In drama, forexample, there is a good deal of practical group work. Unlikemany lessons, drama <strong>in</strong>volves movement and physical activity.<strong>The</strong>re is often no time <strong>in</strong> s<strong>in</strong>gle periods for groups to developideas satisfactorily nor for <strong>in</strong>dividuals to make the transitionfrom other styles of learn<strong>in</strong>g.Expressive work <strong>in</strong> all of the arts takes concentration,application — and time. Short periods often prejudice goodwork. Moreover, the week-long gaps which are commonbetween lessons can mean that a large proportion of eachlesson is spent pick<strong>in</strong>g up the threads of the work <strong>in</strong> hand —and too little on mov<strong>in</strong>g it forward.<strong>The</strong> second form of fragmentation is between the arts.In Chapter 4 we discussed the opportunities which thearts present for <strong>in</strong>ter-discipl<strong>in</strong>ary work. This applies equallyat secondary level. <strong>The</strong>se opportunities are too often lost <strong>in</strong>the divisions of the timetable.98 Integrat- Some schools have sought to overcome these difficulties byion establish<strong>in</strong>g faculties or departments of creative or expressivearts. We welcome this, <strong>in</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>ciple. <strong>The</strong>re are two dangers<strong>in</strong> practice. First, it can lead simply to a larger enclave.<strong>The</strong> real value of <strong>in</strong>tegration is not only between the differentarts but also between the arts and the rest of the curriculum.<strong>The</strong> arts as a whole can easily become segregatedbeh<strong>in</strong>d faculty walls.63


Second, <strong>in</strong>tegration can mean many th<strong>in</strong>gs <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>gsimply a loose assortment of discipl<strong>in</strong>es adm<strong>in</strong>istered tochildren <strong>in</strong> a general dose. Pupils need time to pursue thearts rigorously and accord<strong>in</strong>g to their different discipl<strong>in</strong>es.This is partly because the different arts do impose differentpatterns of work and require different skills. It is also becausedifferent children f<strong>in</strong>d different arts more compatible withtheir own ideas and abilities than others and will wanteventually to give more time to them.Just as fragmentation can destroy concentration andcont<strong>in</strong>uity, the abid<strong>in</strong>g danger <strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>tegrated courses is <strong>in</strong>sacrific<strong>in</strong>g depth for variety.99 Space <strong>The</strong> arts require certa<strong>in</strong> facilities, not only, as for exampleand with dance and music, to allow the work to be done at all,facilities but also to enhance the atmosphere <strong>in</strong> which it takes place.Laboratories not only provide the facilities for scientificwork, they provide a sett<strong>in</strong>g and a mood for it. Equally,the drama room, the art and music rooms facilitate expressivework partly through becom<strong>in</strong>g associated with it. Specialistfacilities do not guarantee work of quality; but they canhelp greatly by rais<strong>in</strong>g pupils' expectations and <strong>in</strong>tensify<strong>in</strong>gtheir concentration. <strong>The</strong> allocation of space and equipmentis largely, but not entirely, determ<strong>in</strong>ed by what is available.Provision is also a function of status. In a secondary school<strong>in</strong> the North-West of England for example, the drama teacherworks, as many do, <strong>in</strong> the school hall. If it is needed for anyother purpose, she has to make way. Consequently, dramais often taken <strong>in</strong> cloakrooms or corridors — or not at all.<strong>The</strong> head teacher welcomes the prestige of the annual productionfor governors and parents, but he gives curriculumdrama no support from day-to-day. Drama is virtually suspendedfrom March to June each year when the hall isused for exam<strong>in</strong>ations. <strong>The</strong> problems of provision here arenot due to an actual lack of them, but to <strong>in</strong>sensitivity towhat is needed. This is not an uncommon story.100 Attitudes Many of the problems <strong>in</strong> f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>g time, space and facilitiesfor the arts are <strong>in</strong> chang<strong>in</strong>g the attitudes which withold them.<strong>The</strong> key figure here, as elsewhere, is the head teacher. He orshe is naturally affected, however, by the views of governorsand parents. <strong>The</strong>re can be a vicious circle here. Parents areless likely to see the value of the arts if the school only giveshalf-hearted support to them <strong>in</strong> the first place. Joan Freeman<strong>in</strong> a study of 'aesthetically gifted' children 2 found that, <strong>in</strong>some of her sample schools <strong>in</strong> Salford, there was 'a completeabsence of measurable talent'. However,64


'. . . there were schools under the same authority, whichhad whole classes learn<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>struments and pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>gwith fervour.' (Freeman, 1979)She found it difficult to believe that 'aesthetic talent istruly def<strong>in</strong>able by school catchment area'. All of these'aesthetically impoverished' children were from economicallypoor areas:'.. . and neither parents nor teachers were seen to besufficiently motivated to foster anyth<strong>in</strong>g that was notconsidered to be essentially education.' (Freeman, 1979)This is an echo of what James Hemm<strong>in</strong>gs (1980) callsthe 'academic illusion'. <strong>The</strong> f<strong>in</strong>al area of constra<strong>in</strong>t derivespartly from this. <strong>The</strong>se are the pressures of the exam<strong>in</strong>ationsystem.101 Exam<strong>in</strong>ations102 <strong>The</strong>need fora policyWe will deal more fully with the question of assessment andexam<strong>in</strong>ation <strong>in</strong> the next chapter. We can note here that theexam<strong>in</strong>ation system, as it operates <strong>in</strong> many schools, restrictsthe arts <strong>in</strong> two ways. First, it can encourage forms of assessmentwhich are not compatible with much of what is achieved<strong>in</strong> the arts. This can affect the way they are taught — themore readily exam<strong>in</strong>ed areas of work be<strong>in</strong>g given greateremphasis. Second, pupils are often not <strong>in</strong>cl<strong>in</strong>ed to takecourses <strong>in</strong> the upper secondary school which do not givethem usable qualifications. Both factors can affect thestatus of the arts and reduce provision.<strong>The</strong>re is no reason to assume, said the <strong>Schools</strong>' Council <strong>in</strong>1975, 3 that the objectives of the different departments <strong>in</strong>a school add up to a set of objectives for the whole curriculum.Indeed, where curricula are so fragmented, it isdifficult to see how this could be so. We share the view ofboth <strong>The</strong> School Curriculum (DBS, 1981) and <strong>The</strong> PracticalCurriculum (<strong>Schools</strong> Council, 1981) that all schools need toevolve a general curriculum policy:'. . . a framework of pr<strong>in</strong>ciples with<strong>in</strong> which <strong>in</strong>dividualteachers, teams or departments can consider how bestthey might each contribute to the whole curriculum.'(<strong>Schools</strong> Council, 1975, p24)In some authorities the processes of consultation thisrequires are well <strong>in</strong> hand. In others they are just beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g.We welcome these moves towards more co-ord<strong>in</strong>ated curricula.We would emphasise two po<strong>in</strong>ts. First, <strong>in</strong>sofar as the65


arts have a substantial contribution to make to the educationof all children and young people, the curricula of all schoolsshould have a clear arts component, properly justified andplanned. Second, <strong>in</strong>sofar as the arts have functions and characteristics<strong>in</strong> common, it is not separate policies for each of thearts which are needed first, but a general policy for the artswhich relates them all to the purposes of the whole curriculum.103 <strong>The</strong> In Chapter 3 we discussed the need for the curriculum to beneed for related to the cultural sett<strong>in</strong>g of the school. To the extentspecifics that it is, the specific contributions of the arts with<strong>in</strong> itwill vary from one school to the next. So too will the particularconstra<strong>in</strong>ts to be overcome <strong>in</strong> putt<strong>in</strong>g policy <strong>in</strong>topractice. An effective policy must take account of actualneeds and circumstances — available staff, spaces, parentalattitudes and so on — <strong>in</strong> the school <strong>in</strong> question. In all schools,however, we would want to see an emphasis on co-ord<strong>in</strong>ationand cont<strong>in</strong>uity <strong>in</strong> arts provision.104 Co- <strong>The</strong>re are three reasons for suggest<strong>in</strong>g that specialists <strong>in</strong>ord<strong>in</strong>ation different art forms co-operate <strong>in</strong> matters of policy. First,provision for the arts is to do with the whole ethos of theschool. Where the general climate is favourable, all of thearts seem to flourish. Changes are more likely to be broughtabout through staff work<strong>in</strong>g together to solve commondifficulties. Second, there are many opportunities for jo<strong>in</strong>tschemes of work <strong>in</strong>volv<strong>in</strong>g music, dance, drama, visual artsand the rest — both as part of the daily curriculum and alsofor specific projects and events. This k<strong>in</strong>d of co-operation canenrich the cultural life of the school <strong>in</strong> general. Third, provid<strong>in</strong>gfor the emerg<strong>in</strong>g and diverg<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>terests and abilitiesof pupils requires co-operation <strong>in</strong> staff<strong>in</strong>g and timetabl<strong>in</strong>g,especially where resources are becom<strong>in</strong>g more limited.105 Con- For many pupils the arts become optional <strong>in</strong> the 4th and 5tht<strong>in</strong>uity year of secondary school when the run up to exam<strong>in</strong>ationsbeg<strong>in</strong>s <strong>in</strong> earnest. This can leave them with very little experienceof the arts. <strong>The</strong> pupil who has 40 m<strong>in</strong>utes of drama perweek, for example, will have had only 12 school days ofdrama — dispersed over three years — before giv<strong>in</strong>g it up.We believe that provision for the arts should be made throughoutthe secondary school <strong>in</strong>dependently of exam<strong>in</strong>ationoptions. <strong>The</strong> logistics will, of course, require very carefulattention. This underl<strong>in</strong>es the need for an overall policy ofprovision.106 An arts A policy for the arts <strong>in</strong> the secondary school will need topolicy cover the follow<strong>in</strong>g:66


107 <strong>The</strong>secondarycurriculuma the proportion of curriculum time neededb patterns of timetabl<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> each yeare use of space and facilitiesd approaches to assessment and exam<strong>in</strong>ation<strong>The</strong> curriculum comprises much more than the timetable.It <strong>in</strong>cludes'. .. all the learn<strong>in</strong>g which is planned or guided by theschool, whether it is carried out <strong>in</strong> groups or <strong>in</strong>dividually,<strong>in</strong>side or outside the school.' (Kerr, 1968, p!6)As HMI have noted, all pupils, whatever their ability donot normally follow identical courses:'With<strong>in</strong> each subject there are possibilities of shap<strong>in</strong>gdetailed content, pace and method to suit different needsand capacities and different pupils choose different subjectsto serve the same curricular aim.' (DES, 1977, p5)Curriculum plann<strong>in</strong>g is complicated by the fact that eachchild has a different curriculum and by the need to ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>balance and coherence <strong>in</strong> each case. For these reasons it isneither wise, nor practicable, to prescribe common curriculaor standard patterns of timetabl<strong>in</strong>g. In th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g about proportionalallocations of curriculum tune, however, we endorsethe follow<strong>in</strong>g guidel<strong>in</strong>e.108 <strong>The</strong> arts<strong>in</strong> thecurriculumHMI propose that some eight 'areas of experience' should betaken as the basis for curriculum plann<strong>in</strong>g (DES, 1977). InChapter 1 we noted several similar classifications. We th<strong>in</strong>k itreasonable to propose that for the first three years of secondaryeducation (11—14) these seven or eight areas occupy noless than three-quarters of curriculum time and for the lasttwo years, up to two-thirds. <strong>The</strong> rest of the time will bespent, <strong>in</strong> the first three years, on other activities which areimportant and necessary <strong>in</strong> terms of vocational and moraleducation and such other elements as may properly constituteas complete a liberal education as can be managed.This might <strong>in</strong>clude, for example, work <strong>in</strong> health education,civic and social studies, and craft and design.In the last two years, the rema<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g third of curriculumtime will be spent on options to which pupils are becom<strong>in</strong>gstrongly committed and/or wish to offer for higher exam<strong>in</strong>ationsor prepare for vocational courses, or a scheme ofgeneral studies, another language, another science or anotherartḞor the rest, we believe that curriculum time ought to be67


distributed equally and equitably among these eight areas ofexperience of which the aesthetic and creative is one. Whateverpatterns of organisation are used, the same po<strong>in</strong>t is tobe noted — that the arts stand foursquare with the rest andneed parity of provision.109 <strong>The</strong> arts Some subjects act as umbrella head<strong>in</strong>gs under which a numberon the of areas of understand<strong>in</strong>g and experience can be tackled.timetable English not only provides for the practice and understand<strong>in</strong>gof the literary arts but also, through them, for moral education.In art and music there can be much reference tomean<strong>in</strong>gs from the world of religious experience, and so on.<strong>The</strong> purpose of the timetable is to provide the greatest numberof pupils with the greatest number of opportunities forlearn<strong>in</strong>g. One possible model which comb<strong>in</strong>es a number of thepo<strong>in</strong>ts we have made comes from the OECD (see Figure I). 4This also gives some <strong>in</strong>dication of how provision of timemight be managed throughout the secondary school.110 Other We have <strong>in</strong>dicated some amounts of time. How it is organisedpossibilities: can vary considerably. One alternative to s<strong>in</strong>gle or doubleblock periods is block timetabl<strong>in</strong>g. This does not produce extratimetabl<strong>in</strong>g time for the arts, it makes a different use of the time available.In place of one or two periods of drama a week, forexample, a class or a group may have one or two days ofdrama <strong>in</strong> a block each half-term. <strong>The</strong> advantage <strong>in</strong> this is <strong>in</strong>facilitat<strong>in</strong>g more susta<strong>in</strong>ed and concentrated work. <strong>The</strong>disadvantage is <strong>in</strong> leav<strong>in</strong>g much longer gaps between sessions,although some would argue that the benefits of the more<strong>in</strong>tensive work outweigh those of shorter, regular sessions.It is here that the differences between the arts are significant.Dance and music, for example, require regular work.<strong>Schools</strong> may f<strong>in</strong>d the greatest benefits lie <strong>in</strong> a comb<strong>in</strong>ationof regular sessions and periodic 'arts days' to allow work ofmore <strong>in</strong>tensity to take place.111 Creative In some schools the arts timetable is based on a roundaboutarts system where a faculty or department distributes an allocateddepartments proportion of time between its specialist discipl<strong>in</strong>es <strong>in</strong> aregular cycle. So, for example, a group may have a block ofdrama, followed the next week by a block of music and soon. <strong>The</strong>re are also opportunities here for co-operative workbetween discipl<strong>in</strong>es. <strong>The</strong> follow<strong>in</strong>g example from a school <strong>in</strong>Devon illustrates another approach.68'<strong>The</strong> standard allocation of time to creative arts faculties<strong>in</strong> new comprehensive schools ranges from six—eightperiods a week and this time has to be shared between


0 _, COMPULSORY FLEXIBILITY MYr•§ELECTIVETIME*


art, craft, home economics, music and drama. This schoolhas attempted a more imag<strong>in</strong>ative use of this time byrecognis<strong>in</strong>g that such a range of subjects can encompassonly certa<strong>in</strong> areas of overlap. Accord<strong>in</strong>gly, it has constructeda programme that allows for both specialistteach<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> each of these areas and for some team-teach<strong>in</strong>gwhere this arises naturally and realistically from shared<strong>in</strong>terests.<strong>The</strong> faculty receives only six periods a week for all ofits work. Two periods a week are allocated for comb<strong>in</strong>edwork and the rema<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g four periods are shared equallybetween the different groups of subjects for work ofspecialist concern. Teachers can opt <strong>in</strong> or out of comb<strong>in</strong>edtime and <strong>in</strong> the past both music and domestic science havedone this, leav<strong>in</strong>g teachers of art, needlework (textiles) anddesign (woodwork and metalwork) to pursue areas ofcommon <strong>in</strong>terest.<strong>The</strong>y beg<strong>in</strong> by look<strong>in</strong>g for areas of study that will berelevant to each area: past projects have <strong>in</strong>cluded, 'Flight','Self-Identity' and 'Camouflage'. <strong>The</strong> teachers discuss howto l<strong>in</strong>k their work together through these themes. <strong>The</strong>yhave established a pattern of team-teach<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> groups oftwo or three. <strong>The</strong>se are determ<strong>in</strong>ed by subject specialisms,teach<strong>in</strong>g experience and personal compatibility. <strong>The</strong>seteams then work with 40/50 children at a time, develop<strong>in</strong>gthe themes <strong>in</strong> whatever ways they feel able.<strong>The</strong> pattern is the same for work with the second yearalthough comb<strong>in</strong>ed time does not run throughout the year.It is thought necessary to allow progressively more timefor specialised work so that children will be able to makeconsidered options for their work with<strong>in</strong> the faculty <strong>in</strong> thethird year.<strong>The</strong> crucial elements <strong>in</strong> the success of this programmeare:a a recognition that specialist <strong>in</strong>terests need to becatered for alongside common programmes of workb some teachers are better left to pursue their ownconcerns rather than be forced <strong>in</strong>to a marriage ofconvenience112 Space What of the provision of space and facilities for the arts? Sirand Alec Clegg, when Education Officer for the West Rid<strong>in</strong>g offacilities Yorkshire, once asked his <strong>in</strong>spectors and advisers how muchspace they would need for their subject <strong>in</strong> a new secondaryschool for 800 pupils. <strong>The</strong> school, had it been built, wouldhave covered 18 acres.Obviously there are limits to what is possible. At the same70


time, <strong>in</strong>appropriate provision is often useless provision anda waste of resources. Build<strong>in</strong>gs can easily dictate curriculum.In all cases the body of a school reflects its m<strong>in</strong>d. <strong>The</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>ciplesof the curriculum need, somehow, to be <strong>in</strong>corporated<strong>in</strong>to the design and allocation of spaces and facilities. Forsome years, little attempt was made <strong>in</strong> school build<strong>in</strong>g designto relate different areas of curriculum activity to each other,or to th<strong>in</strong>k overall of the use of facilities by all age groups,<strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g adults and young people who have left school. 5113 A Local authorities are now becom<strong>in</strong>g m<strong>in</strong>dful of the need —different <strong>in</strong> build<strong>in</strong>g or conversion — to base the design of spaces andapproach facilities on the pr<strong>in</strong>ciples of a co-ord<strong>in</strong>ated curriculum whichcaters for a fully comprehensive range of <strong>in</strong>terests andabilities.Figure 2 shows a design for a new school <strong>in</strong> Leicestershire.<strong>The</strong> Director of Education makes the follow<strong>in</strong>g comments:'<strong>Schools</strong> should comb<strong>in</strong>e the opportunity for flexible programmeplann<strong>in</strong>g and <strong>in</strong>dividual project work with thespecialist facilities that are needed for pupils of secondaryschool age. <strong>The</strong> design should facilitate fluidity of grouporganisation and easy movement from space to space. <strong>The</strong>whole should be conceived as a series of associated curriculumareas, each serviced by groups of teachers work<strong>in</strong>gtogether to meet the needs of <strong>in</strong>dividual pupils and groupsof various sizes.<strong>The</strong> start<strong>in</strong>g po<strong>in</strong>t <strong>in</strong> a cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g dialogue between theEducation Department and the Architect is the brief whichwill establish clearly the relationships which are to beachieved <strong>in</strong> the f<strong>in</strong>al design. It is important that themulti-purpose use of school build<strong>in</strong>gs should be reflected<strong>in</strong> the brief to the Architect.We have tried to make the library and resources area afocal po<strong>in</strong>t of any new secondary school. <strong>The</strong> design complex— which <strong>in</strong>cludes eng<strong>in</strong>eer<strong>in</strong>g and woodwork shops,pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g and draw<strong>in</strong>g, textiles, fashions, ceramics andhome economics — is closely l<strong>in</strong>ked to the biologicalsciences — draw<strong>in</strong>g and botanical areas are often adjacent.Beyond the science laboratories contact is made withmathematics, modern languages and the humanities, which<strong>in</strong> turn l<strong>in</strong>ks up aga<strong>in</strong> with the library/resources focalpo<strong>in</strong>t.Another complex, generally associated with the entrancefoyer/social area is the raked lecture hall cum dramastudio. <strong>The</strong>se two areas can be opened up to form atheatre and replace the conventional assembly hall for800 pupils, which <strong>in</strong> our view is hardly relevant any longer71


FIGURE 2SHEPSHEDCOMMUNITYCOLLEGEopened 197672 THOMAS LOCKE COUNTY ARCfflTECT(by permission of the Leicestershire County Council)


1 FOYER2 TOILETS3 STAFF MARKING4 STAFFROOM5 CARETAKER6 CLEANER7 REGISTRARg KITCHEN9 GENERAL OFFICE10 PRINCIPAL11 VICE PRINCIPAL12 STORE13 TUTOR14 INTERVIEW15 CAREERS16 RECOVERY17 DENTAL SURGERY18 DARK ROOM192021222324252627282930313233343536QUIET ROOMCHANGINGMEDICALFIRST AIDMUSICOFFICEDINING ROOMREHEARSALDRAMA STUDIOLECTURE THEATREBAH LOUNGEBAR/SNACK BARSOCIALCLIMBING WALLCHANGING ROOMINSTRUCTORSHOWERSPLANT ROOM37 SPORTS HALL3839GAMES ROOMSTUDY40 TUTORIAL4142SWITCHROOMOFFICE43 REPROGRAPHIC44 TECHNICIAN45 LIBRARY ISSUE46 COMPUTER4748LIBRARY/RESOURCEAUDIO VISUAL ROOM49 LIBERAL STUDIES50 GROUP ROOM51 STAFF PLANNING52 GENERAL TEACHING53 REMEDIAL54 LANGUAGES55 RECORDING56 COMMERCE5758MATHEMATICSBIOLOGY LAB.59 LECTURE60 ANIMAL ROOM61 TECHNICIAN62 CHEMISTRY LAB.63 PHYSICS LAB.64 GENERAL LAB.65 GREENHOUSE66 BIOLOGY POOL6768DRAWING OFFICEJEWELRY69 ENGINEERING &METALWORK70 ENGINEERING PROJECT71 CASTINGN72 FORGE/WELDING73 WOODWORK74 GENERAL PRACTICAL7576FABRIC PRINTINGCLAY AREA77 KILN ROOM78 GENERAL CRAFT7980HOUSECRAFTFLAT81 HOME ECONOMICS82 LAUNDRY83 SCIENCE BAY84 GOOD GROOMING85 DRAWING & PAINTING86 TEXTILES & FASHION73


<strong>in</strong> upper schools. Associated with this area is the musicsuite compris<strong>in</strong>g one or two large ensemble rooms and upto half a dozen practice rooms, storage for <strong>in</strong>struments etcetc.' 6Whether <strong>in</strong> the design of new build<strong>in</strong>gs or <strong>in</strong> the conversionand use of exist<strong>in</strong>g plant, we see these pr<strong>in</strong>ciples of coord<strong>in</strong>ationand of dual and possibly multi-use of facilities andspace as of prime importance.114 <strong>The</strong> size If we take the curriculum patterns we have proposed and theof the range of arts activities we hope to see <strong>in</strong>cluded, add vocationalschool activities and those related to social studies and moral educationand calculate on the basis of five years compulsorysecondary education, it becomes clear that we are th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>ghere of schools of a certa<strong>in</strong> m<strong>in</strong>imum size. We have, webelieve, to be th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g of schools of 800—1,000 pupils ifwe are to provide and make full use of the facilities neededto operate a full curriculum compris<strong>in</strong>g sciences, the arts andthe humanities — <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g history, geography, economics,politics and social studies. <strong>Schools</strong> of a larger size wouldbe able to provide a greater variety of facilities; but above acerta<strong>in</strong> size — say 1,200 — it is widely, and probably wisely,felt that other countervail<strong>in</strong>g considerations beg<strong>in</strong> to arise.<strong>The</strong>re must of course be exceptions to these figures. Dependentupon the form of school organisation used <strong>in</strong> particularlocal education authorities, an upper school of 1400 for14—18+s might not be too large.115 Fall<strong>in</strong>g In many parts of the country the more common problemsrolls are due to the contraction of school rolls. Partly as a responseto fall<strong>in</strong>g rolls, the ILEA Inspectorate has been consider<strong>in</strong>ga variety of strategies to ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> and, where possible, toimprove provision for the arts. S<strong>in</strong>ce these are be<strong>in</strong>g considered<strong>in</strong> times of economic restra<strong>in</strong>t, it is implicit <strong>in</strong> thesesuggestions that there would be some re-allocation of resourcesrather than additional demands. <strong>The</strong>y are based onthree assumptions. First, the functions of some schools,particularly the smaller ones, will have to change and thiswill require co-operation and the acceptance of some commonpatterns of work between schools.Second, <strong>in</strong> provid<strong>in</strong>g alternative patterns for organis<strong>in</strong>gthe eight areas of experience, a priority should be givenfirst to the 16—19 age range followed by 14—16 and, <strong>in</strong> somecases, the whole secondary range. Third, no s<strong>in</strong>gle patternof organisation will serve the requirements of every pupil.What are the possibilities for extend<strong>in</strong>g the arts curriculum?74


116 Short Short, two, three or four week courses could be organised<strong>in</strong>tensive for pupils from a number of schools. An efficient deploycoursesment of staff with viable group sizes could be achievedwithout an overall <strong>in</strong>crease <strong>in</strong> the curriculum time spentby the pupils on the areas <strong>in</strong> question. This is an extensionof the 6th form summer school pattern, but with a closerelationship to the daily curriculum work and possibly toexam<strong>in</strong>ation courses <strong>in</strong> addition to the general purpose ofenrich<strong>in</strong>g their experience <strong>in</strong> and of the arts. Such coursesare already common <strong>in</strong> fieldwork and with appropriatestaff and materials can prove effective for the study ofliterature, set works and practical aspects of design technology,for example. <strong>The</strong> courses need not be restricted to thesummer term.117 Holiday <strong>The</strong> <strong>in</strong>volvement of committed pupils <strong>in</strong> the arts may extend,courses for some aspects of the work, to participation <strong>in</strong> coursesdur<strong>in</strong>g holiday periods. <strong>The</strong>se could deal <strong>in</strong> detail withspecific topics or themes <strong>in</strong> music, art, drama, dance and soon.118 "Third Teachers <strong>in</strong> a number of curriculum areas <strong>in</strong>volve pupils <strong>in</strong>sessions' voluntary extra-curricular activities. Such sessions can allowfor great flexibility <strong>in</strong> the deployment of teachers bothwith<strong>in</strong> a school or on a co-operative basis with others.119 Specialist <strong>The</strong> establishment of specialist centres on an authority orcentres divisional basis might serve some needs of these coursesand extra sessions. <strong>The</strong>re is now a significant number ofarts centres (see Chapter 8) throughout the country. <strong>The</strong>secan provide valuable supplementary provision for schools<strong>in</strong> a number of ways by provid<strong>in</strong>g:a specialist spaces and facilities for dance, drama, musicand visual arts beyond the resources of <strong>in</strong>dividualschoolsb archives of resources and <strong>in</strong>formatione an appropriate work<strong>in</strong>g environment to <strong>in</strong>tensifyconcentration (see para 99 and Appendix)<strong>The</strong> regular use of such a specialist centre on a Saturdayhas, for example, given <strong>in</strong>strumental music with<strong>in</strong> the ILEAits dist<strong>in</strong>ctive quality. One of the positive effects of fall<strong>in</strong>grolls is to make available a number of build<strong>in</strong>gs for conversionto such purposes with<strong>in</strong> almost all authorities. Wemust emphasise, however, that we see such centres as supplementaryto, not a replacement for, appropriate provision <strong>in</strong>the school.75


120 A Implicit <strong>in</strong> such proposals is a question<strong>in</strong>g of the presentchange of divisions of responsibility <strong>in</strong> education and also of theperspective school as an isolated, specialist <strong>in</strong>stitution. <strong>The</strong> developmentof community schools and colleges, embrac<strong>in</strong>g the hithertoseparate areas of adult education, youth services and communitygroups with the compulsory stages of education,is lead<strong>in</strong>g to a much broader view of education and of theroles of the arts with<strong>in</strong> it. We will develop these po<strong>in</strong>ts <strong>in</strong>our conclud<strong>in</strong>g chapter.121 <strong>The</strong> Just as for primary schools (see Chapter 4) the role of theAdvisory Advisory Service <strong>in</strong> support<strong>in</strong>g the arts <strong>in</strong> secondary schoolsService is paramount. Advisers can be of <strong>in</strong>estimable help <strong>in</strong> facilitat<strong>in</strong>gcontact and co-ord<strong>in</strong>ation between schools and teachers,through for example:a regular meet<strong>in</strong>gs to discuss issues related to provision,practice and policy <strong>in</strong> and between schoolsb curriculum groups to explore <strong>in</strong> detail particular aspectsof the arts curriculum (eg questions of assessment) andto make their f<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>gs available to other teacherse <strong>in</strong>formal exchanges, for example, visits by arts teachersto other schools to watch colleagues at work and toexchange ideas and viewsd documentation of syllabuses, project work and materials,resource <strong>in</strong>formation etce professional associations br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g together teacherswith<strong>in</strong> the arts to discuss wider educational concernsand to plan events, activities and courses of action topromote their professional <strong>in</strong>terests <strong>in</strong> the schoolcurriculum<strong>The</strong> need for such a service is especially press<strong>in</strong>g at a timewhen fall<strong>in</strong>g rolls and general economies call for expertadvice <strong>in</strong> questions of retra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, redeployment and there-allocation of resources <strong>in</strong> order to ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> and susta<strong>in</strong>a balanced and coherent curriculum.122 Curri- <strong>The</strong> quality of education — <strong>in</strong> the arts as elsewhere — dependsculum on the quality of contact between teacher and pupil. Fortra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g the reasons we have discussed, sensitive and flexible timetabl<strong>in</strong>gis of prime importance. This is more likely to comeabout where arts teachers themselves are consulted andparticipate <strong>in</strong> curriculum plann<strong>in</strong>g. As HMI have argued:76'However detailed the knowledge, no timetabler is likelyto know everyth<strong>in</strong>g about each teacher ... it is unlikelythat among a group of, say, eight English specialists,


they will all be equally gifted <strong>in</strong> teach<strong>in</strong>g poetry, drama,prose, or 'skills'. A timetable which allocates each teacherseparately and unalterably to one group for one year ismak<strong>in</strong>g no allowance for these differences and may wellbe skew<strong>in</strong>g the pupils' English diet. . . s<strong>in</strong>ce most teachersare most successful and confident when perform<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>what they regard as their own best field and circumstances,they are most likely to respond to a timetablewhich allows them as much freedom as possible to meettheir criteria. Equally, dynamism, reth<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g and a redef<strong>in</strong>itionof objectives may not flourish if the timetableencourages the static to rema<strong>in</strong> so and stultifies <strong>in</strong>vention.'(DBS, 1977, p65)Many teachers have neither the experience nor the confidenceto press for new patterns of timetabl<strong>in</strong>g and tend<strong>in</strong>stead to suffer the problems of the present. Initial tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gcourses tend to be peremptory <strong>in</strong> such matters, concentrat<strong>in</strong>gon subject-specialisms and encourag<strong>in</strong>g little thought aboutthe curriculum as a whole. <strong>The</strong>re is an important role herefor <strong>in</strong>-service tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> giv<strong>in</strong>g teachers the knowledge andskills needed to participate confidently <strong>in</strong> the curriculumplann<strong>in</strong>g and policy-mak<strong>in</strong>g which is vital <strong>in</strong> the arts.123 Senior We concluded our discussion of the arts <strong>in</strong> primary schoolsstaff by hop<strong>in</strong>g for more teachers with <strong>in</strong>terests <strong>in</strong> the arts to beappo<strong>in</strong>ted to positions of responsibility. Equally we wouldencourage such teachers <strong>in</strong> secondary schools to aim <strong>in</strong> duecourse for senior positions and for headships. Undoubtedly,'Five hundred Headmasters and Headmistresses tra<strong>in</strong>ed <strong>in</strong><strong>Arts</strong>, Drama, Dance and Music as their ma<strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>terestwould make more difference <strong>in</strong> ten years than all theWhite and Green Papers.' 7124 Speak<strong>in</strong>g Some exist<strong>in</strong>g head teachers may fear that generous profromvision for the arts may have adverse effects on discipl<strong>in</strong>e orexperience detract from other work. We have presented our argumentsfor the arts, but, <strong>in</strong> the end, noth<strong>in</strong>g is more persuasive thanexperience. <strong>The</strong> experience of the follow<strong>in</strong>g head teacheris an eloquent illustration.'My faith <strong>in</strong> the importance of the arts stems from myfirst headship of a Secondary Modern School <strong>in</strong> the"Potteries" which I took over <strong>in</strong> 1960. This school hadacute problems of discipl<strong>in</strong>e, standards and parent support.Alongside the revisions to the curriculum and teach<strong>in</strong>gmethods, we <strong>in</strong>troduced drama, a creative approach to77


78literature and put money and resources <strong>in</strong>to art andmusic. All of these changes cumulatively transformedthe school with<strong>in</strong> three years. <strong>The</strong>re is it seems to me adirect l<strong>in</strong>k between the attitudes of students and theplace that the arts occupy <strong>in</strong> the life of the school.All the arts subjects are governed by discipl<strong>in</strong>e andthis is the feature which is most often forgotten. Butthe ballet dancer, the musician <strong>in</strong> an orchestra, the writerstruggl<strong>in</strong>g for the exact phrase will know the mean<strong>in</strong>g ofdiscipl<strong>in</strong>e. In most of the areas the discipl<strong>in</strong>e embracesthe m<strong>in</strong>d and the emotions and the body. This is not thediscipl<strong>in</strong>e that relies on a display of strength but whichdepends upon the skill of creat<strong>in</strong>g someth<strong>in</strong>g. Successfulteachers <strong>in</strong> literature or music or drama all offered anddemanded quality with no concessions. Demands weremade: there was pride <strong>in</strong> standards, skill and atta<strong>in</strong>ment.As <strong>in</strong> all education, expectations rule. As a headmaster Ihave found that the important th<strong>in</strong>g is to give my teachersof drama, art and music, the rooms and the timetablethey need. Drama done <strong>in</strong> odd periods must be <strong>in</strong>conclusive.By the time the teacher has obta<strong>in</strong>ed the atmospherehe wants, the bell goes and the work is broken off.At my second school, money and resources <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>gteach<strong>in</strong>g strength were also put <strong>in</strong>to the arts. This wasbecause the creative experience <strong>in</strong> these areas developedconfidence and satisfaction for the students. It was becausethey developed powers of expression and communication,sensitivity and responsiveness.I have no doubts, hav<strong>in</strong>g applied this pr<strong>in</strong>ciple to threeschools, that good arts teach<strong>in</strong>g br<strong>in</strong>gs <strong>in</strong> a tone of greatersympathy and understand<strong>in</strong>g. Pupils are more responsive.It is possible to move them with words. <strong>The</strong>re is not <strong>in</strong>them that hardness which breeds hardness. When I firstcame to my present school, I was staggered by the aggressivenessand roughness of the students. Now, five years later,that is gone. I attribute much of that to the effects of artsteach<strong>in</strong>g. Where students are more sensitive to atmosphereand speech, the teachers <strong>in</strong> all subjects have an easiertime. Among the greatest virtues the arts offer is the rise<strong>in</strong> self-esteem that comes from creation. As a studentstruggles to express him/herself or communicate throughthe arts, that sense of identity elim<strong>in</strong>ates the desire to benoticed <strong>in</strong> less attractive ways.I have always been proud of the record my schoolshave had for lack of aggression and vandalism. So <strong>in</strong> my20th year of Headship I am runn<strong>in</strong>g a large ComprehensiveSchool <strong>in</strong> which the <strong>Arts</strong> Faculty — responsible for music,drama, and art — has 12 teachers and over one sixth of


the timetable. <strong>The</strong> school has a common curriculum sothat every child will spend over one sixth of the week onmusic, drama and art. Even <strong>in</strong> the last week I have beenconsider<strong>in</strong>g how to give more emphasis to these studies,especially for 6th Formers. <strong>The</strong>y will all spend time ondrama and <strong>in</strong> art and they will be encouraged to do music.From our capitation, English will have £1,500 this yearand the <strong>Arts</strong> Faculty £2,300. We are about to re-fashionour Hall as a work<strong>in</strong>g theatre us<strong>in</strong>g our own labour andhave asked a local charity for £1,250 for materials. Suchis my confidence, after 19 years, <strong>in</strong> the value of this work.'125 Equality <strong>The</strong> arts have a claim on an equitable and major part ofofcurriculum time. This holds no less for capitation monies,provision the provision of rooms, materials and equipment and theappo<strong>in</strong>tment of staff. Just as scientists need laboratories,so do arts teachers need studios. Of course, just as physicists,chemists and biologists may have to share their facilities,so must arts teachers, on a dual-use basis, be prepared to'double-up' where necessary. Just as teachers of science,mathematics or modern languages need money for technicalequipment, slides, tapes and specimens, so too do arts teachersneed materials such as paper, canvas, clay, sheet music,tapes and slides and equipment such as kilns, easels andmusical <strong>in</strong>struments. Like all teachers they must also beprepared to co-ord<strong>in</strong>ate their need for materials and equipment.Just as those who value the sciences <strong>in</strong> schools will wantto see as many representatives of them <strong>in</strong> school staffroomsas possible — physicists, chemists, biologists, geologists — sotoo will those who value the arts want to see artists, musicians,teachers of dance, drama, poetry and literature. <strong>Arts</strong> teachersare not ask<strong>in</strong>g for the moon. <strong>The</strong>y are as aware as anyone elseof the need to work with<strong>in</strong> f<strong>in</strong>ancial limits and restrictions ofspace and time. But they can see no reason, and neither canwe, for their be<strong>in</strong>g fobbed off with next to noth<strong>in</strong>g. Even <strong>in</strong>times of restra<strong>in</strong>t and cutback we can see no reason why theyshould shoulder a disproportionate share of restricted opportunitiesfor do<strong>in</strong>g the work at all. In Joan Freeman's words,'Neither time nor money are adequate excuses for depriv<strong>in</strong>gchildren of the richer aspects of education . . . <strong>The</strong> losersfrom this state of affairs are grow<strong>in</strong>g up now.' (Freeman,1979)126 Summary In this chapter we have looked at some of the constra<strong>in</strong>tson the development of the arts <strong>in</strong> schools. We have stressedthe need for a policy for the arts <strong>in</strong> each school and have79


80outl<strong>in</strong>ed the sorts of provision this suggests. We have outl<strong>in</strong>eda number of possible strategies for respond<strong>in</strong>g to theeffects of fall<strong>in</strong>g rolls on arts provision. We have concludedby emphasis<strong>in</strong>g the need for teachers to be better tra<strong>in</strong>ed<strong>in</strong> deal<strong>in</strong>g with curriculum issues and the need to affectexist<strong>in</strong>g attitudes at adm<strong>in</strong>istrative level.


6 Assessment, evaluation and accountability127 Reasons <strong>The</strong> debate about education has grown <strong>in</strong> part from publicfor the demand for schools to be more accountable — to showchapter results. <strong>The</strong>re is an understandable and legitimate pressureon teachers to assess and evaluate their work with children.<strong>The</strong>re is a danger <strong>in</strong> th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g that this can always be doneeffectively through formal tests and exam<strong>in</strong>ations. Ourarguments <strong>in</strong> this report have clear implications <strong>in</strong> theseareas of assessment, evaluation and accountability whichwe hope to make clear <strong>in</strong> this chapter. We beg<strong>in</strong> by look<strong>in</strong>gat the need for accountability. We then dist<strong>in</strong>guish betweenassessment and evaluation look<strong>in</strong>g at some of the processes<strong>in</strong>volved. We look particularly at how these apply to thearts and offer some strategies for meet<strong>in</strong>g the demands ofaccountability.128 <strong>The</strong> We firmly endorse the pr<strong>in</strong>ciple of educational accountability.need for Parents and employers have vested <strong>in</strong>terests <strong>in</strong> education andaccount- a right and a need to be kept <strong>in</strong>formed of children's progressability and atta<strong>in</strong>ment <strong>in</strong> all areas of the curriculum, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g thearts. This need for <strong>in</strong>formation lies at the centre of what wehave to say. <strong>The</strong> basic demands from parents and employersare reasonable enough. <strong>The</strong>y are fora adequate teach<strong>in</strong>g of certa<strong>in</strong> skillsb cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g improvements <strong>in</strong> the general standard ofeducational atta<strong>in</strong>mente adequate <strong>in</strong>formation to be made available aboutpupils' actual achievements and personal potentialA positive response to these demands <strong>in</strong> the schools canonly help to raise the level of public understand<strong>in</strong>g about,and <strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong>, education. <strong>The</strong> problem is to ensurethat the forms of accountability — the actual measures81


used — are appropriate to the work be<strong>in</strong>g done and that theyhelp to develop and improve educational provision ratherthan restrict and distort it. Some demands for accountabilitycan damage the educational <strong>in</strong>terests they seek toserve.129 Two We dispute two arguments. First, the best way to raise thefalse level of basic skills <strong>in</strong> literacy and numeracy is to narrow thearguments curriculum so that these subjects become the predom<strong>in</strong>antarea of attention. Second, the most reliable guide to thequality of education can be found <strong>in</strong> public exam<strong>in</strong>ationresults. A corollary of this is that 'standards' are best improvedby <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g the pressures of public exam<strong>in</strong>ations. <strong>The</strong>re iscerta<strong>in</strong>ly a need to comb out some of the tangles <strong>in</strong> thecurriculum, but the real issue is how to improve the overallquality and general balance of education. This is the legitimateprov<strong>in</strong>ce of accountability. What forms of assessment andevaluation are needed for this? <strong>The</strong> functions of assessmentand evaluation are sometimes seen as synonymous, but theyare different and need to be considered separately. We startwith assessment.130 Assess- <strong>The</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>cipal function of assessment <strong>in</strong> schools is to providement <strong>in</strong>formation about pupils' abilities and levels of atta<strong>in</strong>ment.This fulfils an important role <strong>in</strong> keep<strong>in</strong>g parents, staff andpupils alert to current levels of work. Assessment may takemany forms. Informally, teachers are assess<strong>in</strong>g pupils all thetime, as <strong>in</strong>deed the pupils are assess<strong>in</strong>g teachers — throughstyles of speech, attitudes to others and to work done.Assessments may also be formal. This is often associated withliteral or numerical grades, percentages and rank positions.<strong>The</strong>se are not essential to assessment. In pr<strong>in</strong>ciple, theform and method of assessment should vary with the activityand the type of <strong>in</strong>formation sought. Assessments of pupilsare not, however, nor can they be, statements of absoluteability. <strong>The</strong>y are statements about achievements with<strong>in</strong> theframework of educational opportunities that have actuallybeen provided. In some degree every assessment of a pupil isalso an assessment of the teachers and of the school.131 Evalu- Because of this, schools need constantly to review the qualityation of provision and their methods of work. This, broadly, isthe function of educational evaluation. It is a more generalprocess than assessment <strong>in</strong> that it looks beyond the pupilsto the style, the materials and the circumstances of teach<strong>in</strong>gand learn<strong>in</strong>g. If teachers need to assess pupils they also needto evaluate their own practice. Although they have differentpurposes, assessment and evaluation are obviously l<strong>in</strong>ked.82


Teachers and pupils alike need <strong>in</strong>formation on each other'sactivities and perceptions if their work together is to advance.Assessment and evaluation should provide this as a basis for<strong>in</strong>formed description and <strong>in</strong>telligent judgement. In discuss<strong>in</strong>gassessment and evaluation, therefore, we are consider<strong>in</strong>g tworelated processes with<strong>in</strong> the daily activity of education.132 Exam<strong>in</strong>- Exam<strong>in</strong>ations are highly structured <strong>in</strong>struments of assessmentation which are <strong>in</strong>tended to test specific knowledge and abilities atparticular po<strong>in</strong>ts <strong>in</strong> pupils' development. An importantfeature of exam<strong>in</strong>ations — to which we will return — is thatthey are used often to rate pupils accord<strong>in</strong>g to a comparativescale of achievement. Although the call for accountability <strong>in</strong>education can only be answered by a rigorous approach <strong>in</strong>the schools to assessment and evaluation, exam<strong>in</strong>ations neednot be the chief means of this. Accountability and exam<strong>in</strong>abilityare not the same th<strong>in</strong>g.133 What In Chapter 5 we argued the need for schools to have ank<strong>in</strong>d of overall policy related to their catchment area, age range andassessment so on. Both the general and the particular aspects of thatand account- policy should be reflected <strong>in</strong> the pattern of the curriculumability? and expressed <strong>in</strong> the work of the various departments. Ifpolicies and pr<strong>in</strong>ciples throughout a school curriculum needto be co-ord<strong>in</strong>ated, they also need to be open to revision andreformation <strong>in</strong> the face of fresh <strong>in</strong>formation, new experienceand chang<strong>in</strong>g circumstances. This has implications for themethods of evaluation and assessment. It means that to beuseful, evaluation should be illum<strong>in</strong>ative and responsive;while assessment should be pervasive and <strong>in</strong>formative.134 Illum<strong>in</strong>- <strong>Schools</strong> and teachers should look for the actual effects ofative their teach<strong>in</strong>g on children. <strong>The</strong> emphasis is important.evaluation Evaluation is not simply a matter of check<strong>in</strong>g on whetherpre-specified aims and objectives have been achieved. Thismay well apply to <strong>in</strong>dustrial or commercial processes where adirect relationship between aims and outcomes is importantto ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> — and easy to corroborate. Education is ratherdifferent. Although teachers and schools must have clear aimsand objectives, these are often modified as the work progresses.Many social processes follow this pr<strong>in</strong>ciple. Ty<strong>in</strong>g a coursetoo closely to pre-specified objectives can stifle the flexibilityand responsiveness on which good teach<strong>in</strong>g depends. Evaluationshould aim to illum<strong>in</strong>ate all aspects of the work.This <strong>in</strong>cludes review<strong>in</strong>g and reflect<strong>in</strong>g on the orig<strong>in</strong>al aims andobjectives and possibly reformulat<strong>in</strong>g them as the work goeson.83


135 Respon- If education <strong>in</strong>volves teach<strong>in</strong>g children particular skills andsive <strong>in</strong>formation, it also <strong>in</strong>volves help<strong>in</strong>g them to <strong>in</strong>vestigate andevaluation understand ideas and values. It means meet<strong>in</strong>g commonneeds as well as develop<strong>in</strong>g unique abilities. Eliot Eisner(1969) dist<strong>in</strong>guishes between two ma<strong>in</strong> types of educationalobjectives — <strong>in</strong>structional and expressive — both hav<strong>in</strong>g animportant place <strong>in</strong> schools. An <strong>in</strong>structional objective is onewhich specifies skills and <strong>in</strong>formation to be learnt. Anexpressive objective does not specify what children are tolearn. It def<strong>in</strong>es a task <strong>in</strong> which they are to engage, or asituation <strong>in</strong> which they are to work. An expressive objective'provides both the teacher and the student with an <strong>in</strong>vitationto explore, defer or focus on issues that are of peculiar<strong>in</strong>terest or import.' All curriculum activities, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g thearts, <strong>in</strong>volve both types of objective. Learn<strong>in</strong>g to master thegrammar and syntax of a language, for example, and us<strong>in</strong>gthe language to explore and express ideas are both importantactivities for the child. <strong>The</strong>y may be closely related <strong>in</strong> practice,each grow<strong>in</strong>g naturally from and <strong>in</strong>to the other. But theyimply different types of objective and different approachesto, and criteria for, evaluation. Methods of evaluation shouldbe sensitive to different types of work and to the variety ofeducational outcomes which result.136 Pervasive Michael Scriven (1967) makes a dist<strong>in</strong>ction between formativeassessment and summative evaluations. Formative evaluations are thosewhich teachers make dur<strong>in</strong>g the course of their work andwhich <strong>in</strong>fluence the direction the work takes. <strong>The</strong>y arediagnostic. Summative evaluations reflect upon the effectsof what has been done. This is not a difference based onwhen the evaluation takes place but on the reason for do<strong>in</strong>git. Similarly, assessments of pupils may be used to decideon the course their work is to take, or to summarise theirachievements. Feedback and encouragement are key elements<strong>in</strong> education. Provid<strong>in</strong>g these should be a function of assessment.This should pervade the process of their education andbe as familiar to pupils as their lessons. This implies someth<strong>in</strong>gmuch broader and more <strong>in</strong>tegral to the work thanperiodic test<strong>in</strong>g and grad<strong>in</strong>g.137 Inform- Assessment should provide as much <strong>in</strong>formation as possible.ative <strong>The</strong>re is a tendency to give assessments <strong>in</strong> the form of grades,assessment marks or percentages. One reason for this is to make themseem objective. Another is to facilitate comparisons betweenpupils. We have four reasons for doubt<strong>in</strong>g the value of suchprocedures, particularly <strong>in</strong> the arts.84a Only very limited aspects of educational atta<strong>in</strong>ment


can be directly quantified and these are ma<strong>in</strong>ly with<strong>in</strong>the <strong>in</strong>structional realm — <strong>in</strong>formation retention, certa<strong>in</strong>sorts of skill and so on. S<strong>in</strong>ce these make up only asmall part of education, they should not impose assessmentpatterns on the greater part.b Evaluation and assessment <strong>in</strong>volve personal judgementsby teachers and exam<strong>in</strong>ers and have much to do withvalues, feel<strong>in</strong>gs and <strong>in</strong>tuition. Most assessments are notcl<strong>in</strong>ically objective, nor can they be. Nor are they mademore reliable, objective or sensitive by condens<strong>in</strong>g them<strong>in</strong>to a s<strong>in</strong>gle letter or number. Do<strong>in</strong>g so can give amislead<strong>in</strong>g impression of f<strong>in</strong>ality.e We see the purpose of education, and therefore ofevaluation and assessment, as help<strong>in</strong>g children to reachthe highest level of atta<strong>in</strong>ment of which they are capable.Grad<strong>in</strong>g encourages generalised comparisonsbetween children — '15th <strong>in</strong> the class' — which may notbe helpful, appropriate or reliable.d Grades always act like averages, and <strong>in</strong> do<strong>in</strong>g so smoothout <strong>in</strong>dividual characteristics and variations amongchildren. A piece of work which has both first-classand very poor features may be graded neither A nor Fbut be given a C. Another essay may show consistentqualities throughout and also be given a C. <strong>The</strong> markitself provides no <strong>in</strong>formation on the important ways <strong>in</strong>which the works differ. Moreover, unless the grade isaccompanied by some verbal comment, the pupilsthemselves receive no benefit from the assessment apartfrom some implied sense of rank <strong>in</strong> the group's overallperformance. Because of the form they take, suchassessments can obscure <strong>in</strong>formation which may be ofconsiderable <strong>in</strong>terest and importance. In such circumstancesthe pupil can be asked 'What did you get out ofthis course?' and reply <strong>in</strong> all seriousness, 'I got a B'(Rowntree, 1977). Such devices work aga<strong>in</strong>st thepurpose they are meant to serve. <strong>The</strong>y do not conveyadequate <strong>in</strong>formation, and the amount they do conveyis, <strong>in</strong> these ways, often mislead<strong>in</strong>g.138 Impli- We are call<strong>in</strong>g for forms of evaluation and assessment whichcations for are compatible with the different forms of work which goaccount- on <strong>in</strong> schools. We talked <strong>in</strong> Chapter 1 of the different formsability of human rationality. Too often these differences are disregarded<strong>in</strong> schools at the vital stage of evaluation andassessment where it is assumed that all forms of atta<strong>in</strong>mentcan be quantified. <strong>The</strong>re are three po<strong>in</strong>ts here. First, we areconcerned <strong>in</strong> the arts, not so much with the quantity, aswith the quality of the experience. When <strong>in</strong> the adult world85


we look at, or participate <strong>in</strong>, visual arts, drama, dance andliterature or listen to or make music, the judgements wemake are based on f<strong>in</strong>e qualities of discrim<strong>in</strong>ation, observationand connoisseurship. <strong>The</strong> need for these skills ofjudgement is as great when we look at arts education <strong>in</strong>schools, and it calls for forms of assessment and evaluationwhich reflect this. Second, education, the arts and evaluationare all bound up with values. Children's 1 and teachers'values are all implicated <strong>in</strong> any attempt to pass judgementsabout educational atta<strong>in</strong>ment. Current approaches seem tosuggest a consensus which often does not exist on suchquestions, and a confidence <strong>in</strong> 'scientific' and 'objective'measures which is often not merited. We are not say<strong>in</strong>ghere that education should somehow be cleansed of valuejudgements. We are ask<strong>in</strong>g for approaches to assessment <strong>in</strong>which differences of value can be recognised and taken <strong>in</strong>toaccount.Third, the arts deal <strong>in</strong> forms of knowledge which aregreatly <strong>in</strong>formed by feel<strong>in</strong>g and <strong>in</strong>tuition. We do not seethese as their weaknesses but as their strength. <strong>The</strong> artsenable us to assert ideas and judgements which we mayrecognise collectively to be true but which cannot be proven<strong>in</strong> other ways, through empirical experiment for example.Intuitive judgement must be recognised as a legitimateelement <strong>in</strong> evaluat<strong>in</strong>g this work <strong>in</strong> schools. Attempts tomake the arts accountable by submitt<strong>in</strong>g them to forms ofassessment which properly belong elsewhere may actuallymake them appear want<strong>in</strong>g by look<strong>in</strong>g for <strong>in</strong>appropriateforms of 'proof. This danger is especially acute <strong>in</strong> the area ofexam<strong>in</strong>ations.139 Exam<strong>in</strong>ations<strong>in</strong>the arts140 Pass<strong>in</strong>gor fail<strong>in</strong>gIt would be difficult to over-estimate the <strong>in</strong>fluence of publicexam<strong>in</strong>ation systems on the conduct of education. Exam<strong>in</strong>ationsare often a dom<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>fluence on the whole style,content and structure of secondary education <strong>in</strong> particular.School curricula throughout the country show a generalsimilarity because of external pressures on syllabuses fromuniversities through exam<strong>in</strong>ation boards. <strong>The</strong> number ofGCE and to a lesser extent CSE passes is still widely acceptedas a measure of a 'good' or a 'bad' school. We have arguedthat exam<strong>in</strong>ability is not the only basis for accountability.Exam<strong>in</strong>ations are only one form of assessment. Moreover,many conventional forms of exam<strong>in</strong>ation have two generalcharacteristics which can limit their value <strong>in</strong> the arts: they arecompetitive and they require a certa<strong>in</strong> level of failure.In the exist<strong>in</strong>g GCE and CSE exam<strong>in</strong>ations the assessment of<strong>in</strong>dividual pupils is based not on absolute but on relative86


achievement. 1 If all candidates were to be given 'A' therewould be compla<strong>in</strong>ts about fall<strong>in</strong>g standards or 'fix<strong>in</strong>g'. Forthe system to have any credibility there has to be a proportionof failures. A pupil's plac<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the list does not depend solelyon personal performance. He or she may improve performanceby 100% over a year, but if everyone else improves similarly,personal grades will be no higher than before. To obta<strong>in</strong> abetter grade a student must take it from students higher upthe list by out-perform<strong>in</strong>g one or more of them. Moreover,children are entered <strong>in</strong> groups for exam<strong>in</strong>ations at the end ofa course of study which they will have started at the sametime: the start<strong>in</strong>g and f<strong>in</strong>ish<strong>in</strong>g po<strong>in</strong>t is based, for the mostpart, on how old they are. All that we know about childrentells us that they develop and mature, <strong>in</strong> every respect, atdifferent rates. Two pupils do not always reach the samestate of read<strong>in</strong>ess for exam<strong>in</strong>ations at the same time even iftheir latent potential for success is the same. <strong>The</strong>re areobvious shortcom<strong>in</strong>gs <strong>in</strong> tak<strong>in</strong>g children at these arbitrarypo<strong>in</strong>ts <strong>in</strong> their personal development, and compar<strong>in</strong>g themwith other children who may be at quite different po<strong>in</strong>ts, todecide, often once and for all, whether they have passed orfailed. Naturally some children do well and these may bequoted <strong>in</strong> defence of the system. But how do we take stockof the vast waste of potential among those who have beenprematurely written-off?141 <strong>The</strong>element offailure142 Argumentsforexam<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gthe artsIt is not the explicit function of public exam<strong>in</strong>ations to failchildren, but an element of failure is <strong>in</strong>escapable <strong>in</strong> thedistribution of relative grades. In order to 'ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> standards'it is essential to limit the number of passes and ensure apercentage of failure. <strong>The</strong> experience of failure is a constantpresence <strong>in</strong> such exam<strong>in</strong>ations and for those children who are'failed' it can have a deep effect on self-esteem and motivation:more especially where the experience is repeated.<strong>The</strong>y may, of course, be driven to work harder. <strong>The</strong>y maybe led to disparage the whole affair and become antipatheticor hostile to learn<strong>in</strong>g. <strong>The</strong> experience of failure can havesignificant consequences by negat<strong>in</strong>g the positive purposes forwhich schools exist.Despite these difficulties, there are three ma<strong>in</strong> groups ofargument currently advanced for <strong>in</strong>troduc<strong>in</strong>g arts exam<strong>in</strong>ations<strong>in</strong> schools.a Vocational<strong>Schools</strong> should be prepar<strong>in</strong>g children for life <strong>in</strong> the adultworld and should give them skills and the evidence thatthey have them. Exam<strong>in</strong>ations provide vocationalsupport.87


MotivationalChildren on exam<strong>in</strong>ation courses work harder and withgreater energy than those who are not; the competitiveedge of an exam<strong>in</strong>ation <strong>in</strong>creases motivation.e PoliticalCompetition for time and resources can become aggressive<strong>in</strong> the upper years of the secondary school when thecurriculum is virtually composed of exam<strong>in</strong>ation options.Non-exam<strong>in</strong>ation work often suffers as a result. Introduc<strong>in</strong>gan exam<strong>in</strong>ation can attract time, resources,prestige and pupils. It can act as a political lever to raisethe status of the work <strong>in</strong> the school.143 Three We see a number of counter-arguments:counter- a Vocationalarguments We are discuss<strong>in</strong>g the role of the arts with<strong>in</strong> a system ofgeneral education for Brita<strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong> the 1980s. It seemslikely that employment prospects <strong>in</strong> conventional jobswill cont<strong>in</strong>ue to dim<strong>in</strong>ish for school leavers — notthrough lack of qualifications but through lack of jobs.Young people cannot enter non-existent jobs, howeverwell-qualified they may be. A narrow<strong>in</strong>g of the curriculumis precisely what is not needed <strong>in</strong> these new socialcircumstances. Far better a partnership between employersand schools <strong>in</strong> which schools provide a broad-basededucation which encourages flexibility, imag<strong>in</strong>ation and<strong>in</strong>dividual resourcefulness, while employers providechildren with the specialist tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g and vocational skillsthey need,b MotivationalOnly a small proportion of children <strong>in</strong> any school willeither want or be able to take exam<strong>in</strong>ation courses <strong>in</strong>the arts. Provid<strong>in</strong>g an exam<strong>in</strong>ation motive for a m<strong>in</strong>orityis no solution to motivat<strong>in</strong>g the majority: and our concernis with the majority. Moreover, it is the professionalresponsibility of teachers to see that children stretchthemselves with or without an exam<strong>in</strong>ation,e PoliticalAdequate provision for the arts will only come aboutwhere they are recognised by the head and the staff asan <strong>in</strong>tegral part of the school's policy. Where thisrecognition is lack<strong>in</strong>g, an exam<strong>in</strong>ation is likely tobe only a short-term solution. Ga<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g school support isthe real issue and we believe that this is more likely tocome about through demonstration of the value of thework and by consultation. In the long-term other formsof evaluation and assessment may play a more constructiverole <strong>in</strong> this.88


144 <strong>The</strong> need For all these reasons we believe it is important to encourageforthe search for alternatives. Parents, teachers and employersalternatives need to know about the <strong>in</strong>dividual skills, <strong>in</strong>terests andpersonal qualities of their children, students, or potentialemployees. Potential for employment does not stop atacademic potential after all. In all cases it is surely moreuseful to an employer to be presented with some k<strong>in</strong>d ofpersonal profile clearly <strong>in</strong>dicat<strong>in</strong>g the positive achievements ofa potential employee at different levels and <strong>in</strong> different sortsof work, than it is to know that the applicant is graded at the57th percentile or obta<strong>in</strong>ed a CSE grade 5, both of which canvary <strong>in</strong> significance from year to year. So far as the arts areconcerned these arguments suggest the need for some sort ofsummative assessment which clarifies the contribution of thearts to pupils' overall development and which <strong>in</strong>dicatesatta<strong>in</strong>ment <strong>in</strong> their work. This is the real task, not that ofdevis<strong>in</strong>g exam<strong>in</strong>ations per se. Among various alternatives weturn first to profile report<strong>in</strong>g.145 Profile Profile report<strong>in</strong>g has been <strong>in</strong> use <strong>in</strong> some schools and authorireport<strong>in</strong>gties for some time and a number of exam<strong>in</strong>ation boards areshow<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> its future development. <strong>The</strong> <strong>in</strong>tentionis to provide more detailed and descriptive accounts ofpupils' work and experience at school and of their personalqualities. Profiles may be used <strong>in</strong> addition to, or <strong>in</strong>stead of,other forms of assessment. <strong>The</strong>re are problems <strong>in</strong> provid<strong>in</strong>gfor written profiles on a large scale. Three ma<strong>in</strong> difficultiesare: first, consistency of reports — ensur<strong>in</strong>g some form ofcomparability; second, the possible discouragement of thosewhose reports are unfavourable; third, the possibility ofcontroversy between parents and teachers. Moreover, it is <strong>in</strong>precisely those areas where profiles might be of most value —<strong>in</strong> describ<strong>in</strong>g personal and social qualities — that there ismost room for controversy. (SCRE, 1977)146 RPA and Profiles may be compiled wholly by teachers, by teachersRPE and pupils or wholly by pupils, as for example with theRecord of Pupil Achievement (see Swales, 1979) and theRecord of Pupil Experience (Stansbury). <strong>The</strong>se provideframeworks with<strong>in</strong> which pupils themselves can keep apersonal record of <strong>in</strong>terests, aptitudes and abilities. Allaspects of the profiles are controlled by pupils, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>gentries <strong>in</strong> the files. <strong>The</strong>se schemes seem to have positiveeffects on pupil motivation and the records themselves areoften more penetrat<strong>in</strong>g and illum<strong>in</strong>at<strong>in</strong>g of personal qualitiesthan those done by teachers.Aga<strong>in</strong> there are difficulties. Costs of materials are high andit is often hard for teachers to f<strong>in</strong>d ways of giv<strong>in</strong>g pupils89


elevant help <strong>in</strong> compil<strong>in</strong>g the profiles without imp<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g ontheir freedom to use them <strong>in</strong> their own way.147 <strong>The</strong> <strong>The</strong>se various forms of profile report<strong>in</strong>g have aroused conneedfor siderable <strong>in</strong>terest here and abroad and clearly merit detailedresearch study. We welcome, therefore, the research project sponsoredby the <strong>Schools</strong> Council look<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>to pupil profiles. This is<strong>in</strong>vestigat<strong>in</strong>g the orig<strong>in</strong>s, rationale and day-to-day work<strong>in</strong>gof various profile report<strong>in</strong>g systems together with a considerationof the criteria used <strong>in</strong> complet<strong>in</strong>g records and therelationships between these and other aspects of assessment.Profile report<strong>in</strong>g deserves serious consideration as a way offorg<strong>in</strong>g l<strong>in</strong>ks between formative and summative assessmentand of <strong>in</strong>tegrat<strong>in</strong>g both <strong>in</strong>to the daily pattern of education.This can benefit parents, teachers, pupils and employers byprovid<strong>in</strong>g more comprehensive and vivid <strong>in</strong>formation whilereflect<strong>in</strong>g on the contribution of the various curriculumactivities to pupils' general development.148 A limited We see only a limited case for exam<strong>in</strong>ations <strong>in</strong> the arts,case for arts because exam<strong>in</strong>ations of whatever sort can only measureexam<strong>in</strong>ation limited aspects of the arts — not necessarily the most importantaspects. This does not dismiss the possibility of anyform of exam<strong>in</strong>ation. Our case for the arts <strong>in</strong> general educationis not an argument aga<strong>in</strong>st provision for special needswhere they exist. We are opposed to confus<strong>in</strong>g such provisionwith a general education. In any school <strong>in</strong> any activity,however, there are likely to be children with special <strong>in</strong>terestor extra commitment. <strong>The</strong>re will be children who have aparticular <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> learn<strong>in</strong>g an <strong>in</strong>strument or study<strong>in</strong>gmusic theory, <strong>in</strong> study<strong>in</strong>g the history of theatre or ref<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gtechniques of dance. <strong>The</strong>se <strong>in</strong>terests may develop out of theirgeneral <strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong> the arts <strong>in</strong> school but go beyond theaverage. If such children wish to extend specialist knowledgeor skills and to study for an exam<strong>in</strong>ation <strong>in</strong> some aspect ofthe arts — perhaps for entry to particular courses <strong>in</strong> highereducation or for quite specific vocational reasons — there isevery reason to provide such courses where there is a demand.Our general reservations about conventional exam<strong>in</strong>ationcourses and procedures still apply and here too we welcomethe search for alternative and flexible patterns.149 Graded One alternative is the graded test. Significant differencestests here are that90a the tests are designed to be taken as <strong>in</strong>formally aspossible whenever <strong>in</strong>dividual children feel ready forthem


the tests encourage criterion-referenced assessments;that is, they aim to discover whether or not a pupilcan perform certa<strong>in</strong> tasks, has particular skills, possessescerta<strong>in</strong> knowledge, without adjust<strong>in</strong>g the result of thetest <strong>in</strong> the light of other pupils' achievements<strong>The</strong> tests progress <strong>in</strong> difficulty and candidates may enterfor them at any age. If the pr<strong>in</strong>ciple were to be developed,children could be tak<strong>in</strong>g such tests throughout their schoolcareer, enter<strong>in</strong>g for different levels <strong>in</strong> different subjects at thesame time accord<strong>in</strong>g to their develop<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>terests and abilities.This would also disperse the weight of formal assessment andsupply a progressive set of motivations. <strong>The</strong> criteria forsuccess are fixed <strong>in</strong> advance and pupils would therefore onlyenter for the test when they felt confident of pass<strong>in</strong>g: moreovertheir chances of pass<strong>in</strong>g would not be affected by theperformance of other pupils. This means that <strong>in</strong> theory a100% pass rate is possible and would be encouraged at anylevel. Individual children could stop when it was felt thatthey had gone as far as they could.150 Some <strong>The</strong> idea of graded tests is not new. What is new is thedifficulties prospect of so wide an application of the idea and thereforethe need for exceptional clarity of criteria. <strong>The</strong>re is anobvious difficulty, particularly for the arts, <strong>in</strong> agree<strong>in</strong>gcriteria for different work. Moreover, s<strong>in</strong>ce the ma<strong>in</strong> differencebetween norm-referenced and criterion-referencedtest<strong>in</strong>g lies <strong>in</strong> the way results are <strong>in</strong>terpreted and used, thewidespread <strong>in</strong>troduction of graded tests may lead <strong>in</strong> practiceto a different sort of exam<strong>in</strong>ation pressure and a differentsort of peck<strong>in</strong>g order. This would certa<strong>in</strong>ly be so if gradedtests were allowed to turn schools <strong>in</strong>to a cont<strong>in</strong>uous assessmentsteeplechase with children urged constantly over thenext hurdle, the grades of the high achievers be<strong>in</strong>g used as astick to beat the less <strong>in</strong>dustrious. Nevertheless, so far as<strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g motivation and self-esteem are concerned, exist<strong>in</strong>gstudies give some grounds for optimism. 100% pass rates ofcourse are always unlikely, but pass rates of 95% at differentlevels have been recorded, emphasis<strong>in</strong>g above all that theexperience of success rather than of failure is always one tobe preferred and promoted <strong>in</strong> education.We emphasise that we see such exam<strong>in</strong>ations as alternativesto exist<strong>in</strong>g forms of exam<strong>in</strong>ation for those children who feel<strong>in</strong>cl<strong>in</strong>ed to take specialist courses. We do not see them, aswe have said, as provid<strong>in</strong>g the foundation nor the justificationof a general arts curriculum. <strong>The</strong> abid<strong>in</strong>g hazard <strong>in</strong> any formof exam<strong>in</strong>ation is that of mak<strong>in</strong>g the measurable importantrather than look<strong>in</strong>g for ways of mak<strong>in</strong>g the important access-91


ible to some form of appropriate assessment. 2Resolv<strong>in</strong>g the problems of assess<strong>in</strong>g and exam<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g the artshowever might assist <strong>in</strong> other areas of the curriculum, <strong>in</strong> twoways. First, the need for some k<strong>in</strong>d of non-competitivesummative assessment for all children is not unique to thearts. Forms of assessment which take account of the specialcharacteristics of the arts might provide stimulat<strong>in</strong>g alternativemodels for others to follow. Second, the need to agreeon criteria for achievement and assessment <strong>in</strong> the arts presentsreal problems of clarity and def<strong>in</strong>ition whose resolution couldbe of value to the curriculum debate as a whole.151 Look<strong>in</strong>g Assessment and evaluation should be seen as a normal partahead of daily practice <strong>in</strong> schools and should provide the meansfor teachers to contribute positively to the formulation andreformulation of the school's general curriculum policy andthe place of their own work with<strong>in</strong> it. <strong>The</strong>re is still far togo along this path. We see two areas <strong>in</strong> particular need ofattention: first, the transfer of <strong>in</strong>formation between primaryand secondary and tertiary education, and second, the tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gof teachers <strong>in</strong> the techniques and processes of evaluation andassessment.152 From Primary schools are not under the same exam<strong>in</strong>ation pressuresprimary to as secondary schools. This does not reduce the need for thesecondary k<strong>in</strong>ds of assessment and evaluation which we have described.Primary teachers need to make <strong>in</strong>formed judgements aboutthe progress and atta<strong>in</strong>ment of their pupils and about theappropriateness and effectiveness of their own teach<strong>in</strong>gstyles and materials.We have urged the use of the arts from the earliest ages sothat by the time they leave primary school children willhave a firm ground<strong>in</strong>g and sense of confidence <strong>in</strong> these formsof activity. Too often the only <strong>in</strong>formation which passesbetween the primary and secondary school is conta<strong>in</strong>ed <strong>in</strong>a short record which deals pr<strong>in</strong>cipally with mathematics,writ<strong>in</strong>g and read<strong>in</strong>g. If secondary schools do not know ofchildren's broader experiences and achievements <strong>in</strong> theprimary school, they can take no account of them. <strong>The</strong>advantage of susta<strong>in</strong>ed arts work <strong>in</strong> the primary school isthen lost. For these reasons, one head teacher <strong>in</strong> Kent hasmade a practice of <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g an extra sheet of general comment<strong>in</strong> the pupils' record cards so that <strong>in</strong>formation aboutmore general developments and <strong>in</strong>terests is at least availableto secondary schools. He considers that this is essential toensure some measure of cont<strong>in</strong>uity <strong>in</strong> the children's education.So do we.92


153 <strong>The</strong> Teachers are the most important resource <strong>in</strong> schools. It is onneed for their skills and professional judgement that the whole enter<strong>in</strong>-serviceprise is founded. If schools are to become more accountable,tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g then effective patterns of assessment need to be developed.This means that provision for the dissem<strong>in</strong>ation of newapproaches and the scrut<strong>in</strong>y of exist<strong>in</strong>g ones must be madeavailable <strong>in</strong> the form of greater opportunities for <strong>in</strong>-servicetra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> this critical area.154 <strong>The</strong> need We ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> that the arts provide essential po<strong>in</strong>ts of entryfor<strong>in</strong>to understand<strong>in</strong>g and shap<strong>in</strong>g the worlds of feel<strong>in</strong>g andpartnership personal response and that <strong>in</strong> their practice and assessmentthe arts should provide an experience of positive achievement<strong>in</strong> schools. <strong>The</strong> task for assessment and evaluation <strong>in</strong>the future is to develop criteria for judgement about skill,understand<strong>in</strong>g and levels of achievement. We suggest thata these should be negotiated and agreed by teachers,pupils, school adm<strong>in</strong>istrators, with appropriate contributionsfrom external agenciesb <strong>in</strong> the field of exam<strong>in</strong>ations, there is a need to reviewmethods of choos<strong>in</strong>g and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g exam<strong>in</strong>ers, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>gspecialist exam<strong>in</strong>ers for the arts, and to devise bettermach<strong>in</strong>ery for consultation and feedback betweenteachers, schools and exam<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g bodies<strong>The</strong> task is, and rema<strong>in</strong>s, to respond positively to the callfor accountability. <strong>The</strong> evidence of enhancement and achievementthrough the arts is <strong>in</strong> rich supply. We need formsthrough which to make it visible and the determ<strong>in</strong>ationthat it should not be distorted by demands for the wrongsort of 'proof.155 Summary In this chapter we have discussed and endorsed the need foraccountability <strong>in</strong> schools. We have called for more thoroughand responsive patterns of assessment and evaluation toachieve this and described the pr<strong>in</strong>ciples on which thesemight be based. We have drawn attention to exist<strong>in</strong>g schemeswhich are pursu<strong>in</strong>g such pr<strong>in</strong>ciples. We have considered thegeneral arguments for exam<strong>in</strong>ations <strong>in</strong> the arts and we haveput counter-arguments. We have identified a limited case forarts exam<strong>in</strong>ations and have po<strong>in</strong>ted to some of the anomalies<strong>in</strong> current approaches. A new approach to exam<strong>in</strong>ations wasdescribed and we have urged the need for further researchhere. We have highlighted the need for more contact andliaison between primary, secondary and tertiary educationand see the k<strong>in</strong>ds of evaluation patterns we have describedas play<strong>in</strong>g a key role <strong>in</strong> this. F<strong>in</strong>ally we have called for93


94more <strong>in</strong>-service tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g provision <strong>in</strong> this critical area ofdemonstrat<strong>in</strong>g through evaluation what actual value thearts are hav<strong>in</strong>g for children <strong>in</strong> schools.We have been th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g of the arts for all children. Indevelop<strong>in</strong>g this theme <strong>in</strong> the next chapter we want now tolook more closely at the value of these activities for childrenwith special needs.


7 Special needs156 Reasons We are concerned <strong>in</strong> this study with the arts for all children.for the With<strong>in</strong> the n<strong>in</strong>e million or so children attend<strong>in</strong>g school <strong>in</strong>chapter the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom there are many groups who requirespecial attention to ensure that particular needs and <strong>in</strong>terestsare not overlooked <strong>in</strong> serv<strong>in</strong>g the majority. Some, like stammerers,may require special treatment. Others, especiallythose with emotional or sexual problems, may never beidentified until research discovers their particular need.Some are very large m<strong>in</strong>orities such as the disturbed childrenestimated by a recent <strong>Schools</strong> Council project to comprise10% of the school population — nearly 1 million children(Wilson and Evans, 1980). All educationalists at all levelshave to provide for the special needs of m<strong>in</strong>orities with<strong>in</strong>their care. For many of these the arts have a particularsignificance. We have chosen four such groups to illustratemeasures which may be necessary for the arts to maketheir full contribution here: those with special gifts ortalents <strong>in</strong> the arts; those who are disabled <strong>in</strong> some way;those with learn<strong>in</strong>g difficulties; and those who belong toracial m<strong>in</strong>orities.157 A com- One of the implications of comprehensive education isprehensive 'that ord<strong>in</strong>ary schools must expect to cater for very manyapproach more special needs, and that the whole concept of childrenwith peculiar difficulties (or <strong>in</strong>deed peculiar talents) mustbe a natural part of the comprehensive ideal.' 1 In otherwords the needs of all, or most, of the groups we identifyought to be a part of the plann<strong>in</strong>g of each school and localeducation authority. This will become clear from a considerationof our four groups. Psychologists, educationalistsand others disagree, for example, about the size and characterof the group of children known as talented, but all agreethat those with special gifts and talents <strong>in</strong> the arts — perhaps95


1%—2% of the school population — need special help beyondthe range of ord<strong>in</strong>ary school provision. 2 <strong>The</strong> Warnock Report(Warnock, 1978) identified 1 <strong>in</strong> 5 children as <strong>in</strong> need ofsome form of special educational provision at some timedur<strong>in</strong>g their school career: usually, but not always, as aresult of some identifiable disability. <strong>The</strong> last of our fourgroups comprises the children from Brita<strong>in</strong>'s racial m<strong>in</strong>orities,now estimated to form 3.2% of the school population ofEngland and Wales, with a much higher proportion <strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>ner-cityareas. 3 Clearly the wide variety of special needs expressedthrough these groups can be satisfied adequately <strong>in</strong> schoolsonly through a genu<strong>in</strong>ely flexible framework which is <strong>in</strong> thereal sense 'comprehensive', able to encompass differences byprovid<strong>in</strong>g alternatives.158 Gifts and <strong>The</strong> need to identify and to provide for gifted and talentedtalents: children has been emphasised repeatedly <strong>in</strong> the grow<strong>in</strong>gexist<strong>in</strong>g literature on this issue. 4 Much of this research concentratesstudies upon gifts and talents related to logico-deductive <strong>in</strong>telligence.It is not much help <strong>in</strong> its treatment of the arts, except <strong>in</strong> ageneral way. We have been grateful, for more specialiststudies such as the Scottish Education Department's GiftedYoung Musicians and Dancers (1976), the <strong>Gulbenkian</strong>reports Go<strong>in</strong>g on the Stage (1975), Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g Musicians(1978) and Dance Education and Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> Brita<strong>in</strong> (1980),and the experience of special schemes, schools and coursessuch as the ILEA's special ability classes for young dancers,Leicestershire's County <strong>Schools</strong> of Music and Dance and itsCounty Drama Workshop, the work of the Royal BalletSchool, Menuh<strong>in</strong> School of Music and so on. Although theEnglish and Scottish education systems compare favourablywith others <strong>in</strong> acknowledg<strong>in</strong>g the problem of giftedness andtry<strong>in</strong>g to take some action about it, most countries alsoexhibit double standards. <strong>The</strong>y accept the pr<strong>in</strong>ciple ofsearch<strong>in</strong>g for, and assist<strong>in</strong>g, exceptional gifts <strong>in</strong> sport, forexample. <strong>The</strong>y are less will<strong>in</strong>g to do this for the arts.159 Def<strong>in</strong>i- <strong>The</strong> analogy with sport is useful <strong>in</strong> def<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g what we meantions by gifts and talents. By gifted we mean those with an exceptionalnatural aptitude for expression and communicationthrough the arts. <strong>The</strong>y are among those who could reachthe top levels of creation and performance perhaps as professionals.By talented, we understand only a different degreeof natural aptitude or <strong>in</strong>terest and have <strong>in</strong> m<strong>in</strong>d larger numbersof children, whose capacity for work <strong>in</strong> the arts is neverthelessout of the ord<strong>in</strong>ary. <strong>The</strong>re are no hard l<strong>in</strong>es of dist<strong>in</strong>ctionhere, especially as we are deal<strong>in</strong>g at the outset with questionsof potential. A great deal will depend on the level and on the96


quality of opportunities which are provided for these aptitudesto develop. This will become our central theme here.We must emphasise first that such gifts and talents are notto be equated simply with a natural flair for certa<strong>in</strong> skillsor techniques of production such as advanced co-ord<strong>in</strong>ationbetween hand and eye <strong>in</strong> draw<strong>in</strong>g. We have stressed theneed for quality as a feature of creative work (Chapter 2)and for orig<strong>in</strong>ality. <strong>The</strong>se must also enter our conception ofgiftedness. We are deal<strong>in</strong>g not only with skills of productionbut also with qualities of vision and perception. Such giftsmay take some time to appear and will need to be carefullynurtured. Putt<strong>in</strong>g children <strong>in</strong> a 'hothouse' from an earlyage so as to concentrate on technical skills of productionmay deprive them of the broad range of experiences <strong>in</strong>sideand outside schools which all children, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g the gifted,need if qualities of vision and perception are to develop.What k<strong>in</strong>d of help is required and can it be justified?160 Is specialhelpjustified?All research suggests that the number of those exceptionallygifted <strong>in</strong> the arts is very small, but essential to the futuredevelopment of the arts. <strong>The</strong> Scottish study of music anddance anticipated an <strong>in</strong>cidence of not more than 15 <strong>in</strong> eachyear. Can special help to so small a group be justified? Is itviable? Yes, if one <strong>in</strong>cludes the talented, accord<strong>in</strong>g to ourdef<strong>in</strong>ition. Together, these should create a group of adequatesize <strong>in</strong> any school of 800—1,000 pupils, which would justifyspecial courses as well as provid<strong>in</strong>g support and stimulationfor <strong>in</strong>dividual members. <strong>The</strong> case for this is moral, educationaland social.161 <strong>The</strong> It is a moral duty of society to provide for all children,moral case <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g those gifted and talented hi the arts, a schoolenvironment <strong>in</strong> which they can best learn. 'It cannot beright,' says a Devon study, 'to ignore or play down a s<strong>in</strong>glechild's high giftedness for fear of creat<strong>in</strong>g disadvantages forothers.' Hence special help has the same aim as generaleducation, the full realisation and development of the wholepersonality. Such help <strong>in</strong> school should be guided not onlyby career considerations but also by the desire to developtalent which will enrich not only an <strong>in</strong>dividual life but alsothe life of the community.162 <strong>The</strong> Although vocational tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g is usually essential for theeducational arts at some stage of development, much depends on thecase nature of the special help provided with<strong>in</strong> the general educationalsystem. <strong>The</strong> development of particular gifts andtalents <strong>in</strong> any subject requires time and effort; specialised97


tuition under well qualified teachers; a sympathetic schoolenvironment, and the facilities to develop the gifts <strong>in</strong> question.Sometimes this sort of support is available <strong>in</strong> ord<strong>in</strong>aryschools for, say, the mathematically gifted. It is rarelyavailable to support gifts and talents <strong>in</strong> the arts. Many schools,<strong>in</strong>deed, do not accept that exceptional talent <strong>in</strong> the artsrequires any exceptional response from them. Consequentlypupils with potential <strong>in</strong> the arts have to develop their giftsoutside school hours, often <strong>in</strong> situations which can h<strong>in</strong>derdevelopment through creat<strong>in</strong>g conflict between the schoolrequirements and their special needs. <strong>The</strong>se needs are:a a good general education <strong>in</strong> concert with specialisedstudiesb education <strong>in</strong> peer groups which can give challengeand stimulatione regular, frequent access to teachers who can understandand help their attitudes to their giftd to start at an early enough age, often before the age of12, because time lost <strong>in</strong> early years can never be recapturede an environment with adequate resources to stimulatethem to understand<strong>in</strong>g and creation163 <strong>The</strong> Aga<strong>in</strong> and aga<strong>in</strong> the research we have studied, and our ownsocial case experience, emphasise the importance of social factors <strong>in</strong>develop<strong>in</strong>g or conceal<strong>in</strong>g gifts — the <strong>in</strong>fluence of homeenvironment, social <strong>in</strong>teraction, the peer group, class backgroundand loyalties, the atmosphere and attitude of aschool. All this conditions social th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g. 'Descriptions ofgiftedness', remarks Joan Freeman, 'are always based on thesocial values of the time and culture <strong>in</strong> which they are given.'(1979, pi)<strong>The</strong> social case arises as much from negative as frompositive attitudes and draws together the moral and educationalarguments. <strong>The</strong>re is often hostility towards thespecially gifted from those, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g teachers, who feelthemselves threatened. If gifts and talents survive it is often<strong>in</strong> spite of the school and family. Morally and educationally,as well as socially, the gifted need to be recognised as aneglected m<strong>in</strong>ority, and those <strong>in</strong> the arts as particularlyneglected.<strong>The</strong>re are a number of arguments aga<strong>in</strong>st the specialtreatment of giftedness, especially treatment which <strong>in</strong>volvesa measure of separate provision. It is important to acknowledgethese.98


164 For and It will be simplest if we state each argument (A) and offeraga<strong>in</strong>st our response (R).special a (A) To take away or separate the most artisticallyprovision gifted from the general school population is to impoverishthe life of a school.(R) <strong>The</strong> general artistic life of a school should notdepend on the chance presence of exceptionally giftedchildren.b (A) To segregate the gifted child is to <strong>in</strong>hibit his or hergeneral education and ability to mix with others.(R) Experience suggests the contrary. Where childrenare do<strong>in</strong>g what they most want to do and can seethemselves progress<strong>in</strong>g, they are relieved of frustrationand conflict with their environment, ga<strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong> strengthand are able to launch themselves at other tasks withfresh confidence and enterprise.e (A) Really gifted people will get through anyway, orteach themselves.(R) This is true only of a very few cases. For the rest,lack of special help usually means wasted potential.In any case, this argument gives all the advantages tothe middle class and to those with the best educationalenvironments, thus compound<strong>in</strong>g social <strong>in</strong>equalities.d (A) Selective schools or special classes are sociallydivisive.(R) <strong>The</strong>re is no evidence to show this provided parentsaccept that selection is a genu<strong>in</strong>e attempt to f<strong>in</strong>d aneducation best suited to their gifted child, and providedsuch selection does not imply or lead to less concern forthe less gifted.e (A) Special provision and special teach<strong>in</strong>g take away thebest teachers from those who most need them.(R) In every country, particularly at secondary level,there is a shortage of highly qualified specialists, capablenot only of <strong>in</strong>spir<strong>in</strong>g gifts and talents <strong>in</strong> the arts, but ofbut of teach<strong>in</strong>g them at all. One solution to this problemis to make particular use of such teachers for the childrenwhom they alone can help. In any case, on what pr<strong>in</strong>cipleof psychology, education or morals could we regard itas right to ignore or frustrate the unusual talents ofsome children because other children do not showthem?165 Three To summarise, there are three reasons for concern<strong>in</strong>g ourreasonsfor selves <strong>in</strong> some degree with gifts and talents <strong>in</strong> the arts. First,concern concern for artistic gifts and talents is a logical developmentof any general concern for the arts. Second, if this reporthelps towards a wider application of the arts <strong>in</strong> education,99


it is likely that more children will be found to reveal artisticgifts and talents requir<strong>in</strong>g nourishment. Third, gifted childrenrema<strong>in</strong> widely misunderstood or ignored as a category.We do not accept the charge of elitism <strong>in</strong> this contextbecause we are not postulat<strong>in</strong>g the gifted versus the nongifted.All children may have gifts of some k<strong>in</strong>d. <strong>The</strong>se needto be discovered and developed to the best of their, and our,ability. Thus there are two dimensions to the question ofgifts and talents at school:a how to <strong>in</strong>crease general exposure to the arts and theopportunity to enjoy and participate <strong>in</strong> them to anextent that we can say the educational process genu<strong>in</strong>elyprovides an opportunity for gifts and talents to revealthemselves <strong>in</strong> every area at every social level? <strong>The</strong>solution to this problem is implicit <strong>in</strong> our considerationof the arts and the curriculumb hav<strong>in</strong>g provided this opportunity, how best to identifygifts and talents and encourage their development?166 Help<strong>in</strong>g No firm l<strong>in</strong>e can be drawn between the gifted and talented.gifts and All the more important, therefore, that local educationtalents: the authorities should create the circumstances at authority androles of the at school level with<strong>in</strong> which the artistic talents of all youngschool people can be encouraged.100a Identification<strong>The</strong> very gifted frequently identify themselves at anearly age. Others need the help of identification byparents, relatives or teachers. It is the school's job to beable to recognise such gifts and talents and to arrangeappropriate support with help from parents and thelocal education authority. To help <strong>in</strong> this the Devoneducation authority, for example, now provides guidance<strong>in</strong> identification and has established two centres towhich primary-age children, thus identified, can go forhalf a day a week for extra tuition.b Extra tuitionIn the later years of primary education and throughoutsecondary education children gifted <strong>in</strong> the arts willneed special tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> their art and special arrangementsto balance this tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g aga<strong>in</strong>st the demands of generaleducation. Such arrangements <strong>in</strong> ord<strong>in</strong>ary schools may<strong>in</strong>clude, dropp<strong>in</strong>g some subjects to provide more time topractise a particular skill, or time off for specialisttuition.<strong>Arts</strong> specialists seem undecided whether this tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gcan be best given with<strong>in</strong> the ord<strong>in</strong>ary school system or


should be concentrated <strong>in</strong> special schools. <strong>The</strong> answervaries accord<strong>in</strong>g to the needs of each art and the judgementof each education authority. Whatever the solution,flexibility is required aga<strong>in</strong>st a general background of<strong>in</strong>terest and will<strong>in</strong>gness to compromise.e A broad approachIn our philosophy, artistic talent is not conf<strong>in</strong>ed totraditional arts such as classical ballet, music, pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>gor poetry. Artistic potential among young people showsitself very widely, for example <strong>in</strong> steel bands, photograpy,mak<strong>in</strong>g videos and <strong>in</strong> disco danc<strong>in</strong>g. It is an awareness ofthis breadth of potential which we would like to seematched <strong>in</strong> the curriculum and <strong>in</strong> out-of-school activitiesto encourage the widest possible development of talent.Even if this were done everywhere, there would stillrema<strong>in</strong> a residue of special need — or at least of specialproblems.d Special problems<strong>Schools</strong> <strong>in</strong> areas of exceptional deprivation will not onlyf<strong>in</strong>d it harder to arrange special provision because ofeconomic circumstances, they will f<strong>in</strong>d as well that alltoo often the specialist teachers needed to foster suchgifts and talents are not available <strong>in</strong> the area. Longjourneys for special lessons may thus become an extraburden on already deprived families. Special care needsto be taken to overcome environmental disadvantage aswell as economic and social disadvantage.167 <strong>The</strong> roles We th<strong>in</strong>k that five k<strong>in</strong>ds of action are necessary at localof the local education authority level to create an atmosphere <strong>in</strong> whicheducation gifts and talent can flourish.authoritya Special tuition should be made available. This mayrange from special tuition through peripatetic specialiststo, for example, the appo<strong>in</strong>tment of drama teachersto senior positions <strong>in</strong> large secondary schools, as <strong>in</strong>Leeds. Many authorities also make central arrangementsthrough which particularly gifted and talented childrencan receive special encouragement and extra experience.<strong>The</strong> Inner London Education Authority, for example,makes provision for pupils with special musical talentsand commitment at a Centre for Young Musicians, whichoffers a full day's music programme every Saturdaydur<strong>in</strong>g term time, and a course <strong>in</strong>corporated <strong>in</strong>to PimlicoSchool. In select<strong>in</strong>g pupils for both of these coursesmusical potential is assessed <strong>in</strong> aural perception, fluencyand response <strong>in</strong> improvisation and commitment tomusical <strong>in</strong>terests and activities. Both courses are staffed101


102by professional musicians, many of whom hold positions<strong>in</strong> the London orchestras and! music colleges. Not allauthorities have shown an understand<strong>in</strong>g of the valuablecontribution which private teachers can make nor takenthe necessary steps to develop an effective liaisonbetween the ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed and non-ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed sectors ofeducation <strong>in</strong> this area.b A broad <strong>in</strong>terpretation is needed of the concept of arts.'Art and Design' with<strong>in</strong> the ILEA, for example, <strong>in</strong>cludesnot only the ma<strong>in</strong>ly practical, autonomous imagemak<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong> art, but also cultural and media studies,design education, and art <strong>in</strong> the built environment towhich the encouragement of mural pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>gs on exteriorwalls makes an important contribution.e Encouragement must be given to a broad range of out-ofschoolactivities from the provision of school spacesfor band rehearsals to support for outside agenciesoffer<strong>in</strong>g specialist opportunities (such as the MerseysideVisual Communications Unit) to the development ofimportant school or county perform<strong>in</strong>g groups, or thesupport of comparable ventures <strong>in</strong> photography or <strong>in</strong>literature.d Local achievements need further stimulation by be<strong>in</strong>gmatched aga<strong>in</strong>st others of like character. <strong>The</strong> NationalYouth <strong>The</strong>atre, National Youth Orchestra, NationalFestival of Youth Dance and so on can flourish onlyto the extent that they receive support from youngtalents, their parents and their local authorities. Thisapplies equally to <strong>in</strong>ternational festivals.e <strong>The</strong>re is a clear need here for co-operative action. Bythis we mean the development of a real, rather thannotional, co-operation between the primary and secondarylevels of education and between the public andprivate sectors. This could mean, for example, thatthe art resources of secondary schools be made availableto help children <strong>in</strong> neighbour<strong>in</strong>g primary schools (seeChapter 9) or that specialists from the private sectorcould be called <strong>in</strong> to help the gifted at primary orsecondary level. It would mean a greater will<strong>in</strong>gness toorganise special part-time classes and activities forgifted and talented pupils, given by teachers from thema<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed or non-ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed sectors, whicheverappeared best for the pupil. It might also mean a greateruse of peripatetic teachers, the establishment of 'skillbanks' and the catalogu<strong>in</strong>g by the local authorities ofthe human and material resources, public and private,available with<strong>in</strong> their communities for deployment <strong>in</strong>the <strong>in</strong>terests of their children.


168 Grants Whatever is done with<strong>in</strong> the authority, there will come aand awards time (at the age of 10 or 12, 16 or 18, accord<strong>in</strong>g to the art)when an artistically gifted or talented young person willrequire an award or grant to cont<strong>in</strong>ue his or her tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>the area of their gift. In due course this must <strong>in</strong>volve:a the will<strong>in</strong>gness of authorities to provide awards to<strong>in</strong>dividual children below the age of 16 for specialtuition or school<strong>in</strong>g, particularly <strong>in</strong> music or danceb the will<strong>in</strong>gness of authorities to provide children abovethe age of 16 with awards or discretionary grants toundertake vocational tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the artse the acceptance that this tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g is as significant as thetra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g or education for which mandatory awards aregiven (see para 232)d the will<strong>in</strong>gness to accept that special tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g should beundertaken outside an authority's area where this seemsbest for the studentWe th<strong>in</strong>k the present education system is flexible enoughto achieve these requirements. We emphasise the optionsopen to authorities, however, because of the need to seechildren who are gifted or talented <strong>in</strong> the arts as <strong>in</strong>dividualswith specific needs rather than as a group with commoncharacteristics.169 Other We have been th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g of children who have special abilitiesneeds <strong>in</strong> the arts and of ways of identify <strong>in</strong>g them. <strong>The</strong>re are childrenwith other sorts of difficulties for whom the activities of thearts may have special benefits. Classifications are difficult andnever discrete. We will identify three major though overlapp<strong>in</strong>gareas of special need: physically disabled, educationallysub-normal, and emotionally disturbed children.1 70 <strong>The</strong> All that we have said of the needs of gifted and talenteddisabled children <strong>in</strong> the arts applies to the artistic needs of the disabled,artist among whom, of course, there will be a proportion of giftedand talented children. Much the same approach is needed tothe problems of the disabled for whom the arts may have anadditional significance <strong>in</strong> the extra opportunities they providefor communication. <strong>The</strong>re are those with sight or hear<strong>in</strong>gimpediments or with speech problems. <strong>The</strong> arts provide avariety of alternative modes of communication for suchchildren <strong>in</strong> say, drama, dance and music. <strong>The</strong>se can bevaluable both for that reason and also for the exercise ofphysical skills and abilities which are <strong>in</strong>volved.'Lisa is a 10 year old with a hear<strong>in</strong>g loss over the whole range of103


frequencies and belongs to the Partially Hear<strong>in</strong>g Unit of a juniorschool. Her degree of hear<strong>in</strong>g loss means that she experiences greatproblems <strong>in</strong> the acquisition of language with consequent difficulties<strong>in</strong> understand<strong>in</strong>g others and express<strong>in</strong>g herself. Music as a means ofnon-verbal communication is therefore particularly relevant. Inaddition, the opportunity for group music-mak<strong>in</strong>g provides a valuablesocial experience and encourages sensitivity and awareness of others.Many musical activities contribute directly to the formation ofcerta<strong>in</strong> concepts which can be related to improv<strong>in</strong>g speech.Dur<strong>in</strong>g the 40 m<strong>in</strong>ute lesson which Lisa has with five otherpartially hear<strong>in</strong>g children once a week, the teachers endeavour toprovide a variety of musical experiences some of which arise fromor will be developed and re<strong>in</strong>forced <strong>in</strong> the classroom. Lisa enjoyss<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g as long as most of the vocabulary is familiar and a song canbe an ideal opportunity for <strong>in</strong>troduc<strong>in</strong>g a new word which will beenforced by repetition. Strong rhythmic patterns, a clear narrativel<strong>in</strong>e or plenty of repeated phrases of words are an important factor<strong>in</strong> the choice of song. <strong>The</strong> children have performed simple twopartsongs <strong>in</strong> front of the whole school with great pride. AlthoughLisa can now pitch her voice on some notes and enjoys games basedon vocal sounds, she cannot control the pitch sufficiently to s<strong>in</strong>g amelodic l<strong>in</strong>e accurately. However, she no longer s<strong>in</strong>gs on a monotoneand is show<strong>in</strong>g more <strong>in</strong>flexion <strong>in</strong> speech.<strong>The</strong> sequential aspect of melody has valuable analogies withverbal language. In the play<strong>in</strong>g of ost<strong>in</strong>ato-type accompanimentsshe is motivated to pay great attention to the group director —teacher or child — where, when words alone are <strong>in</strong>volved, she oftenlacks concentration because of the factors <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> lip-read<strong>in</strong>gwhich together with her hear<strong>in</strong>g-aid are her only means for acquir<strong>in</strong>gverbal language.It is, however, <strong>in</strong> the area of <strong>in</strong>vented music that she showsparticular ability. She is always brimm<strong>in</strong>g with imag<strong>in</strong>ative suggestionsfor represent<strong>in</strong>g ideas musically and will search <strong>in</strong> a very <strong>in</strong>tenseway for the 'right' sound. Show<strong>in</strong>g great powers of discrim<strong>in</strong>ationshe immediately rejects what does not satisfy her and experimentswith a wide variety of sound sources. Often while experiment<strong>in</strong>g shewill f<strong>in</strong>d sounds which suggest other ideas and will be motivated touse words which, at some other times, she is reluctant to do.Without a wide variety of musical experiences — large areas ofcreative potential would be left undeveloped and her understand<strong>in</strong>gof many music/sound concepts would be much more difficult. It isby reflect<strong>in</strong>g these concepts <strong>in</strong> speech, and by provid<strong>in</strong>g the opportunityfor the sense of achievement through creation and performancethat the partially hear<strong>in</strong>g child's ability to communicate bothverbally and non-verbafly are strengthened.'171 <strong>The</strong> need We endorse the widely held and still grow<strong>in</strong>g conviction <strong>in</strong>for action the UK, USA, Canada, Scand<strong>in</strong>avia and other countries(reviewed <strong>in</strong> the Wamock Report) that so far as is humanlypossible, disabled children and young people should share theopportunities for self-fulfilment that we want for all children.This places a special responsibility on those who have to teach104


and provide for the arts. In mak<strong>in</strong>g this provision we canpo<strong>in</strong>t to three special difficulties:a the problem of identify<strong>in</strong>g an artistic gift may becomplicated by the nature of the disability, this requiresspecial attention <strong>in</strong> the guidance to teachers given by aneducation authorityb there is a shortage of teachers with adequate tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>this field and of artists with the ability and commitmentto give time to help the disabled. <strong>The</strong> former can beresolved with<strong>in</strong> an authority only through appropriate<strong>in</strong>-service tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g. <strong>The</strong> latter is be<strong>in</strong>g tackled throughfor example the work of Shape, 5 an organisation l<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>gprofessional artists with a variety of social needs fromwhich authorities can derive support <strong>in</strong> roughly thesame measure as they give ite there is the problem of segregation. Specialists are asdivided on this issue as others are over the best way todevelop artistic gifts. Generally we th<strong>in</strong>k the weight ofevidence, particularly <strong>in</strong> the United States, is aga<strong>in</strong>stsegregation, especially where this might be proposedfor the mentally retarded, maladjusted or disabled. Itis wiser we th<strong>in</strong>k, to provide substantial supplementaryhelp <strong>in</strong> ord<strong>in</strong>ary schools along the l<strong>in</strong>es that we havealready described172 Less able In any school there are children who, for a variety of reasons,and disturbed require some form of remedial activities or therapy. Forchildren example, children who are educationally sub-normal needspecial care and attention <strong>in</strong> the development of skills oflearn<strong>in</strong>g and communication; there are children with emotionaldisorders of various sorts, and, for the reasons we havesuggested, this may <strong>in</strong>clude very gifted children. All mayneed the attention of specialist teachers and/or therapists.We approach our comments here with caution because ofthe emphatic differences between general education andtherapy. We want only to note the grow<strong>in</strong>g body of experienceand op<strong>in</strong>ion which po<strong>in</strong>ts to the particular value of thearts — especially music, art, dance and drama — <strong>in</strong> these twoareas of remedial education and therapy. <strong>The</strong>se provide notonly accessible channels of expression and communication<strong>in</strong> both of these areas, but also, <strong>in</strong> the case of therapy, ameans of explor<strong>in</strong>g and express<strong>in</strong>g emotion which can be animportant release <strong>in</strong> itself while provid<strong>in</strong>g the therapist withsignificant diagnostic <strong>in</strong>formation. In draw<strong>in</strong>g attention tothese specialised uses of the arts <strong>in</strong> education, we emphasisethat they are the prov<strong>in</strong>ce of tra<strong>in</strong>ed and qualified specialists<strong>in</strong> art, drama and music therapy and not of the general105


classroom teacher. Nevertheless, the existence and value ofthis work should be recognised <strong>in</strong> schools and by localeducation authorities. 61 73 Rais<strong>in</strong>g <strong>The</strong>re are grey areas <strong>in</strong> and between these categories of need.confidence <strong>The</strong>re are many children, for example, who are do<strong>in</strong>g lesswell than they might at school because they feel unconfident<strong>in</strong>, or unmotivated by, a good deal of curriculum work. Hereas well, the arts can provide a positive experience of successand help to raise the self-confidence on which educationalatta<strong>in</strong>ment depends so heavily. This is well illustrated <strong>in</strong> thefollow<strong>in</strong>g teacher's account of one girl's experience of thearts.106'Angela is 11, <strong>in</strong> the fourth year at junior school. She is the onlygirl <strong>in</strong> her family, with several older brothers. Her school recordshows a pattern of shyness, unsatisfactory attendance, lack ofconfidence <strong>in</strong> school subjects, lack of progress <strong>in</strong> basic skills, andvery little school—home liaison. <strong>The</strong> parents seemed over-protectiveand the Education Welfare Officer found them hostile when he madeenquiries at the house. In weekly music lessons with her class Angelakept a very low profile and showed no enthusiasm, striv<strong>in</strong>g not tobe noticed if possible. When she was old enough to jo<strong>in</strong> the afterschoolMusic and Drama Club she did not come forward to jo<strong>in</strong>,although many of her peer group pressed me for membership.At the beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g of her f<strong>in</strong>al year <strong>in</strong> junior school (September1978) she was allocated to my class. Previously I had taught hertwice a week <strong>in</strong> a remedial maths group of eight children so I knewsometh<strong>in</strong>g of her academic ability and I was very aware of hererratic attendance and had noted her lack of response to praise.She sometimes functioned well <strong>in</strong> the maths group but I felt thatshe didn't believe me when I told her of her ability! In September1978 almost all my class jo<strong>in</strong>ed the Music and Drama Club if theyhadn't already done so dur<strong>in</strong>g the previous year. Angela wasn't<strong>in</strong>terested and cont<strong>in</strong>ued her non-<strong>in</strong>volvement and poor attendance.In November when the Music and Drama Club was rehears<strong>in</strong>g theChristmas Show she suddenly approached me and asked if shecould jo<strong>in</strong> if somebody dropped out of the cast. All the other girls<strong>in</strong> the class were <strong>in</strong> the club except one. Three weeks before theshow, one of the girls (from another class) failed to appear at arehearsal. <strong>The</strong> miss<strong>in</strong>g girl was a potential truant whom I was try<strong>in</strong>gto reform via music and drama, and she has subsequently become aworse attender. Angela took over her part that day. Not even know<strong>in</strong>gthe plot, Angela jo<strong>in</strong>ed a group of six children who were on stage forthe whole show, s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g and danc<strong>in</strong>g and talk<strong>in</strong>g. Los<strong>in</strong>g a great dealof her shyness, she emerged with a good s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g voice and an aptitudefor danc<strong>in</strong>g. She spent her playtimes and lunchtimes study<strong>in</strong>g herscript with other members of the group of six. She stayed late torehearse three even<strong>in</strong>gs a week and never missed a s<strong>in</strong>gle day to theend of term. I had never seen her so animated; other teachers alsonoticed the amaz<strong>in</strong>g change. She had no difficulty <strong>in</strong> learn<strong>in</strong>g all


the aspects of her role, although the rest of the class had had twoweeks more rehearsal time, plus a long-term build up of dramaexercises and extra s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g, dance and <strong>in</strong>strumental work <strong>in</strong> the club.She was co-operative and quick to respond, check<strong>in</strong>g unobtrusivelyfrom time to time to make sure that she was <strong>in</strong> time with the otherfive <strong>in</strong> her group and obviously learn<strong>in</strong>g a great deal by observ<strong>in</strong>g therest of the cast, especially the lead<strong>in</strong>g actors and s<strong>in</strong>gers. Her mothercame to see the show and Angela was very pleased with herself.Other children were impressed that she had learnt so quickly too,and commented on this.After Christmas Angela, unlike many, turned up on the first dayand has had good attendance now for two months. She is far moreself-assertive, has chosen new friends to sit near, and is naughtysometimes. She is gett<strong>in</strong>g more work done <strong>in</strong> maths and language.<strong>The</strong> presentation of her work shows a new pride and she is develop<strong>in</strong>ga handwrit<strong>in</strong>g style which is gradually replac<strong>in</strong>g her untidy pr<strong>in</strong>t.Other children <strong>in</strong> the class who improved <strong>in</strong> various ways dur<strong>in</strong>g therehearsal and performance period have not kept up their improvement,unfortunately, but Angela is still do<strong>in</strong>g well. In class musiclessons she is ready to try a fairly demand<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>strument, <strong>in</strong>stead ofwav<strong>in</strong>g a hesitant shaker. She s<strong>in</strong>gs quite boldly, hav<strong>in</strong>g managed aone-l<strong>in</strong>e solo <strong>in</strong> the Christmas Show. She dances with great enthusiasmand a strong feel<strong>in</strong>g for rhythm. Previously she did not respond whenteachers tried to encourage her or gave her extra help. If anyone wascross with her she would disappear for several days. Now she can takecriticism. She seems to have had a breakthrough, and it was she whomade the first approach, ask<strong>in</strong>g for an understudy part.'A number of po<strong>in</strong>ts are illustrated here. First, <strong>in</strong> the arts,Angela found an area where she could succeed and ga<strong>in</strong>respect. Second, much of this depended on the teachersacuity of judgement and observation <strong>in</strong> assess<strong>in</strong>g this situation.Specifically, the teacher was prepared to wait for results andnot to expect them immediately. Third, this is a clear testimonyof how a person's com<strong>in</strong>g to feel valued can enablethem to become valuable to others.174 <strong>Arts</strong> and Although the groups we have described so far comprise aracial significant number of school students, a large need to enm<strong>in</strong>oritiescourage artistic expression lies among the children of Brita<strong>in</strong>'sracial m<strong>in</strong>orities. We prefer this to the term 'ethnic m<strong>in</strong>orities'which has come to imply someth<strong>in</strong>g apart from Britishculture. A great many of Brita<strong>in</strong>'s racial m<strong>in</strong>orities are,British. <strong>The</strong> ethnographic changes which created this situation,particularly with<strong>in</strong> the major cities, took place dur<strong>in</strong>g thelate fifties, the sixties and the early seventies, a time ofconsiderable curriculum development. Today there areconcentrations of over 20% of 'immigrant' pupils <strong>in</strong> a numberof local education authorities <strong>in</strong> England and Wales.107


'With<strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>dividual schools <strong>in</strong> certa<strong>in</strong> local educationauthorities as many as 50% of pupils were from immigrantbackgrounds, and <strong>in</strong> a few concentrations of over 90%. Yetthe presence <strong>in</strong> such numbers of children from ethnicm<strong>in</strong>orities, who very often had extreme contrast<strong>in</strong>gculture, was not considered to warrant any considerationwith regard to general curriculum development <strong>in</strong> theschools. <strong>The</strong>ir needs were seen merely <strong>in</strong> terms of (i)<strong>in</strong>tense language exposure and (ii) behavioural correctionunder the guise of education subnormality (ESN).' 7175 <strong>The</strong> This quotation from a paper prepared for the Commissionneed for for Racial Equality <strong>in</strong>dicates the need to make appropriateprovision cultural provision for the children of racial m<strong>in</strong>orities.Such provision is as important for all students and for allstaff <strong>in</strong> our schools as it is for the children and teachers ofthe racial m<strong>in</strong>orities themselves. <strong>The</strong> general lack of understand<strong>in</strong>gof the cultures of racial m<strong>in</strong>orities is a cause of<strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g concern to educationalists, politicians and socialworkers alike. This is partly because of its implications forracial disharmony. Yet schools, if they were so m<strong>in</strong>ded,could use the enormous diversity of cultural and artisticresources now available <strong>in</strong> many classrooms to <strong>in</strong>crease therelevance of much that is taught and, not least, to helpbridge the gap between schools and the home. Unfortunately,<strong>in</strong> schools and <strong>in</strong> curricula where the arts are not highlyregarded, the art-forms of non-Europeans are likely tosuffer most. All children will be losers from this attitude,but the children of m<strong>in</strong>ority races may suffer disproportionatelyas their values are excluded or ignored.176 Impli- We have argued already that art is not someth<strong>in</strong>g restrictedcartons to Tiigh' culture. Neither is it a product only of Europeanfor the culture and its derivatives <strong>in</strong> various parts of the world. <strong>The</strong>curriculum art forms of Asia, Africa and other Third World cultures —their music, dance, drama, sculpture and pottery — open theway to new ideas of history, geography, religion, socialorganisation, and art itself. This does not call necessarily forany new structures but for a wider acceptance of other thanWestern traditions <strong>in</strong> our exist<strong>in</strong>g arrangements. <strong>The</strong> arts <strong>in</strong>Brita<strong>in</strong> and <strong>in</strong>ternationally have often ga<strong>in</strong>ed and developedthrough a creative response to new <strong>in</strong>fluences, from Frenchand Italian opera, Gothic cathedrals, and Ch<strong>in</strong>ese porcela<strong>in</strong>,to the use made by Picasso of African art. <strong>The</strong> ma<strong>in</strong> differenceis that we have the proponents of these arts <strong>in</strong> our very midst.Already <strong>in</strong> our communities there are the street carnivals,steel band music, African and Indian danc<strong>in</strong>g. This widerunderstand<strong>in</strong>g of art has been encouraged <strong>in</strong> Brita<strong>in</strong> dur<strong>in</strong>g108


the last decade by the development of community arts andby a grow<strong>in</strong>g acceptance of cultural pluralism. Even so, thereis a long way to go and much depends upon the schools. Forthem the implications extend not only to a reconsiderationof the balance of the curriculum but also to exam<strong>in</strong>ationsyllabuses, the tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g of teachers and exam<strong>in</strong>ers, the needfor greater liaison between regional arts associations andlocal education authorities, and to a recognition that provid<strong>in</strong>gfor the special needs of the arts of racial m<strong>in</strong>oritiesliv<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> Brita<strong>in</strong>, and the arts of other cultures, can not be atemporary commitment. It will have a profound and cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>geffect upon our education system as the most farreach<strong>in</strong>gmeans of underp<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g the foundations of a societywhich has become, <strong>in</strong> the course of a s<strong>in</strong>gle generation, bothmulti-racial and multi-cultural. This does not mean, ofcourse, that all schools must teach all children about allcultures. It means rather that we must recognise — <strong>in</strong> theterms which we discussed <strong>in</strong> Chapter 3 — that all teach<strong>in</strong>gtakes place <strong>in</strong> a cultural context and that this must be taken<strong>in</strong>to account by the school.177 Respond- With Section 10 of the 1976 Education Act on the statute<strong>in</strong>g to the book, the Warnock Report concluded that the spirit ofchallenge <strong>in</strong>tegration implied by Section 10 is 'a challenge to theeducation system as a whole'. We believe that this 'challenge'applies directly to help<strong>in</strong>g the special needs which we havediscussed. To meet this challenge we def<strong>in</strong>e eight responses:a there should be a source of expert advice with<strong>in</strong> eachauthority through advisers and/or counsellors, withmore tra<strong>in</strong>ed counsellors at local level free enough toattend to <strong>in</strong>dividual requirements <strong>in</strong> each area of needb there should be more <strong>in</strong>-service tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g of teachers <strong>in</strong>how to identify and assist the talented, the disabled andthe racial m<strong>in</strong>orities, and to acquire appropriate attitudesand orientatione the arts of other cultures should <strong>in</strong>form arts teach<strong>in</strong>g ateach level of educationd there should be short courses to assist adm<strong>in</strong>istrators toan understand<strong>in</strong>g of these special problems and theirsolutionse there should be similar help for parents, seek<strong>in</strong>g especiallyto bridge the gap between school and homewhich often developsf where a career <strong>in</strong> one of the arts is <strong>in</strong>dicated (andartistic talent can reside <strong>in</strong> the disabled as well as theable-bodied of whatever race) careers teachers should befamiliar with arts tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g opportunities as well as the109


implications of different types of abilityg more attention should be given dur<strong>in</strong>g teacher tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gto problems of this natureh we consider the value of the arts to be underestimated<strong>in</strong> hospitals, prisons, and other <strong>in</strong>stitutions receiv<strong>in</strong>gyoung people for particular periods of time. <strong>The</strong> roleand possibilities of the arts <strong>in</strong> these situations should bereassessed <strong>in</strong> light of experience reported by organisationssuch as Shape178 A special <strong>The</strong> Warnock Report and the recent surveys of primary andproblem secondary schools by the Inspectorate all po<strong>in</strong>t out thatteachers' expectations of their pupils are too low. This<strong>in</strong>creases possibilities that potential will be overlooked ornot encouraged at both ends of the spectrum of specialneed. We th<strong>in</strong>k, though, that with<strong>in</strong> the generality of specialneed <strong>in</strong> the arts there is one group particularly at risk. This isthe economically disadvantaged child of whatever race. Itseems to us reasonable to assume that there are proportionatelyas many gifted and talented children from low <strong>in</strong>comefamilies as from more wealthy families. <strong>The</strong>re are certa<strong>in</strong>lyas many disabled children, possibly more. What poorerchildren lack is the educational opportunity, environmentand family advantages of the better off. <strong>The</strong> economicallydisadvantaged talented or disabled are an acute and specialproblem requir<strong>in</strong>g, perhaps, an element of priority treatment.179 Summary In this chapter we have considered areas of special needwith<strong>in</strong> the general provision for the arts <strong>in</strong> schools. We haveidentified four such areas and commented on each of them.We have looked at arguments for and aga<strong>in</strong>st mak<strong>in</strong>g specialprovision for gifted children and have concluded that it ismerited. We specified what this might mean <strong>in</strong> terms of theschools and local education authorities. Aga<strong>in</strong>st this backgroundwe discussed the additional needs of the disabled.<strong>The</strong> uses of the arts <strong>in</strong> remedial teach<strong>in</strong>g and <strong>in</strong> therapywere also recognised and endorsed. In these respects weacknowledged the difficulties <strong>in</strong> susta<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g discrete categoriesof special need and gave an example of the generalvalue of the arts <strong>in</strong> rais<strong>in</strong>g children's self-esteem. We turnedthen to the arts of racial m<strong>in</strong>orities and argued for particularattention to be given to these <strong>in</strong> the general cultural sett<strong>in</strong>gof the curriculum and of the school as a whole. We haveconcluded by po<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g to the aggravation of all of theseissues by economic hardship and have recommended anelement of priority attention to certa<strong>in</strong> aspects of this <strong>in</strong> thearts <strong>in</strong> schools.110


8 Children, teachers and artists180 Reasons Lord Redcliffe-Maud (1976) has argued that arts support andfor the arts education are 'natural allies'. We will go further and saychapter that <strong>in</strong> key respects they are <strong>in</strong>ter-dependent: that there isa relationship between the status and levels of support forthe arts <strong>in</strong> education and <strong>in</strong> society as a whole.One of the implications of this, and of our emphasis on therelationships between participation and appreciation, is theneed to foster contacts between the world of professionalarts and that of education — between children, teachers andartists. In recent years there have been many attempts to dothis. In this chapter we outl<strong>in</strong>e the range of these schemes.We discuss the mutual benefits for all concerned and we goon to consider the problems and difficulties they may encounter<strong>in</strong> practice. We see these <strong>in</strong>itiatives as be<strong>in</strong>g ofprime importance to the future development of both thearts and of education.181 Direct For the most part, children come <strong>in</strong>to contact with artistsand <strong>in</strong>directly — through experienc<strong>in</strong>g their work. <strong>The</strong> <strong>in</strong>itiatives<strong>in</strong>direct we have <strong>in</strong> m<strong>in</strong>d not only aim to deepen children's undercontactstand<strong>in</strong>g of artists' work but also to br<strong>in</strong>g them <strong>in</strong>to directcontact with artists for jo<strong>in</strong>t work<strong>in</strong>g projects.182 Current An <strong>Arts</strong> Council publication on Professional <strong>Arts</strong> and <strong>Schools</strong>schemes (1980) describes <strong>in</strong> detail the wide range of exist<strong>in</strong>g work <strong>in</strong>this area. It concludes that there is probably more go<strong>in</strong>g on,and more <strong>in</strong>terest be<strong>in</strong>g shown <strong>in</strong> these ventures, than eventhe most optimistic observer might expect. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> Councilpaper is the most detailed description available of theseprojects and we recommend it for fuller background <strong>in</strong>formation.Our concern here is with some particular po<strong>in</strong>ts ofpr<strong>in</strong>ciple and with identify<strong>in</strong>g courses of action for thefuture.Ill


We will first outl<strong>in</strong>e five ma<strong>in</strong> areas of activity. <strong>The</strong>se areclassified not — as <strong>in</strong> the <strong>Arts</strong> Council paper — accord<strong>in</strong>g tothe different art forms, but accord<strong>in</strong>g to different types ofcontact and organisation. <strong>The</strong>y are:a Artists <strong>in</strong> Education schemes. <strong>The</strong>se br<strong>in</strong>g practis<strong>in</strong>gartists <strong>in</strong>to schools for specific projects only eg <strong>The</strong><strong>Arts</strong> Council's Writers <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> scheme.b <strong>Arts</strong> education companies. <strong>The</strong>se are companies whichhave a primary commitment to educational issues andobjectives eg <strong>The</strong>atre <strong>in</strong> Education.e <strong>Arts</strong>/education liaison schemes, ie those which areadm<strong>in</strong>istered by professional companies — eg EnglishNational Opera and Ballet Rambert — and which aim tofoster l<strong>in</strong>ks between the companies' work and schoolsthrough education packs, workshops etc.d <strong>Arts</strong> centrese Other schemes183 Artists Artists <strong>in</strong> Education schemes now extend across all the major<strong>in</strong>art forms. <strong>The</strong>y vary considerably <strong>in</strong> length and format. WeEducation can dist<strong>in</strong>guish generally between visits and residencies.184 Visits In 1969, the <strong>Arts</strong> Council, <strong>in</strong> conjunction with the Departmentof Education and Science, established a scheme toencourage work<strong>in</strong>g writers to visit schools, colleges of furtherand higher education and <strong>in</strong>-service teachers' courses. Writers<strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> provides for s<strong>in</strong>gle visits, although further visitsmay be arranged. <strong>The</strong> format and content will vary accord<strong>in</strong>gto the writer and the group concerned — it may be aread<strong>in</strong>g, a talk and discussion or a writ<strong>in</strong>g workshop. Poets<strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> is organised by the Poetry Society and funded byW H Smith and Sons Ltd. Not only is this more specialised,it also provides for longer contact between the artist and thegroup. <strong>The</strong> poet visits the school three times, work<strong>in</strong>g eachtime for a whole morn<strong>in</strong>g or afternoon with 20 or so childrenwho have shown particular <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> the scheme. Dur<strong>in</strong>gthe first two visits he or she aims to stimulate the children'sown writ<strong>in</strong>g. After the second visit he or she makes a personalselection from the children's work to be <strong>in</strong>cluded <strong>in</strong> ananthology which is produced for the f<strong>in</strong>al visit. This is apublic event <strong>in</strong> the even<strong>in</strong>g for parents, friends and teachersand <strong>in</strong>cludes read<strong>in</strong>g of the pupils' and the poet's work. 2Writers on Tour is organised by the <strong>Arts</strong> Council <strong>in</strong> conjunctionwith regional arts associations and local educationauthorities. It provides for groups of four writers at a time tovisit the same area, to give public read<strong>in</strong>gs <strong>in</strong> the even<strong>in</strong>g andto visit local schools dur<strong>in</strong>g the day. <strong>The</strong> general aim is to112


<strong>in</strong>g writers of national and <strong>in</strong>ternational stand<strong>in</strong>g to localaudiences — <strong>in</strong> an economical way .<strong>The</strong> contact time betweenartists and groups is not long <strong>in</strong> any of these schemes. Othersprovide for more susta<strong>in</strong>ed work through subsidised residencies.185 Rest- Organised pr<strong>in</strong>cipally by regional arts associations, the Artistsdencies <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> scheme places visual artists <strong>in</strong> schools or galleriesto work for two to eight days — either consecutively or overseveral weeks. Aims and organisation vary from region toregion.<strong>The</strong> overall and common purpose is to deepen children'sunderstand<strong>in</strong>g of contemporary art <strong>in</strong> general and of the<strong>in</strong>dividual artist's work <strong>in</strong> particular. 3<strong>The</strong>re have been considerable developments <strong>in</strong> recentyears <strong>in</strong> all areas of dance. 4 <strong>The</strong>re has been a correspond<strong>in</strong>ggrowth of <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> dance and education. <strong>The</strong> GreaterLondon <strong>Arts</strong> Association, for example, has funded fourDance Fellows to work <strong>in</strong> four London Boroughs for oneyear. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> Council has organised seven pilot projects —two <strong>in</strong> Leeds; two <strong>in</strong> Manchester; and one each <strong>in</strong> Havant,Devon and ILEA — each last<strong>in</strong>g five weeks and compris<strong>in</strong>g aperiod of preparatory work <strong>in</strong> the chosen school by a danceartist, a one-week residency by a professional dance companyand a follow-up period with a choreographer to create adance piece with the pupils. Companies <strong>in</strong>volved so far<strong>in</strong>clude, London Contemporary Dance <strong>The</strong>atre, ExtemporaryDance Company, Emma Dance Company, Dance Tales, Ludus,Spiral and Basic Space.<strong>The</strong> Greater London <strong>Arts</strong> Association also susta<strong>in</strong>s anumber of Writers' Fellowships. Under the C Day LewisFellowships, the Association helps to fund a salary for awriter to work <strong>in</strong> a school for two days a week for a fullacademic year. <strong>The</strong> salary is completed by the school or thelocal education authority. Fellowships are open to anypublished creative writer <strong>in</strong> any field and it is for the writerand the school to negotiate their own pattern of activitiesfor the year. 5<strong>The</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> itself took a lead <strong>in</strong> thisarea of residencies when, <strong>in</strong> 1973, it made available £30,000— later raised to £50,000 — to support a scheme whichaimed to <strong>in</strong>troduce artists <strong>in</strong> all media to work <strong>in</strong> schools.This established a partnership <strong>in</strong> fund<strong>in</strong>g between the <strong>Foundation</strong>and eight local authorities. Each chose an artist, attach<strong>in</strong>ghim or her to work <strong>in</strong> a school for a year. Cheshirechose a dance choreographer; Coventry a video artist; Cumbriaa composer; Devon a dramatist; Hertfordshire a sculptor;ILEA a rather special mix of pa<strong>in</strong>ter, composer and dramatist;Leicestershire a pa<strong>in</strong>ter; Sheffield a film-maker. 6 113


186 <strong>Arts</strong> In the schemes we have just mentioned, the artists are noteducation tra<strong>in</strong>ed as teachers, nor is education their major professionalcompanies concern. <strong>Arts</strong> education companies — <strong>The</strong>atre <strong>in</strong> Educationand Dance <strong>in</strong> Education — differ from conventional companies<strong>in</strong> that they are primarily concerned with work <strong>in</strong>schools and with educational issues. <strong>The</strong>y seek to comb<strong>in</strong>ethe roles of artist and teacher and company members oftenhave been tra<strong>in</strong>ed or have worked as teachers <strong>in</strong> schools.<strong>The</strong>se companies work with children of all abilities and<strong>in</strong>terests and use the forms and processes of the arts topromote the exploration of specific themes and issues. Tobeg<strong>in</strong> with, <strong>The</strong>atre <strong>in</strong> Education programmes were ma<strong>in</strong>lycentred around- performance. Now they also comprise elementsof simulation, of practical workshops, discussion,role-play exercises and so on. <strong>The</strong>y often extend over severalsessions with a group and <strong>in</strong>clude teachers' packs for preparationand follow-up work. <strong>The</strong> activities of these companiesnow <strong>in</strong>clude work outside schools — <strong>in</strong> pubs, clubs,arts centres, special care <strong>in</strong>stitutions and so on. <strong>The</strong>ir workrepresents the most susta<strong>in</strong>ed and perhaps the most farsee<strong>in</strong>gattempts so far to harness the capabilities and resourcesof professional artists to the purposes of education. 7187 <strong>Arts</strong>/ More traditional perform<strong>in</strong>g companies have also begun toeducation recognise the necessity and desirability of forg<strong>in</strong>g l<strong>in</strong>ks withliaison: education. This is be<strong>in</strong>g shown <strong>in</strong> the appo<strong>in</strong>tment of eduperform<strong>in</strong>gcation liaison officers and also <strong>in</strong> the production of educompaniescational materials to complement productions; practicalworkshops with company members; lectures and talks onthe company's work and so on.<strong>The</strong> Royal Opera House, the National <strong>The</strong>atre, the EnglishNational Opera are among those now giv<strong>in</strong>g attention tothis. <strong>The</strong> Royal Shakespeare Company through its DevelopmentAdm<strong>in</strong>istrator has also evolved a pattern of workshops,sem<strong>in</strong>ars and demonstration, us<strong>in</strong>g the artistic and technicalpersonnel of the company to illum<strong>in</strong>ate aspects of their ownwork and also the <strong>in</strong>terpretation and performance of plays <strong>in</strong>production.188 <strong>Arts</strong>/ In the visual arts, the role of museums and galleries is of keyeducation importance. <strong>The</strong>re have been considerable developments <strong>in</strong>liaison: educational liaison <strong>in</strong> this area. <strong>The</strong> appo<strong>in</strong>tment by the <strong>Arts</strong>museums and Council of an Art Education Officer, 'to develop the edugalleriescational impact of the Council's tour<strong>in</strong>g exhibitions' hasbeen an important step forward <strong>in</strong> encourag<strong>in</strong>g these <strong>in</strong>itiatives.A number of museums and galleries have appo<strong>in</strong>tedtheir own education officers. <strong>The</strong> Whitechapel Gallery <strong>in</strong>London, for example, has been particularly active <strong>in</strong> edu-114


cation and community work follow<strong>in</strong>g such an appo<strong>in</strong>tment.<strong>The</strong>ir activities now <strong>in</strong>clude practical workshops at theGallery; the use of teacher-guides for specific exhibitions;and the mount<strong>in</strong>g of exhibitions which are of particular<strong>in</strong>terest to the local community, for example, the recent<strong>Arts</strong> of Bengal exhibition. <strong>The</strong> Gallery also arranges meet<strong>in</strong>gswith teachers to discuss how it can best be used as aresource.189 <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>The</strong>re has been a remarkable proliferation of arts centrescentres throughout Brita<strong>in</strong>. Accord<strong>in</strong>g to one estimate 8 there arenow over 150 of these rang<strong>in</strong>g from custom-built suitesof studios and galleries to converted premises compris<strong>in</strong>gperhaps a small theatre and exhibition space. <strong>Arts</strong> centresvary enormously <strong>in</strong> size and also <strong>in</strong> fund<strong>in</strong>g, organisation andpolicy. <strong>The</strong> Cockpit <strong>in</strong> London, for example, is fundedentirely by the ILEA and employs four education teams whowork, through different art forms, <strong>in</strong> local schools, at theCockpit, <strong>in</strong> local <strong>in</strong>stitutions and <strong>in</strong> youth centres. Hampshirehas a network of local drama centres which are ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>edby the local education authority, and so on. All thecentres aim to provide a focus and a resource for local artsactivities, through space and facilities for practical work andmeet<strong>in</strong>gs, as well as to attract artists to perform and exhibittheir work.190 Other <strong>The</strong>re are many other schemes, often organised by regionalschemes arts associations, <strong>in</strong>volv<strong>in</strong>g pa<strong>in</strong>ters, video artists, sculptors,photographers and film-makers. In Devon, for example,through consultations with the Visual <strong>Arts</strong> Officer forSouth-West <strong>Arts</strong>, a number of artists have been placed <strong>in</strong>different schools for a year at a time. <strong>The</strong>se have <strong>in</strong>cluded:'— a designer of musical <strong>in</strong>struments to work <strong>in</strong> a secondarymodern school where musical <strong>in</strong>put was urgentlyrequired— an <strong>in</strong>tellectual 'systems' pa<strong>in</strong>ter to a grammar schoolwhere he made particular contact with staff <strong>in</strong> the scienceand mathematics departments— a pr<strong>in</strong>tmaker to a school attempt<strong>in</strong>g to develop newareas of work <strong>in</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>tmak<strong>in</strong>g— a pa<strong>in</strong>ter to a school where work is based on similarsource material to that used by the artist— three craftsmen <strong>in</strong> wood — <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g a wood-turner andtoymaker — to tour and provide demonstrations to threedifferent craft departments'In theory, there is no limit to the variations <strong>in</strong> these115


schemes. <strong>The</strong> Arvon <strong>Foundation</strong>, for example, takes childrenout of school for residential courses at one of two centres <strong>in</strong>Devon and Yorkshire. Here they can work for a week withpublished writers, discuss<strong>in</strong>g each other's work <strong>in</strong> an <strong>in</strong>formalbut <strong>in</strong>tensive atmosphere. Youth and Music organise subsidisedperformances for 14—25 year olds: an audience that <strong>in</strong>cludeschildren at school. Some regional organisers of Youth andMusic have arranged projects specifically for schools, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>gone with the composer Trevor Wishart. <strong>The</strong> f<strong>in</strong>al piece,Passion, <strong>in</strong>volved 800 children <strong>in</strong> four performances.Orchestras and smaller groups have a long tradition ofschool performances. Although some of these are nowbe<strong>in</strong>g affected by economies, the Hall6 Orchestra, the NorthernS<strong>in</strong>fonia, the Oxford Pro Musica, the Guilford Philharmonicand the Apollo Trust are among those hop<strong>in</strong>g to developthese activities. <strong>The</strong> Contemporary Music Network providedby the <strong>Arts</strong> Council also encourages visits and workshops <strong>in</strong>schools by contemporary composers and musicians.191 Mutual <strong>The</strong>re is then a wide range of attempts to br<strong>in</strong>g togetherbenefits the professional arts and education. <strong>The</strong> value of this isnot obvious to everyone. <strong>The</strong> Pr<strong>in</strong>cipal of a London Polytechnicrecently received a letter from the Chairman of alocal bus<strong>in</strong>ess which read:'I see the local tech. has appo<strong>in</strong>ted a poet <strong>in</strong> residence.Such gross waste of rate-payers' money on <strong>in</strong>essentialsand unnecessary frills should be <strong>in</strong>stantly stopped and Ilook to you to ensure that they concentrate on theirtask <strong>in</strong> future.'So far from be<strong>in</strong>g 'frills', if the arts are essential to education— as we ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> they are — such schemes can haveprime importance for schools. It must be stressed that thebenefits here are not just for children but for teachers andartists too. What are these benefits?192 Benefits Work<strong>in</strong>g with professional artists can benefit pupils <strong>in</strong> threefor pupils: ways: <strong>in</strong> improv<strong>in</strong>g skills, attitudes and understand<strong>in</strong>g,skillsDance, drama, music, literature and the visual arts callon a huge variety of specialist skills <strong>in</strong> the many media andforms of expression that they use. No school, however largeits staff, can hope to provide expert help and advice <strong>in</strong> allof these. Visit<strong>in</strong>g artists can give pupils the benefit of specialistskills <strong>in</strong>, for example, ethnic arts, ballet, lithography etcwhich would not otherwise be available to them.193 Attitudes Work<strong>in</strong>g with artists can affect children's attitudes to the arts116


<strong>in</strong> two ways: by demystify<strong>in</strong>g them and by emphasis<strong>in</strong>g theirbasic seriousness. <strong>The</strong> arts, like many other th<strong>in</strong>gs <strong>in</strong> schools,can seem to pupils to be remote from the concerns and<strong>in</strong>terests of everyday life. This remoteness can be re-<strong>in</strong>forcedwhere they are taught only about particular works of art andga<strong>in</strong> no understand<strong>in</strong>g of the personal processes — of commitment,effort, and achievement — by which men andwomen have created them.Meet<strong>in</strong>g and work<strong>in</strong>g with liv<strong>in</strong>g artists can give childrenvaluable <strong>in</strong>sights <strong>in</strong>to the nature of these processes and <strong>in</strong>tothe <strong>in</strong>terests and motivations which drive them. <strong>The</strong>re is afurther po<strong>in</strong>t here. One effect of vocational pressures <strong>in</strong>schools is for the arts to be considered as leisure activities,not essential — c.f. our correspondent above — and not asserious as 'real work'. We have argued aga<strong>in</strong>st this attitudethroughout this report. One way of combat<strong>in</strong>g it <strong>in</strong> schoolsis for pupils to work with those who have actually made thearts their occupation — to see the commitment and applicationthis <strong>in</strong>volves and demands. This can do much to raisethe status of the arts for children and young people.194 Under- <strong>The</strong> arts are not only to do with the development of practicalstand<strong>in</strong>g skills. <strong>The</strong>y are to do with explor<strong>in</strong>g ideas and feel<strong>in</strong>gs, issuesand events that concern artists both as <strong>in</strong>dividuals andas members of society. Contact with practis<strong>in</strong>g artists canhelp to deepen children's understand<strong>in</strong>g of the issues whichconcern them and to appreciate more fully the forms ofwork through which they seek to understand them. Thiscan help to counter the feel<strong>in</strong>g that the arts are someth<strong>in</strong>gentombed <strong>in</strong> books and also help children towards a furtherunderstand<strong>in</strong>g of contemporary life <strong>in</strong> general.195 Benefits <strong>The</strong>re are two ma<strong>in</strong> ways <strong>in</strong> which these schemes can be offor teachers: benefit to teachers: by broaden<strong>in</strong>g their range of personalcontact and professional contacts and by provid<strong>in</strong>g valuable materialfor their own work <strong>in</strong> schools.Teachers themselves may be accomplished artists <strong>in</strong> theirown field. <strong>The</strong> heavy demands of curriculum work oftenmean, however, that it is difficult for them to devote asmuch time as they would like either to their own work orto keep<strong>in</strong>g abreast of contemporary developments <strong>in</strong> theirspecialist area. <strong>Arts</strong> teachers may be more or less hardpressedthan their colleagues <strong>in</strong> this respect. Nevertheless:'Contact with the contemporary arts, or with the liv<strong>in</strong>gworld of the art of the past would seem to be an <strong>in</strong>dispensablesource of personal stimulus and nourishment. Ateacher's personal <strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong> the processes of art117


is likely to give his teach<strong>in</strong>g relevance and vitality — artsteach<strong>in</strong>g will become neither perfunctory nor mechanical<strong>in</strong> his hands. Like any other system — organic, electronicor social — an arts department without effective andvital l<strong>in</strong>ks with its environment will suffer progressivebreakdown.' (Ross, 1975, p44)<strong>The</strong> provision of these contacts for teachers is of benefitboth to them and to their pupils.196 Material In a more direct way, the visit of artists from outside theeducation system can provide the teacher with opportunitiesfor a range of work both before, dur<strong>in</strong>g and after the visit.This might be related to the work of the artist <strong>in</strong> question,to issues with which he or she is concerned, or to techniquesand processes with which he or she is associated.197 Benefits For artists, work<strong>in</strong>g with children and young people can beforbeneficial <strong>in</strong> two ma<strong>in</strong> ways. First, by encourag<strong>in</strong>g clarity <strong>in</strong>artists the expression of ideas to young people and, second, byenrich<strong>in</strong>g their own experience through the ideas and <strong>in</strong>fluenceof young people themselves. So, for example,'. . . an artist <strong>in</strong> residence <strong>in</strong> a primary school, who hadearlier produced large-scale formalist sculptures beganto shape smaller representational works. In other artforms, such as drama, the development of workshopson the <strong>in</strong>terpretation of texts has enabled actors anddirectors, to engage <strong>in</strong> practical research.' (<strong>Arts</strong> Councilof Great Brita<strong>in</strong>, 1981, p8)Edward Blishen sums up this aspect of the schemes. He saysof the Writers <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> scheme;'<strong>The</strong> idea of the scheme is the writers admit children tosome of their excitement about language. To me it oftenseems that I am be<strong>in</strong>g admitted, refresh<strong>in</strong>gly, to theirs.' 9198 In <strong>The</strong>se are some of the potential benefits of the schemes wepractice have described. As always with education, the ways <strong>in</strong>which specific <strong>in</strong>dividuals may benefit are <strong>in</strong>numerable. Itis important to recognise, however, that none of thesebenefits is automatic or guaranteed. <strong>The</strong>re are a number ofproblems <strong>in</strong> the practice of these schemes. What are theyand what l<strong>in</strong>es of action do they suggest?199 Choos<strong>in</strong>g In every case, detailed consideration must be given to thean artist match<strong>in</strong>g of the artist or company to the school — with118


egard to the facilities and space available, the ethos ofparticular departments, the nature of the artists' work andits relations to the general <strong>in</strong>terests of the children andteachers. Not all artists are suited to work<strong>in</strong>g with childrenand young people. Some artists do not like them. Otherswork best with particular age groups. At all events, theartists must be <strong>in</strong>terested and committed. But <strong>in</strong>terest is notenough. <strong>The</strong>y must also be able to communicate clearlywith children. It has been the experience of the PoetrySociety that the poets should have, for example, someteach<strong>in</strong>g experience, a special <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> education, orshould be of particular <strong>in</strong>terest to young people.200 <strong>The</strong> <strong>The</strong> school must also understand the role of the artist and theattitude function of the scheme. <strong>The</strong> actual contact time betweenof the artists and children is usually short and always limited. <strong>The</strong>school school, therefore, should look upon the time and moneyspent as <strong>in</strong>vestments rather than as simple purchase ofgoods. This has implications for the preparation, conductand follow-up of the visit.201 Prepar- <strong>The</strong>re is little to be ga<strong>in</strong>ed from putt<strong>in</strong>g an artist <strong>in</strong> front ofation a class who do not know why he or she is there or anyth<strong>in</strong>gabout his or her work. <strong>The</strong> school should pave the wayfor the visit both by brief<strong>in</strong>g the class about the artist and theartist about the class. Indeed, the best results often comewhen the visits are part of a general scheme of work ratherthan isolated hiccoughs <strong>in</strong> the daily rout<strong>in</strong>e. By know<strong>in</strong>gsometh<strong>in</strong>g of the artist's work <strong>in</strong> advance — or of the themeshe or she will be deal<strong>in</strong>g with — the pupils are likely tomake more sense of the session itself and to use it morefully through productive question<strong>in</strong>g. <strong>The</strong> <strong>in</strong>troductionsshould be over before the meet<strong>in</strong>g beg<strong>in</strong>s.202 Conduct Most people feel nervous and <strong>in</strong>secure when fac<strong>in</strong>g a newclass of children. However deep their <strong>in</strong>terest, most artistsdo not have the professional skills of teachers <strong>in</strong> deal<strong>in</strong>gwith groups of children. <strong>The</strong>y are unlikely to give of theirbest if they are simply po<strong>in</strong>ted at a classroom and told whattime break is. <strong>The</strong>re are two po<strong>in</strong>ts here. First, visit<strong>in</strong>gartists should complement the work of the full-time teachers.<strong>The</strong>y are not substitutes for it. We will return to this later.<strong>The</strong> teacher should be on hand to help guide the work, ifnecessary, and to lend support. Second, the school mustmake adequate provision of time and facilities for this work.In Chapter 5 we discussed the problems of fragmentationdue to <strong>in</strong>nappropriate timetabl<strong>in</strong>g. <strong>The</strong>se can be muchworse for those who are unused to work <strong>in</strong> short, fixed119


periods of time. <strong>The</strong>re are possibilities of unproductiveconflict here between the rout<strong>in</strong>es of the school and thedifferent work<strong>in</strong>g patterns of those who normally operateoutside the education system. If schools arrange for schemesof this type to take place, they need to be sensitive to theconditions needed for work to develop satisfactorily.203 Follow- Well-managed schemes can provide considerable opportunitiesupfor further work and development with the groups <strong>in</strong> question.Poets <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> has sent many different poets — <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>gKit Wright, Michael Rosen, Syndey Carter, Francis Horovitz,Christopher Logue, Lol Coxhill, Roger McGough — <strong>in</strong>toschools all over the country. <strong>The</strong>ir approaches varied, as dothose of teachers. Barry McSweeney and Ela<strong>in</strong>e Randell,'. . . brought newspaper headl<strong>in</strong>es with them and the13—15 year old boys made poems with them. ChristopherLogue, work<strong>in</strong>g with 12—14 year olds at Reigate structuredhis workshops round the theme Immour.' Lol Coxhillwork<strong>in</strong>g with 9—11 year olds at Ely Teachers' Centre,where schools from the surround<strong>in</strong>g rural district hadsent pupils, encouraged the children to look at soundand poetry.' 10Whatever value the visits have <strong>in</strong> themselves can be enhancedby pursu<strong>in</strong>g with the group the ideas and themes which havebeen generated and by us<strong>in</strong>g the enthusiasm which has beenraised.204 Artists Professional teachers, as we have noted, may be accomplishedand teachers artists. Equally, professional artists may be gifted teachers.In talk<strong>in</strong>g of artists and teachers as we have done we do not<strong>in</strong>tend to suggest differences which do not exist betweenthem. We see their roles here as complementary. Nevertheless,they are different because there are different responsibilities<strong>in</strong>volved.Teachers' responsibilities to pupils are long-term and extendover years. Those of visit<strong>in</strong>g artists are short-term — a year atmost, often much less. Teachers have to provide a balancedprogramme of learn<strong>in</strong>g across a wide range of ages andabilities throughout the school. Visit<strong>in</strong>g artists work withfewer groups and often those with special <strong>in</strong>terests <strong>in</strong> theirparticular field of work. Teachers have detailed knowledgeof <strong>in</strong>dividuals and groups <strong>in</strong> the school. Visit<strong>in</strong>g artists knowmuch less about the pupils, even if their specialist knowledgewith<strong>in</strong> the arts exceeds that of the teacher.<strong>The</strong> roles of artists and teachers should therefore be seen<strong>in</strong> conjunction — the one rely<strong>in</strong>g on the other for the overall120


success of the scheme.205 <strong>The</strong> role <strong>The</strong> artist who visits, or is resident <strong>in</strong>, a school, is there as onof the artist artist and not as a supply teacher. His or her role is to stimulate<strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong>, and to provide <strong>in</strong>sights <strong>in</strong>to, the particularareas of work <strong>in</strong> which he or she is expert. <strong>The</strong> ways <strong>in</strong> whichartists enact this role will vary accord<strong>in</strong>g to their own personalitiesand the art <strong>in</strong> question. A visit<strong>in</strong>g musician, conductoror writer may adopt recognisable teacher-roles as <strong>in</strong>structors<strong>in</strong> particular matters of technique or as leaders of discussionand group activity. A potter, sculptor or pa<strong>in</strong>ter may be ofmost value carry<strong>in</strong>g on with his or her own work, accessibleto the pupils, answer<strong>in</strong>g questions, and communicat<strong>in</strong>g bydo<strong>in</strong>g.Some regional arts associations have experimented withresidencies where the technical facilities of a school aremade available to an artist for a particular period of time.In these circumstances,'. . . it is crucial that the visit<strong>in</strong>g artists are not transformed<strong>in</strong>to art teachers: the pupils are seldom, if ever,with professional artists. <strong>The</strong> artist must be given theopportunity to get on with his own work dur<strong>in</strong>g thevisit otherwise he merely becomes another <strong>in</strong>structor . . .<strong>The</strong> success of the project rests on the school recognis<strong>in</strong>gand exploit<strong>in</strong>g the difference between teacher and artist.' 1 '206 A <strong>The</strong> difference is not always recognised and the balance isdelicate difficult to ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>. One writer, look<strong>in</strong>g back over a 'friendly,balance productive and educational year' as a C Day Lewis Fellow <strong>in</strong>a North London Comprehensive, commented on the 'complexrole of the writer <strong>in</strong> the school.' On the one hand,'. . . I didn't want to appear to the boys as just anotherteacher. On the other, it was a hard dist<strong>in</strong>ction to ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>.I asked them to call me by my first name but habitdies hard, and the ubiquitous "Miss" prevailed.'<strong>The</strong> larger problems were created by the staff, however:'Some teachers asked me to set and check homework forboys who were miss<strong>in</strong>g important classwork by com<strong>in</strong>gto me. Others asked me to help the boys prepare CSEfolders. I was quite happy to do this and <strong>in</strong> a way itwould have seemed absurd if the teachers had not feltable to ask me; but I wonder if part of the po<strong>in</strong>t of hav<strong>in</strong>ga non-teacher on the staff is lost if the non-teacher doesteacherish th<strong>in</strong>gs.' 12 121


207 <strong>The</strong> role <strong>The</strong> rple of the teacher is crucial here, partly because of theof the detailed knowledge he or she has of the pupils and partlyteacher because it is more susta<strong>in</strong>ed. It is to prepare children, throughbackground work, for the visit, and to mediate between theartist and the groups, as necessary, dur<strong>in</strong>g the course of it —help<strong>in</strong>g them to adjust to each other's <strong>in</strong>terests and levelsof atta<strong>in</strong>ment. <strong>The</strong>re are two common difficulties here.First, there may be resentment among the staff at the ideaof 'artists' be<strong>in</strong>g brought <strong>in</strong>to the school <strong>in</strong> the first place.Most schools have understood the purpose of the Artists<strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> scheme, although, for example,'. . . a few teachers have remarked that if they themselvesdid their own work <strong>in</strong> the art room, that ought to amountto the same th<strong>in</strong>g.' 13Second, given the recent emergence of these schemes,some schools and teachers may f<strong>in</strong>d it difficult to know howto make the best use of them and may be forgiven for fall<strong>in</strong>gback on habit and convention. We will come back to thislater.208 Problems Although their aims and patterns of work may be quitefaced by arts different, arts education companies — <strong>The</strong>atre <strong>in</strong> Education,education Dance <strong>in</strong> Education — face as many problems <strong>in</strong> work<strong>in</strong>gcompanies with schools as the Artists <strong>in</strong> Education schemes we havebeen consider<strong>in</strong>g.In secondary schools especially, the congestion of thecurriculum can make it difficult for companies to get <strong>in</strong> atall. Once <strong>in</strong>, schools often fail to use the opportunitiespresented by companies for susta<strong>in</strong>ed work — see<strong>in</strong>g thevisit as a treat for for the children and a break for the teacher.Some companies are also under pressure from the funders tovisit as many schools as possible — sometimes two or three aday — so as to be 'cost-effective.' This can severely limit theactual value of the work by deny<strong>in</strong>g sufficient time forproductive relationships to develop between companies andschools. Consequently, visit<strong>in</strong>g companies can be affected bythe same 'cycle of constra<strong>in</strong>t" which hampers arts teachers <strong>in</strong>the school (see Chapter 4). Equally, of course, companiesthemselves may sometimes misjudge the appropriateness ofmaterial for schools, or the levels of atta<strong>in</strong>ment and <strong>in</strong>terestof groups they are to work with.209 Courses Given these various considerations, we can identify a numberof action: of courses of action to be pursued <strong>in</strong> develop<strong>in</strong>g these imporfourneeds tant relationships between children, teachers and artists.<strong>The</strong>se are related to four areas of need. <strong>The</strong>se are for new122


patterns ofa tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gb liaisone co-operationd evaluation210 <strong>The</strong> <strong>The</strong>se new forms of work make new demands on bothneed for teachers and artists. This suggests the need for appropriatetra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g for those <strong>in</strong>volved.For those who hope to have full-time employment <strong>in</strong> thisarea — as with arts education companies — a susta<strong>in</strong>edcourse of professional tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g will be valuable. Neitherexist<strong>in</strong>g teach<strong>in</strong>g courses nor conventional arts tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gcourses are adequate <strong>in</strong> themselves. We welcome, therefore,the development of the Community <strong>The</strong>atre Course at RoseBruford College with its emphasis on research<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>to andtra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g for these new ventures. As the course cont<strong>in</strong>ues todevelop it may provide valuable patterns for others to follow,<strong>in</strong> other <strong>in</strong>stitutions and <strong>in</strong> other art forms. For those whowill become <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> these schemes <strong>in</strong>termittently — otherartists and teachers — preparatory workshops and shortcourses might be provided by the organisers of the scheme<strong>in</strong> the area. <strong>The</strong>se could provide opportunities to discuss:a the objectives of the schemeb the background experiences and work of those <strong>in</strong>volvede the respective roles of teachers and artistsd the facilities neededSuch courses could do much to create the right blend ofunderstand<strong>in</strong>g and co-operation between schools and visit<strong>in</strong>gartists.211 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> are complex organisations. Each is different fromneed for the next <strong>in</strong> terms of atmosphere and habits and patterns ofliaison work. <strong>The</strong> professional lives of teachers differ considerablyfrom those of artists <strong>in</strong> terms of daily rout<strong>in</strong>es and thenature of their <strong>in</strong>terests and responsibilities. Br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g thesevarious worlds together for productive work demands a flairfor matchmak<strong>in</strong>g, and tact and common-sense <strong>in</strong> organisation.<strong>The</strong> need for sensitive and <strong>in</strong>formed liaison is paramount.At a national level the appo<strong>in</strong>tment of an Education Officerto the <strong>Arts</strong> Council of Great Brita<strong>in</strong> — and the subsequentdevelopment of the Education Unit — has done much tofoster these contacts. At the regional level, the GreaterLondon <strong>Arts</strong> Association has also recognised the need for anEducation Liaison Officer. We consider such appo<strong>in</strong>tments123


to be essential to the future development of this work andhope that other arts associations will recognise the potentialhere.Individual companies have also seen this need. Among thefirst to act on it was the Greenwich Young People's <strong>The</strong>atre<strong>in</strong> their appo<strong>in</strong>tment of a <strong>Schools</strong> Liaison Officer. Sheargues that companies need a liaison officer, operat<strong>in</strong>g witha full knowledge of the company's educational policy,'. . . to <strong>in</strong>itiate putt<strong>in</strong>g theory <strong>in</strong>to practice with teachers,to understand teachers' struggles <strong>in</strong> schools, to fulfil theneed for cont<strong>in</strong>uity of contact, to be available to teacherswhen actor/teachers are rehears<strong>in</strong>g, designers design<strong>in</strong>g etc.It is a role whose priority and responsibility is to formand ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> l<strong>in</strong>ks with teachers, the focal po<strong>in</strong>t of contact,facilitat<strong>in</strong>g access to the process that makes teachersaware of TIE as part of a coherent educational framework,not as a peripheral activity.' (Bennion, 1980, p48)Equally, the role of liaison officers now be<strong>in</strong>g appo<strong>in</strong>ted tothe national subsidised companies goes far beyond address<strong>in</strong>gmarket<strong>in</strong>g policies to schools. <strong>The</strong> task is to project suchcompanies as educational resources and to encourage greaterunderstand<strong>in</strong>g both of their work and work<strong>in</strong>g methods.212 Creat<strong>in</strong>ga problem213 <strong>The</strong>need forco-operationA successful education policy assumes a company's capacityto deal with the extra demand on performances, workshopsand lectures which it is likely to create. Some exist<strong>in</strong>g schemesare mov<strong>in</strong>g forward tentatively both for lack of experienceof the educational world and also for lack of fund<strong>in</strong>g forthe extension of exist<strong>in</strong>g activities. This is one of a numberof reasons for look<strong>in</strong>g for new patterns of co-operationbetween arts organisations and educational bodies.We see a clear need for closer co-operation between regionalarts associations and local education authorities. A number ofregions have already taken this step. In Leicestershire, <strong>in</strong>1974, the County Council agreed that its responsibilities<strong>in</strong> the arts should be delegated to a newly-formed <strong>Arts</strong>Committee of the Education Committee. This has facilitatedcloser l<strong>in</strong>ks between the schools, the District Council and theRegional <strong>Arts</strong> Association. It has also led to a number of thosefrom the professional arts jo<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g the <strong>Arts</strong> Committee asHonorary Advisers to work with elected members.<strong>The</strong> L<strong>in</strong>colnshire and Humberside <strong>Arts</strong> Association hasformed an Education Liaison Committee which drawstogether representatives from each local education authority<strong>in</strong> the region to discuss educational policies and fund<strong>in</strong>g with124


the Association. This k<strong>in</strong>d of co-operation has great advantagesboth <strong>in</strong> long-term plann<strong>in</strong>g and <strong>in</strong> enabl<strong>in</strong>g quick responcesto immediate issues. It can also facilitate discussionson the dual fund<strong>in</strong>g by arts associations and local authoritiesof projects or events where their <strong>in</strong>terests overlap. In the viewof the <strong>Arts</strong> Council's Senior Education Officer:'When the professional arts are <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> education, adual f<strong>in</strong>ancial responsibility is ... the pre-requisite formature partnership and the evolution of schemes andprojects which satisfy both of the partners.' (MacDonald,1980,p38)Such fund<strong>in</strong>g is not always, nor necessarily, lavish. A localadviser tells of a residential weekend dance course for sixthformers. <strong>The</strong> authority provided the centre and the teach<strong>in</strong>gstaff but were unable to sponsor a performance by a professionaldance company which the adviser hoped to <strong>in</strong>clude<strong>in</strong> the weekend's programme. In this case a small grant by theregional arts association to support this professional performancewould have had great benefits for those <strong>in</strong>volved.Often, however, arts associations seem reluctant to sponsors<strong>in</strong>gle events of this type, despite their rewards. Support<strong>in</strong>gthe appo<strong>in</strong>tment of arts/education liaison officers to regionalarts associations is one further, and specific way <strong>in</strong> which thispr<strong>in</strong>ciple of co-operation, <strong>in</strong> policy and fund<strong>in</strong>g, might beput directly <strong>in</strong>to practice.214 <strong>The</strong> We have discussed the potential benefits and some of theneed for problems <strong>in</strong> these schemes. We endorse their value, <strong>in</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>evaluationciple and consider them to be of great importance with<strong>in</strong>the general terms of our arguments for the arts <strong>in</strong> education.<strong>The</strong>ir success is not automatic, however. <strong>The</strong>re is a need nowfor effective and susta<strong>in</strong>ed evaluation. In Chapter 6 wediscussed the need to evaluate the arts <strong>in</strong> schools <strong>in</strong> wayswhich were compatible with the experiences <strong>in</strong> question.Equally, methods of evaluation applied to these schemesmust reflect the nature of the processes <strong>in</strong>volved. <strong>The</strong> aimmust be to clarify what these visits and residencies actuallyachieve for all <strong>in</strong>volved — children, teachers and artists. Thismust take account of the diversity of <strong>in</strong>terests and responsesand of differences of expectation and of value. <strong>The</strong> qualityof the work — rather than the numbers tak<strong>in</strong>g part — is thecentral criterion here, and the improvement of the work thema<strong>in</strong> po<strong>in</strong>t.Some attempts at evaluation are now be<strong>in</strong>g made. <strong>The</strong>Greater London <strong>Arts</strong> Association has convened a regularwork<strong>in</strong>g group to consider aspects of the Music <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong>125


scheme. <strong>The</strong> Charlotte Mason College of Education is conduct<strong>in</strong>ga four year study of the work of the Brewery <strong>Arts</strong>Centre <strong>in</strong> Kendal. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> Council has commissioned anevaluation report of the Dance Artists <strong>in</strong> Education. Anevaluation of Writers <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> is scheduled for the f<strong>in</strong>ancialyear 1982—83. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> Council is also about to publish anevaluation of the educational activities of <strong>The</strong> ContemporaryMusic Network and is <strong>in</strong> the process of appo<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g a researcherfor the Photographers <strong>in</strong> Education projects. <strong>The</strong><strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> has also sponsored reports on theresidencies it has supported. 14 <strong>The</strong> value of these studies willbe <strong>in</strong> improv<strong>in</strong>g the quality of these schemes, just as the valueof these schemes is <strong>in</strong> improv<strong>in</strong>g the quality of education.215 A general <strong>Schools</strong> are often closed societies. Outside the family, teacherspr<strong>in</strong>ciple are the only adults with whom many children have any susta<strong>in</strong>edpersonal contact. Beh<strong>in</strong>d these schemes we see abroader educational pr<strong>in</strong>ciple — that of open<strong>in</strong>g the schoolitself to new <strong>in</strong>fluences and of see<strong>in</strong>g education <strong>in</strong> a muchwider sett<strong>in</strong>g than schools alone. Moreover, these <strong>in</strong>itiativesnot only pose challenges to accepted roles and patterns ofwork <strong>in</strong> education, they also pose alternatives to acceptedideas about the roles of artists by br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g their work to thewide congregation of <strong>in</strong>terests, attitudes and beliefs whichany school represents. <strong>The</strong>y are key ways of dissolv<strong>in</strong>g thebarriers which so often exist between the school and thecommunity and between children and the adult world. It isto these broader roles of the arts that we turn <strong>in</strong> the f<strong>in</strong>alchapter.216 Summary In this chapter we have considered the new forms of contactwhich are develop<strong>in</strong>g between children, teachers and artists.We have outl<strong>in</strong>ed the range of these schemes and consideredboth their benefits and difficulties <strong>in</strong> practice. We have comparedthe roles of teachers and artists and identified fourareas where action is needed to promote the developmentand improvement of these significant <strong>in</strong>itiatives. We have concludedby relat<strong>in</strong>g theses schemes to a view of educationwhich extends beyond the school.126


9 Beyond the school217 Reasonsfor thechapter218 KeythemesIn this chapter we want to relate our arguments to a viewof education which extends beyond the school; to the generaland associated ideas of community education and of cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>geducation. We believe that these have particular significancefor the future. It is beyond the scope of this report todeal with these complicated and develop<strong>in</strong>g areas <strong>in</strong> greatdetail. <strong>The</strong>y are the subject of other documents; we will referto these as we go on. Nevertheless, there are some importantgeneral po<strong>in</strong>ts here which we want to make.Three themes have run through this report:a education is a moral and a cultural undertak<strong>in</strong>g andmust respond to social changeb all teach<strong>in</strong>g, from plann<strong>in</strong>g to evaluation, must takeaccount of the lives that children and young peopleactually leade the arts are not peripheral to education, they arefundamental ways of understand<strong>in</strong>g and enrich<strong>in</strong>gexperience which all children can and should learnto use and enjoyIn develop<strong>in</strong>g these themes we have been question<strong>in</strong>g threeprevalent assumptions about education:a true education is essentially academicb education is merely a preparation for someth<strong>in</strong>g thathappens later one education should therefore become ever more specialisedWe can now add two further assumptions to these whichwe also question:127


d education is someth<strong>in</strong>g that only happens to childrene this is best done beh<strong>in</strong>d closed doors — or gatesEducation must enable children to make sense of and act<strong>in</strong> the world which they are liv<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> now. This is a lifelongprocess which only beg<strong>in</strong>s at school. This suggests a broaderrole for schools than is commonly given to them at present.Just as our arguments lead us to question the rigid demarcationsof conventional curricula <strong>in</strong>to separate specialisms,so they suggest a need to dissolve the barriers between theschool itself and the community which surrounds it. In someschools throughout the country there are attempts to do justthis. We have described aspects of one of them <strong>in</strong> the Appendix.This is not <strong>in</strong>tended as a model. Different schools mustand will devise different approaches accord<strong>in</strong>g to their differentcircumstances. <strong>The</strong> example illustrates how one schoolhas evolved an approach.219 Practical <strong>The</strong> idea and practice of community education is not new.difficulties A number of schools and colleges are pursu<strong>in</strong>g such pr<strong>in</strong>ciplesthroughout the country, notably <strong>in</strong> Cambridgeshire and Leicestershire.1 <strong>The</strong>re are considerable variations <strong>in</strong> the ways <strong>in</strong>which these are organised, funded and adm<strong>in</strong>istered. <strong>The</strong>reare also considerable difficulties <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> putt<strong>in</strong>g the pr<strong>in</strong>ciplesof community education <strong>in</strong>to practice, specifically theprevail<strong>in</strong>g attitudes with<strong>in</strong> the community itself to educationand to educators. Attempts to change the style of exist<strong>in</strong>gprovision may <strong>in</strong>deed be actively resisted. <strong>The</strong> school wedescribe <strong>in</strong> the Appendix occupies the premises of a formerall-girls school with an established reputation <strong>in</strong> the areafor high academic standards. <strong>The</strong> changeover to comprehensiveand community pr<strong>in</strong>ciples met with some firm resistancefrom the first and this put an onus on the school to conv<strong>in</strong>ceparents and employers locally, through demonstration, thatacademic standards could be ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed and improved underthe new system.<strong>The</strong> size of the school and the sit<strong>in</strong>g of the campus itselfalso has a bear<strong>in</strong>g on the extent to which local people arelikely to make use of it. This school is fortunate <strong>in</strong> thisrespect <strong>in</strong> be<strong>in</strong>g centrally placed <strong>in</strong> the town and <strong>in</strong> occupy<strong>in</strong>gwell-established and familiar build<strong>in</strong>gs. Structures ofgovernment also vary and necessarily so. In all cases, however,the attitudes and patterns of relationships among those <strong>in</strong>volved<strong>in</strong> organisational matters is the key factor <strong>in</strong> determ<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gthe success or otherwise of such ventures. Co-operationand co-ord<strong>in</strong>ation are central pr<strong>in</strong>ciples. For all of thesereasons we do not seek to idealise the practice of communityschools nor to put a gloss on the work<strong>in</strong>gs of this one. 2 We128


want to draw attention to some of the fundamental motiveswhich <strong>in</strong>form this movement and to endorse their value <strong>in</strong>pr<strong>in</strong>ciple with<strong>in</strong> the terms of this report.220 Potential First, we have emphasised that education must take accountbenefits of the diversity and complexity of children's <strong>in</strong>terests and experiencesas members of vary<strong>in</strong>g cultural groups. This schooland others seek to do this directly by dissolv<strong>in</strong>g the <strong>in</strong>stitutionalbarriers of education and by open<strong>in</strong>g the school as ageneral resource for local people, <strong>The</strong> emphasis here is on<strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g both the quantity and the quality of opportunitiesfor learn<strong>in</strong>g and development.Second, there is a recognition of the important relationshipswhich must be fostered between children and the adultworld. Adults not only use the facilities of the school dur<strong>in</strong>gthe day, they also participate <strong>in</strong> some of the same lessonswith pupils on GCE courses. Staff at the school have commentedon the positive benefits this has had on the attitudesof the pupils themselves to the work by giv<strong>in</strong>g it a differentstatus for them.Third, the need for, and the value of, co-operation andco-ord<strong>in</strong>ation is illustrated <strong>in</strong> two ways:a between groups and organisations <strong>in</strong> jo<strong>in</strong>t ventures ofcommon <strong>in</strong>terest as with the l<strong>in</strong>ks between the schooland the local arts associationb <strong>in</strong> promot<strong>in</strong>g the multi-purpose use of expensive plantand equipment. This school is used day and even<strong>in</strong>g anddur<strong>in</strong>g weekends and holidays. This has benefits on allsides: the community education programme is fundedby it and local groups have space and facilities for theirown workFourth, the benefits <strong>in</strong> these undertak<strong>in</strong>gs are mutual. <strong>The</strong>local community is help<strong>in</strong>g to broaden and enliven the workof the school, whilst the community itself is, potentially,be<strong>in</strong>g enriched by the new opportunities which are madeavailable both materially and educationally. It is here aboveall, <strong>in</strong> the reciprocation of benefits and opportunities, thatthe real value of community-based education lies. <strong>Arts</strong>activities and events can play a key part <strong>in</strong> this process ofexchange and development through br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g together youngand old, men and women from all sections of the communityfor productions of plays, and concerts; <strong>in</strong> mount<strong>in</strong>g exhibitionsof pictures, sculpture and pottery; for dances, read<strong>in</strong>gs and soon. In these ways a community can enrich its environmentand social existence and add to its sense of identity and purpose.Such provision need not entail significant extra expend-129


iture. It does require a different attitude to the use of exist<strong>in</strong>gresources to meet the demand of further educational opportunitybeyond the period of compulsory education. Thisbr<strong>in</strong>gs us to our second area of discussion: cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g education.221 What is We have commented on the limitations of see<strong>in</strong>g educationcont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g simply as a preparation for work and on the restrictions thiseducation? can <strong>in</strong>flict on the curriculum. <strong>The</strong> corollary is that educationis someth<strong>in</strong>g which happens only to children and to youngpeople. A recent discussion paper on cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g educationcalls this the 'front-load<strong>in</strong>g' model of education, <strong>in</strong> which:'as much education as possible is taken on board at thebeg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g of life. <strong>The</strong> student is thus issued with all thenecessary educational supplies to cope with another 50or so years of adulthood.' (ACACE, 1979,plO)This preparation idea limits not only the breadth butalso the length of education. 3Those who do go on to some form of education or tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>ggenerally do so to get qualifications for more highly paid,more highly regarded jobs. <strong>The</strong> vocational emphasis, therefore,is very much stronger beyond compulsory educationthan dur<strong>in</strong>g it. In discuss<strong>in</strong>g cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g education we have <strong>in</strong>m<strong>in</strong>d more than vocational courses and more, therefore, thanis generally understood by further or higher education.Cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g education <strong>in</strong>cludes these and it embraces adulteducation; but it is <strong>in</strong>tended to suggest a broader pr<strong>in</strong>ciple —that of provid<strong>in</strong>g educational opportunities for whoeverwants them, when they want them, irrespective of age oremployment. As employment patterns cont<strong>in</strong>ue to changeand, with them, the balance between work and non-workbetween the employed and the unemployed, the notion ofcont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g education will become <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly significant.222 <strong>The</strong> range <strong>The</strong> range of current provision is large but uncoord<strong>in</strong>ated.of cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g If we consider the immediate divisions among those mov<strong>in</strong>geducation on to full-time education at 16+, there are those who are:130a hop<strong>in</strong>g to complete at least a two year course and thengo on to further or higher educationb hop<strong>in</strong>g to complete at least a two year course and thenget a job, perhaps <strong>in</strong>volv<strong>in</strong>g some part-time furthereducation/tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>ge hop<strong>in</strong>g to study for one year and then get a job perhapscomb<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g this with further education/tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g


d undecided about their future but look<strong>in</strong>g for a oneyear extension of their full-time educatione return<strong>in</strong>g to full-time education because they have beenunable to f<strong>in</strong>d work<strong>The</strong>re is, <strong>in</strong> addition, a wide range of part-time options.Part-time students are usually engaged <strong>in</strong> craft, technical orbus<strong>in</strong>ess courses often with ascribed day-release; on sandwichcourses; <strong>in</strong> jobs with short periods of structures tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g; retra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gon a voluntary basis or on a course of general <strong>in</strong>terest. 4Cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g education thus <strong>in</strong>cludes study <strong>in</strong> 6th forms, universities,colleges, polytechnics, specialist centres and <strong>in</strong>stitutions,even<strong>in</strong>g classes and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g at work.223 <strong>The</strong> <strong>The</strong> vocational emphasis, particularly <strong>in</strong> further and higherproblems of education, means that opportunities for the arts are generallyreform poor. Nevertheless, there is a grow<strong>in</strong>g awareness of the needto br<strong>in</strong>g some coherence to the pr<strong>in</strong>ciples and pattern ofwhat is now a haphazard and confus<strong>in</strong>g variety of options.<strong>The</strong> task is a complicated one. Reform is far from easy andwill depend <strong>in</strong> the first place probably on lessons fromexperiences at local education authority level. To beg<strong>in</strong> with,non-advanced further education is hard to def<strong>in</strong>e. Overlapp<strong>in</strong>gwith school education, <strong>in</strong>dustrial tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g and the privatesector, there is no generally accepted theory of further education<strong>in</strong> the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom and no curriculum philsophyfor the many different k<strong>in</strong>ds of student attend<strong>in</strong>g for differentperiods at different times. Ma<strong>in</strong> courses are also dom<strong>in</strong>atedby different national exam<strong>in</strong>ation bodies. Yet further educationnowadays provides not only a second chance for somebut often a first chance for many more.224 A national Vie hold that there should be educational provision equallycommitment for the non-work as well as the work areas of life from thenursery to old-age. <strong>The</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>ciple of cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g educationthus sets vocational courses with<strong>in</strong> a broader framework ofeducation opportunity and sees such opportunities as a lifelongright. Brita<strong>in</strong> accepted this pr<strong>in</strong>ciple at a conference ofEuropean m<strong>in</strong>isters of education at Stockholm <strong>in</strong> 1975. Thiscommitment together with the recommendations of theRussell Report on adult education (DBS 1973) led to theofficial establishment <strong>in</strong> 1977 of the Advisory Council forAdult and Cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g Education. 5In March 1979, the Advisory Council published a discussiondocument on cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g education <strong>in</strong> which they recommendeda re-appraisal of the traditional terms of cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>geducation. <strong>The</strong>ir suggestions are helpful <strong>in</strong> consider<strong>in</strong>g theplaces of the arts here.131


225 Initial Initial and post-<strong>in</strong>itial education are proposed as alternativesand to current divisions such as compulsory and post-compulsorypost-<strong>in</strong>itial education. <strong>The</strong> period of <strong>in</strong>itial education would <strong>in</strong>clude theeducation time of compulsory education but would also embrace anyfurther education which immediately followed, such as 6thform or university. Post-<strong>in</strong>itial education would <strong>in</strong>clude anyeducational courses undertaken later <strong>in</strong> life after an oftensubstantial break from the <strong>in</strong>itial period. <strong>The</strong> AdvisoryCouncil estimates that there are 2,000,000 adults <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong>some form of post-<strong>in</strong>itial education at any one time — aboutone <strong>in</strong> twenty of the adult population. <strong>The</strong>y emphasise theneed for co-ord<strong>in</strong>ation and cont<strong>in</strong>uity of provision <strong>in</strong> the<strong>in</strong>itial stage of education as well as underl<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g the differentchallenges and problems <strong>in</strong> provid<strong>in</strong>g courses for those whoreturn to education at a later stage often for quite specificpurposes. <strong>The</strong> need for cont<strong>in</strong>uity <strong>in</strong> arts provision is importantthroughout the <strong>in</strong>itial stage. It makes little sense togenerate <strong>in</strong>terest and <strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong> the practice of the artsamong young people if opportunities for them to carry onwith and develop those <strong>in</strong>terests are arbitrarily cut short atthe end of compulsory education.This k<strong>in</strong>d of provision is now essential <strong>in</strong> provid<strong>in</strong>g a vitalsecond chance, <strong>in</strong> help<strong>in</strong>g to develop new skills needed byrapidly chang<strong>in</strong>g technology, and <strong>in</strong> enrich<strong>in</strong>g personal <strong>in</strong>terestsfor new work/non-work lifestyles.226 Higher Although provision <strong>in</strong> higher education lies outside oureducation brief, any consideration of the arts <strong>in</strong> schools should takeaccount of the opportunities which exist for further workat a tertiary level. In some <strong>in</strong>stitutions the <strong>in</strong>troduction ofcomb<strong>in</strong>ed arts, or performance arts degrees with options <strong>in</strong>music, drama, film and f<strong>in</strong>e art — usually under the guidanceof the Council for National Academic Awards — has outdistancedprovision made at secondary level.We hope that the <strong>in</strong>troduction of such degrees may <strong>in</strong>creasepressure to extend the place of the arts <strong>in</strong> the secondarycurriculum so that students may take advantage of the newopportunities at tertiary level. On the other hand it is stillmostly the case that university and ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed <strong>in</strong>stitutionsof higher education are lamentably short of provision for thestudy and practice of the arts, especially the universities,except <strong>in</strong> a very traditional sense. <strong>The</strong>refore we welcome the<strong>in</strong>clusion of the arts as part of the remit of the LeverhulmeTrust.227 General <strong>The</strong> effect of the usual dist<strong>in</strong>ction between vocational andand non-vocational courses is to downgrade 'such valuable andvocational important ventures as the adult literacy scheme, tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g forcourses trade union activities and a whole range of provision <strong>in</strong> the132


humanities and the arts' (ACACE 1979). <strong>The</strong> Advisory Councilsuggests <strong>in</strong>stead that the term Vocational' be applied tocourses with a specific occupational purpose and 'general' tothose which have wider purposes. A general course:'. .. may provide a basic ground<strong>in</strong>g for a career or helpillum<strong>in</strong>ate a student's job; but it may also develop creativeactivities or be studied simply for its own sake, as <strong>in</strong>tellectualstimulation or enlightenment or to enable people tomake a more effective contribution to society.' (ACACE,1979,p8)<strong>The</strong>re are particular issues to be considered <strong>in</strong> the provisionfor vocational tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the arts as professions. We will turnbriefly to these later. We want to say at once that we see aplace for arts activities not only <strong>in</strong> general courses <strong>in</strong> both the<strong>in</strong>itial and post-<strong>in</strong>itial stages, but also with<strong>in</strong> vocationalcourses for occupations other than <strong>in</strong> the arts.228 <strong>The</strong> arts It is becom<strong>in</strong>g the practice, even with<strong>in</strong> highly specialised<strong>in</strong> vocational courses, to offer options for students outside the pressure ofcourses the exam<strong>in</strong>ed syllabus. In the technical and bus<strong>in</strong>ess doma<strong>in</strong>sof further education, the courses of the Technician EducationCouncil (TEC) or the Bus<strong>in</strong>ess Education Council (EEC) andthose of the City and Guilds are becom<strong>in</strong>g well-established asthe basic qualifications <strong>in</strong> their field. <strong>The</strong>se conta<strong>in</strong> a built-<strong>in</strong>requirement for 10% time for optional courses. <strong>The</strong>se mayrange from jewellery-mak<strong>in</strong>g to c<strong>in</strong>ema and television studiesas well as across the humanities and physical education. Wehope to see the development of the arts with<strong>in</strong> this frameworkalthough this would undoubtedly test the resources ofmany of the colleges runn<strong>in</strong>g TEC and EEC courses, lack<strong>in</strong>gas they often do a strong or well-developed arts department.This suggests the need for patterns of co-ord<strong>in</strong>ation and cooperation<strong>in</strong> arts activities between colleges if there is to beadequate coverage with<strong>in</strong> the present framework of economiesand on the basis of exist<strong>in</strong>g, as proposed to ideal, provision.It is particularly important to safeguard opportunities formore personal work with<strong>in</strong> the structure of vocationalcourses be<strong>in</strong>g, as they generally are, non-exam<strong>in</strong>able componentsof the course — as <strong>in</strong> TEC and EEC — and moregenerally at risk from enforced economies.229 General A number of European countries — <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g West Germany,courses France, Sweden and Belgium — have legislated to providepaid educational leave for members of the work<strong>in</strong>g population.This has opened up educational opportunities for theworkforce <strong>in</strong> excess of those <strong>in</strong> the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom. In West133


Germany 18% of the workforce has benefited from paid educationalleave. This forms part of the response to the deepseatedand long-term causes of unemployment and the needto re-organise and re-educate to meet the demands and theeffects of a chang<strong>in</strong>g economy. Direct comparison betweenalternative economic and <strong>in</strong>dustrial systems is always difficultof course and can be mislead<strong>in</strong>g. <strong>The</strong> emphasis <strong>in</strong> WestGermany, for example, is on <strong>in</strong>dustrial and technical courses.Nevertheless our own general need is no less great. <strong>The</strong>re willbe those who will want to tra<strong>in</strong> for a professional life <strong>in</strong> thearts and others who will want to extend their experience ofthe arts purely for their own <strong>in</strong>terest and understand<strong>in</strong>g. Adequateprovision must be made to meet these <strong>in</strong>terests anddemands <strong>in</strong> the evolv<strong>in</strong>g pattern of general courses. It is particularlyregrettable that, <strong>in</strong> the historical development ofexist<strong>in</strong>g provision, vocational and general <strong>in</strong>terests shouldhave become opposed <strong>in</strong> the demand for resources.230 Adult It is <strong>in</strong>comprehensible <strong>in</strong> view of the long-term need foreducation cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g education <strong>in</strong> both the vocational and the generalsectors, that adult education <strong>in</strong> particular should have beenso under-funded <strong>in</strong> the past and so affected by economies <strong>in</strong>the present. About 40% of the adult population is likely totake part <strong>in</strong> adult education courses at some time or another.Such courses are by no means all vocational and cover a widerange of general <strong>in</strong>terests. <strong>The</strong> place of the arts <strong>in</strong> this is wellestablished.This does not mean that it is always well providedfor. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> Council of Great Brita<strong>in</strong> have undertaken adetailed study of this area and a report is now available. 6This gives evidence of the massive demand among adults forgeneral educational courses and of the high demand with<strong>in</strong>this for work <strong>in</strong> the arts and crafts. <strong>The</strong> scale of this <strong>in</strong>volvement<strong>in</strong>dicates an enormous, self-identified need among theadult population for the arts and their related activities.It is worth remember<strong>in</strong>g that the 1944 Education Actplaces a statutory responsibility upon local educationauthorities to provide cultural and recreational opportunitiesfor adults although it does not specify how this should bedone or what forms it should take. Partly as a result of thisthe pattern of provision is now complex and diverse. Inaddition to local authority <strong>in</strong>stitutes of adult education,there are residential colleges, university extra-mural departmentsand the widespread activities of the WorkersEducational Association with over 1,000 branches of affiliatedgroups. Residential colleges play a significant role with<strong>in</strong> thisgeneral pattern. 7<strong>The</strong>re seems to be <strong>in</strong> each of these areas a strong will<strong>in</strong>gnessto promote l<strong>in</strong>ks with the professional arts. In the case134


of local authority <strong>in</strong>stitutes, three ma<strong>in</strong> advantages are identified:a to improve the quality of coursesb to enrich the cultural climate of the <strong>in</strong>stitutes and collegese to help the centres reach groups <strong>in</strong> the community<strong>The</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>cipal problems lie <strong>in</strong> the need for co-ord<strong>in</strong>ationand liaison with fund<strong>in</strong>g bodies. <strong>The</strong> survey suggests forexample that some <strong>in</strong>stitutions have never come acrosstheir regional arts association and that others 'have onlythe cloudiest notion of what it does'.<strong>The</strong>re is a clear opportunity here for RAAs to relate theiractivities to these exist<strong>in</strong>g structures of provision if only, as afirst step, by mak<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>formation more available to suchgroups about the services and resources they can provide. Acommon barrier to this is the dist<strong>in</strong>ction between professionaland amateur arts. <strong>The</strong>re is a case for relax<strong>in</strong>g the rigidities ofthis dist<strong>in</strong>ction <strong>in</strong> the area of adult education where, <strong>in</strong> termsof quality of work and levels of <strong>in</strong>volvement, it is becom<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>gly difficult to susta<strong>in</strong>.231 Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g What of those who wish to pursue a career <strong>in</strong> the arts? <strong>The</strong>for the arts requirements for candidates and the provision now availablevary considerably between the various arts. <strong>The</strong>se have been,or are now, the subject of detailed <strong>in</strong>dividual reports by the<strong>Gulbenkian</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> and others. <strong>The</strong> general picturewhich is emerg<strong>in</strong>g is of long-stand<strong>in</strong>g diversity and lack ofdirection slowly be<strong>in</strong>g brought <strong>in</strong>to focus. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong>report on Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g Musicians (1978) <strong>in</strong>dicated that it is thepattern of higher education and the subsequent careerstructure for musicians which is <strong>in</strong> most urgent need ofattention rather than exist<strong>in</strong>g exam<strong>in</strong>ation structures (thoughthey leave someth<strong>in</strong>g to be desired) or the need to encourageand develop the talents of young musicians — which is atleast understood and supported if not always acted on. <strong>The</strong><strong>Gulbenkian</strong> study of Dance Education and Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> Brita<strong>in</strong>(1980) shows a different picture. Here the need to developyoung talent and encourage late-starters is still very little appreciated.It is only now that a unified system of exam<strong>in</strong>ationsis beg<strong>in</strong>n<strong>in</strong>g to develop. Go<strong>in</strong>g on the Stage (1975) wascritical of the uneven standards of drama tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g and thedivision between contemporary practice <strong>in</strong> the theatre andthe forms of tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g often be<strong>in</strong>g provided by the colleges.<strong>The</strong> visual arts too are be<strong>in</strong>g considered <strong>in</strong> a <strong>Gulbenkian</strong>report, Inquiry <strong>in</strong>to the Economic Situation of the VisualArtist, part of which will be exam<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g the varied tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g135


outes for the visual arts. In particular, there are the significantdivisions of op<strong>in</strong>ion over the relative merits of design educationand f<strong>in</strong>e art tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, part of a far flung debate <strong>in</strong> theart world and one to which present structures of exam<strong>in</strong>ationshave hardly yet been related. With<strong>in</strong> the terms of this reportwe want to comment on some general po<strong>in</strong>ts of provision.232 Gett<strong>in</strong>g It is not with<strong>in</strong> the capacity of all schools or colleges tostarted provide the k<strong>in</strong>d of specialised help which would be neededfor those hop<strong>in</strong>g for careers <strong>in</strong> the arts. Nevertheless we dosee it as part of the responsibility of the ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed educationsystem to ensure that opportunities for tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>the arts are available along with other vocational courses:we also see the need for grants and awards to become statutoryrather than discretionary as they often are now. Despitethe numerous schemes which have been <strong>in</strong>troduced <strong>in</strong> recentyears to try and dissipate the effects of long-term unemployment,especially among the young, careers <strong>in</strong> the arts havefailed to be given either support or, it seems, creditability.<strong>The</strong> last Labour Government's paper outl<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g its plans forvocational preparation for young people entitled A BetterStart <strong>in</strong> Work<strong>in</strong>g Life listed the aims of vocational preparationas:136'a to equip young people with certa<strong>in</strong> basic skills andknowledgeb to enhance their understand<strong>in</strong>g of the work<strong>in</strong>g environmente to motivate them and to develop their potential andextend their basic job skills and knowledged to help them assess their potential and to th<strong>in</strong>k realisticallyabout jobs and future prospects' (DBS and DE,1979)<strong>The</strong> paper goes on to comment that: 'In general, schoolsshould not be expected to provide specific vocational tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gfor the needs of particular occupations . . . What schoolscan be expected to supply is a foundation for vocationalpreparations.' Certa<strong>in</strong>ly there is much to agree with here.But nowhere <strong>in</strong> the proposals is there any mention of thearts. Instead, the paper goes on,' 'the ma<strong>in</strong> contribution (ofthe schools) to future vocational needs lies <strong>in</strong> the teach<strong>in</strong>g oflanguage and mathematical, scientific and technical skillsand knowledge .. . the attitudes of enquiry and respect forthe views of others which all good teach<strong>in</strong>g aims to encourageare also relevant and so too is an understand<strong>in</strong>g of the economicand social contexts of work<strong>in</strong>g life.' <strong>The</strong>se po<strong>in</strong>ts areendorsed <strong>in</strong> the present government's review of Education


for 16—19 year olds (DBS, 1980). We believe that the listedaims apply equally to the arts as to other prospective careersand that it should now be part of the policy and practice ofall such schemes to make adequate provision for this. Inparticular we would hope that the Manpower Services Commission,the Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g Services Agency and their relatedschemes would beg<strong>in</strong> to broaden their def<strong>in</strong>ition of tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gto <strong>in</strong>clude provision for careers <strong>in</strong> the arts.233 New Certa<strong>in</strong> sections of our society are under particular difficultiesopportunities <strong>in</strong> tak<strong>in</strong>g up careers <strong>in</strong> the arts and we would welcome widerrecognition of this. In the perform<strong>in</strong>g arts, especially musicand dance, a good deal of preparatory work is needed, anda certa<strong>in</strong> level of technical competence assumed beforebe<strong>in</strong>g accepted on vocational courses. Because schoolscannot be generally expected to provide specialist preparation,would-be professionals are usually obliged to seek privatetuition. This can be costly and often beyond the reach ofthose <strong>in</strong> the lower economic groups. <strong>The</strong> result is an economicfilter on entry <strong>in</strong>to the professional arts. Many otheryoung people discount a career <strong>in</strong> the arts for other reasons.This is not necessarily because of lack of ability. NaseemKhan <strong>in</strong> <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> Brita<strong>in</strong> Ignores (1976) comments on thevocational expectations of those from different economicand social groups:'West Indians . .. have the problems engendered by lowsocial status. Countless reports have shown them at thebottom of the ladder — <strong>in</strong> employment, education, hous<strong>in</strong>g.English community arts has received its impetus from theyoung middle-classes who not only have the confidence tomanipulate structures and use facilities but can also settheir faces aga<strong>in</strong>st materialistic success.' (Khan, 1976)She sees two areas <strong>in</strong> need of encouragement: the creationof more opportunities at a work<strong>in</strong>g level, and the emergenceof artists and groups from ethnic m<strong>in</strong>orities <strong>in</strong> the top rankof the professional arts. For this to happen both the socialand economic obstacles <strong>in</strong> the way of young, potential performershave to be reduced.234 <strong>The</strong> A different approach to identify<strong>in</strong>g and develop<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>dividualWeekend abilities is that of Inter-Action's Weekend <strong>Arts</strong> College<strong>Arts</strong>(WAC) <strong>in</strong>itiated by two local dance and drama teachers atCollege the Inter-Action Centre <strong>in</strong> Kentish Town, London. <strong>The</strong>scheme developed from a request from a teacher for help<strong>in</strong> provid<strong>in</strong>g tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g for a talented young dancer. This hasled to a range of courses <strong>in</strong> the perform<strong>in</strong>g arts be<strong>in</strong>g held137


at the centre on a regular basis. <strong>The</strong> classes are taken byprofessional teachers and the aim is to provide for youngpeople of 14+ who might want to pursue a professionalcareer <strong>in</strong> the arts or <strong>in</strong> teach<strong>in</strong>g and to give them a firmbackground of techniques and confidence to prepare themfor this. <strong>The</strong> courses are aimed specifically at young peoplewho have not had sufficient opportunities to develop theirabilities to the necessary standards and who cannot affordpersonal tuition elsewhere. <strong>The</strong> classes cost 65p per session<strong>in</strong> 1981. Scholarships are available through a special fundfor those <strong>in</strong> particular f<strong>in</strong>ancial need. Students must berecommended by a teacher and show a serious <strong>in</strong>tention topursue the course regularly. Once accepted they follow aprofessional regime of work. One important effect of thisis to test the strength of their own ambitions and commitment<strong>in</strong> this work. Classes are divided <strong>in</strong>to Beg<strong>in</strong>ners, Intermediateand Advanced groups and the College now works atits present capacity of 100 students on Sunday. <strong>The</strong>re arealso classes for younger children from 3—13 on Saturdays.As the scheme has progressed there have been two majordevelopments. First, some of the students have now become<strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> runn<strong>in</strong>g classes with the younger age groups andbeg<strong>in</strong>ners, pass<strong>in</strong>g on the skills which they have acquired atthe College. Second, the senior students have now formed aperformance group, Fusion: <strong>The</strong> London and CommonwealthYouth Ensemble, tak<strong>in</strong>g its own work <strong>in</strong> drama, dance andmusic to community groups, youth centres and other venues.235 Harness<strong>in</strong>gresources138Such schemes emphasise the value of harness<strong>in</strong>g all availableexist<strong>in</strong>g resources to help make the new provision we urge.<strong>The</strong>re are five areas of resource available, besides that offurther education. <strong>The</strong>y are: professional arts groups and<strong>in</strong>dividual artists; the youth service; voluntary arts agencies;specialist youth <strong>in</strong>formation agencies; broadcast<strong>in</strong>g. Professionalarts support can be arranged direct with <strong>in</strong>dividualartists or companies, as described <strong>in</strong> Chapter 7; throughregional arts associations; and through education schemesbe<strong>in</strong>g developed by many arts bodies such as the RoyalOpera House and Whitechapel Art Gallery. Voluntary artsresources range from semi-official bodies like the RoyalSociety of <strong>Arts</strong> to many different k<strong>in</strong>ds of communityarts group <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g pr<strong>in</strong>tshops, theatre groups, and artscentres. Youth <strong>in</strong>formation agencies <strong>in</strong>clude the NationalYouth Bureau and British Youth Council, both governmentfunded, and the privately sponsored Youthaid. <strong>The</strong> importantpossibilities of broadcast<strong>in</strong>g, with its ability to reach youngpeople directly, are be<strong>in</strong>g developed by the ma<strong>in</strong> broadcast<strong>in</strong>gservices and by special young adult media appo<strong>in</strong>tments


at the National Extension College and on Merseyside. Allthese provide resources which can be drawn upon and coord<strong>in</strong>atedeither by <strong>in</strong>dividual organisations or by localauthorities.We would like to re<strong>in</strong>force the need to provide whateverfunds may be possible to encourage companies, societiesand <strong>in</strong>dividuals to do more. Given the enthusiasm and will<strong>in</strong>gnessnow be<strong>in</strong>g shown, the <strong>in</strong>dications are that a comparativelymodest <strong>in</strong>vestment from local education authorities, the<strong>Arts</strong> Council or other relevant groups could be enormouslyrewarded. For the vocational courses we have mentionedthere is the further benefit of a rich <strong>in</strong>put of technicalexpertise. Given the will<strong>in</strong>gness of the companies, it is forthe colleges themselves to look for ways of <strong>in</strong>tegrat<strong>in</strong>g with,and build<strong>in</strong>g upon, what they have to offer. It is importantthat the potential for such liaison should <strong>in</strong>form the comb<strong>in</strong>gthrough of policies <strong>in</strong> both the vocational and general sectorsof cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g education. <strong>The</strong> <strong>in</strong>itiatives we have describedgive some grounds for cautious optimism.236 <strong>The</strong> We turn f<strong>in</strong>ally to the Youth Service and the voluntaryYouth youth organisations because collectively these form the mostService important resource for the 14—25 age group other thanfurther education itself. <strong>The</strong>y are now suffer<strong>in</strong>g neglect,expenditure cuts and dw<strong>in</strong>dl<strong>in</strong>g morale. <strong>The</strong> <strong>in</strong>creasedcommercial provision of leisure and recreation facilities haslost the Service the <strong>in</strong>terest of many young people over 14.<strong>The</strong>re is an urgent need for the Service to re-th<strong>in</strong>k its role torecapture the older age groups by provid<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> particular:a opportunities for constructive leisure of a k<strong>in</strong>d outsidethe commercial fieldb opportunities for creative experience, especially throughthe artse educational alternatives for certa<strong>in</strong> areas of needd counsell<strong>in</strong>g for leisure, careers and personal problemsl<strong>in</strong>ked with youth activitiese activities l<strong>in</strong>ked wilh the Youth Opportunities Programme,<strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g arts activities, to make a betterbalance between the work and non-work areas of youngpeople's livesWe welcome the Government's proposal to undertake areview of the Youth Service, but urge that it should seek toencompass all the needs of young people outside school andcollege to develop a much broader conception of youthservice than exists today and hence a wider provision able toengage young people's enthusiasm and stimulate their creative139


potential. <strong>The</strong> exceptional situation which faces young peopletoday places a new importance on all the agencies whichexist to serve them from formal education to voluntaryactivity. It implies new tasks, new responses, new th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>gand, above all, a new urgency.237 Summary In this chapter we have extended the ma<strong>in</strong> themes of thereport <strong>in</strong>to a consideration of community and cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>geducation. We discussed some of the pr<strong>in</strong>ciples of communityeducation and po<strong>in</strong>ted to the many difficulties <strong>in</strong>volved andto the potential benefits. We outl<strong>in</strong>ed the pr<strong>in</strong>ciple of cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>geducation and emphasised the exist<strong>in</strong>g nationalcommitment to this. Acknowledg<strong>in</strong>g the problems of reformwe have pressed for the <strong>in</strong>clusion of the arts <strong>in</strong> general andvocational courses <strong>in</strong> further and higher education. We havenoted the grow<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong> the arts <strong>in</strong> adult educationand have endorsed the call for more contact between regionalarts associations and this sector of education. <strong>The</strong> difficultiesof secur<strong>in</strong>g tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g for the professional arts were discussedand a new <strong>in</strong>itiative <strong>in</strong> this area was described. In press<strong>in</strong>gfor new attitudes to the use of exist<strong>in</strong>g resources we haveended with a call for these issues to be given due attention<strong>in</strong> the review and revaluation of the Youth Service.140


10 RecommendationsThis report has led us to some clear conclusions. We began by review<strong>in</strong>g theproblems now fac<strong>in</strong>g schools. We stressed that we were not about to pleada special case for the arts but to make a general one: that the forms ofeducation now needed to meet the profound changes <strong>in</strong> British society musttake greater account than <strong>in</strong> the past of the capabilities, values and theprocesses of teach<strong>in</strong>g and learn<strong>in</strong>g that the arts represent <strong>in</strong> schools.Our analysis of the idea of education for a pluralist society, togetherwith our observations on the arts themselves, suggests that considerablesignificance should be attached to those activities which are concerned withthe life of feel<strong>in</strong>g and the development of creative powers. We ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>that a well-<strong>in</strong>formed pursuit of all k<strong>in</strong>ds of creativity will enable us not onlyto cope more positively with the economic necessities of the world, butalso to <strong>in</strong>crease the potential for discovery and progress on the many frontsof human <strong>in</strong>terest and activity that they offer us.We also emphasise that the arts are as much a part of the life and atmosphereof our society as, for example, science, technology, morals andreligion. Due account should be taken, <strong>in</strong> the discussions now tak<strong>in</strong>g placeat all levels on the school curriculum, of the important contributions of thearts <strong>in</strong> the follow<strong>in</strong>g six areas of educational responsibility:a develop<strong>in</strong>g the full variety of human <strong>in</strong>telligenceb develop<strong>in</strong>g the capacity for creative thought and actione the education of feel<strong>in</strong>g and sensibilityd develop<strong>in</strong>g physical and perceptual skillse the exploration of valuesf understand<strong>in</strong>g the chang<strong>in</strong>g social culture.In all cases we emphasise the complementary relationship between children'sown practical work <strong>in</strong> the arts and their understand<strong>in</strong>g of and response tothe work of others.We ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> that a positive concern with the enrichment of our publiclife through the practice and appreciation of the arts would confer immeasurablebenefits on our society.141


We have developed our arguments <strong>in</strong> relation to a number of issues whichwe have summarised at po<strong>in</strong>ts throughout the report. We want here tosummarise the forms of action they suggest.WE RECOMMEND THAT:1 <strong>The</strong> Secretaries of State for Education shoulda give equal consideration to the arts <strong>in</strong> all future state-ments about the whole curriculumb <strong>in</strong>clude the arts <strong>in</strong> those areas of the curriculum identified<strong>in</strong> <strong>The</strong> School Curriculum as need<strong>in</strong>g special consideration,<strong>in</strong> view of the particular problems of provisionand status which we have identified.<strong>The</strong> artsand thecurriculum2 Recognis<strong>in</strong>g its substantial and legitimate commitment toScience Education <strong>in</strong> the com<strong>in</strong>g years, the <strong>Schools</strong>Council should now give full consideration to ways <strong>in</strong> whichit can support and improve the practice and understand<strong>in</strong>gof the arts <strong>in</strong> schools, tak<strong>in</strong>g account of its exist<strong>in</strong>g work<strong>in</strong> this area.3 Recognis<strong>in</strong>g the many problems which confront thedevelopment of the arts <strong>in</strong> the curriculum, Local EducationAuthorities should:a provide courses on curriculum plann<strong>in</strong>g and evaluationas part of <strong>in</strong>-service tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g provision for arts teachersb provide courses on the pr<strong>in</strong>ciples and practice of artseducation for head-teachers and others concerned withthe organisation and adm<strong>in</strong>istration of the educationservicee ensure that cuts <strong>in</strong> spend<strong>in</strong>g and the economies necessitatedby fall<strong>in</strong>g rolls do not fall disproportionately onthe arts.<strong>The</strong> arts <strong>in</strong>primaryschools4 Opportunities for expressive and creative work <strong>in</strong> the artsshould be more widely developed as part of the daily workof primary schools.5 Head teachers should explore ways of improv<strong>in</strong>g theconfidence and expertise of teachers <strong>in</strong> us<strong>in</strong>g the arts,specifically through encourag<strong>in</strong>g members of staff withspecialist skills to act as consultants with<strong>in</strong> the school.6 Records made available to middle and secondary schoolsshould <strong>in</strong>clude <strong>in</strong>formation on children's activities anddevelopment <strong>in</strong> the arts, <strong>in</strong> the primary school.142


<strong>The</strong> arts <strong>in</strong>secondaryschools7 <strong>The</strong> arts should be accorded equal status with othermajor areas of the curriculum and this should be reflected<strong>in</strong> the allocation of resources.8 Head teachers and those responsible for the timetableshould recognise the different requirements of the variousarts and take these <strong>in</strong>to account <strong>in</strong> tackl<strong>in</strong>g matters ofprovision.9 <strong>The</strong> need should be recognised for a policy for all of thearts <strong>in</strong> schools and arts teachers <strong>in</strong> the same school shouldtherefore discuss and co-ord<strong>in</strong>ate policies wherever possible,and especially <strong>in</strong> relation to the allocation of time andfacilities.10 <strong>The</strong> need should be recognised for work <strong>in</strong> the arts todevelop <strong>in</strong>to the 4th, 5th and 6th forms of secondaryschools and opportunities for this to happen shouldbe made available outside exam<strong>in</strong>ation courses.11 Patterns of assessment should take account of the pr<strong>in</strong>ci-pies and objectives of arts education and of the nature ofaesthetic experience and development.Assessmentandevaluation12 S<strong>in</strong>ce we believe that <strong>in</strong> their practice and assessment thearts should be seen as provid<strong>in</strong>g experience of positiveachievement <strong>in</strong> schools:a the use of profile report<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the arts should be fully<strong>in</strong>vestigatedb the appropriateness and usefulness of criterion-referencedtests <strong>in</strong> the arts should be fully <strong>in</strong>vestigated.13 Exam<strong>in</strong>ations should not be seen as the means of legitimis<strong>in</strong>gthe arts <strong>in</strong> schools.14 Discussions on more effective and responsive forms ofassessment and evaluation should <strong>in</strong>volve employers andother <strong>in</strong>terested groups, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g parents.15 Local Education Authorities should give special consider-ation to the needs of the gifted, the disabled and ofethnic m<strong>in</strong>ority groups.Specialneeds16 To this end, Local Education Authorities should:a make available extra help and tuition to those withspecial gifts and talents <strong>in</strong> the arts and143


wherever possible, co-ord<strong>in</strong>ate the use of staff andresources between schoolse be prepared to provide awards to <strong>in</strong>dividual childrenbelow the age of 16 for special tuition <strong>in</strong> dance andmusicd be prepared to provide those above the age of 16 withgrants and awards to undertake vocational tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>the artse provide for expert advice to assist <strong>in</strong> the identificationof those with special needs <strong>in</strong> the artsf identify and respond to special needs <strong>in</strong> the arts by theprovision of <strong>in</strong>-service courses for teachers and adm<strong>in</strong>istratorsg keep careers teachers fully <strong>in</strong>formed of opportunitiesfor vocational tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the arts.17 Special provision should be made by arts fund<strong>in</strong>g organis-ations and Local Education Authorities together to helpprepare professional artists to work <strong>in</strong> schools.Artists andeducation18 <strong>Schools</strong> should recognise the mutual benefits of work<strong>in</strong>gcontacts between children, teachers and artists and shouldencourage visits and jo<strong>in</strong>t projects.19 <strong>Schools</strong> and artists should be matched with care, anddetailed preparation and follow-up should be seen asessential elements <strong>in</strong> such projects.20 <strong>The</strong> importance of quality rather than quantity of contactshould be recognised and <strong>in</strong> recognition of this closeattention should be given to the evaluation of currentschemes <strong>in</strong>volv<strong>in</strong>g artists <strong>in</strong> education.21 <strong>Arts</strong> fund<strong>in</strong>g organisations should be prepared to helpLocal Education Authorities to meet the costs of professionalperformances by artists where these are part ofan educational course.22 Closer work<strong>in</strong>g contacts should be developed betweenLocal Education Authorities and Regional <strong>Arts</strong> Associations,specifically through the appo<strong>in</strong>tment to the latterof Education Liaison Officers.Beyond theschool23 <strong>Schools</strong> should consider ways of mak<strong>in</strong>g specialist facilitiesand resources for the arts available for broader use by thecommunity.24 Opportunities should be available for students <strong>in</strong> Further144


Education to pursue <strong>in</strong>terests <strong>in</strong> the arts as part of generalcourse work.25 In consider<strong>in</strong>g arts activities with and by adults, artsfund<strong>in</strong>g organisations should consider ways of relax<strong>in</strong>gthe dist<strong>in</strong>ction between professionals and amateurs.In addition26 Given the importance of the arts and of creative workwith<strong>in</strong> broadcast<strong>in</strong>g and the pr<strong>in</strong>ted media, considerationshould be given to an <strong>Arts</strong> for All campaign, supported bythe media and funded by arts bodies.27 <strong>The</strong> National Youth Bureau should consider establish<strong>in</strong>g astand<strong>in</strong>g conference for the <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> the Youth Service toformulate policies and priorities so as to create an awarenessof the importance of the arts for young people andto promote relevant action.28 One of the redundant colleges of education should bedeveloped by the Department of Education and Science<strong>in</strong>to a centre for <strong>in</strong>itial and <strong>in</strong>-service tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g of Youthand Community <strong>Arts</strong> Workers lead<strong>in</strong>g to appropriatequalifications, and comb<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g research <strong>in</strong>to theory andpractice of the arts <strong>in</strong> these areas.29 Provision should be made for work <strong>in</strong> the arts <strong>in</strong> the<strong>in</strong>itial tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g courses of all students prepar<strong>in</strong>g to work <strong>in</strong>primary schools.30 Consideration should be given to mak<strong>in</strong>g some work <strong>in</strong>the arts a compulsory element <strong>in</strong> the professional studiessections of both BEd and PGCE courses of studentsprepar<strong>in</strong>g to work <strong>in</strong> schools.31 <strong>The</strong> Department of Education and Science should undertakea survey to exam<strong>in</strong>e, after the cuts of recent years,what now rema<strong>in</strong>s of the provision for <strong>in</strong>itial tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g ofteachers <strong>in</strong> the arts, pay<strong>in</strong>g particular attention to thebalance between, and the relationship of, practical andtheoretical courses.32 A National Council for <strong>Arts</strong> Education should be establishedto promote the development of the arts <strong>in</strong> educationand to pursue the recommendations of this report.145


AppendixOur arguments <strong>in</strong> this report are based on experience of the arts and education<strong>in</strong> schools throughout Brita<strong>in</strong>. <strong>The</strong>y have also been <strong>in</strong>formed by<strong>in</strong>ternational developments <strong>in</strong> this field <strong>in</strong> the USA, Canada, Australia and<strong>in</strong> many European countries. We have used examples of practice at a numberof po<strong>in</strong>ts <strong>in</strong> the report. Many more could be given of the diversity of thiswork and of the wealth of its actual and potential contribution to education.<strong>The</strong> follow<strong>in</strong>g accounts of practice lend further support to some of thespecific po<strong>in</strong>ts we have been mak<strong>in</strong>g.1 <strong>The</strong> arts and community education: one Leicestershire school's approach<strong>The</strong> schoolThis is a 14—18 Upper School comb<strong>in</strong>ed with a Community College.<strong>The</strong> school is ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed by the local education authority but has a selfbudget<strong>in</strong>gCommunity Education Programme. Under the authority's generalarrangements, children transfer to upper schools from 11—14 high schools.<strong>The</strong> curriculum is built around a core of subjects taken by all pupils. <strong>The</strong>community programme is <strong>in</strong>dependent of, but associated with, the schoolcurriculum and is <strong>in</strong>tended to be as flexible and wide-rang<strong>in</strong>g as possible.<strong>The</strong> curriculumEach pupil participates <strong>in</strong> the core curriculum which comprises English,mathematics, science, humanities/social studies, PE and one design subject.This comprises a range of activities <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g drama, music, dance, art,woodwork, metalwork, needlework etc. Pupils opt for one of these. All ofthe core activities are either CSE or GCE courses. In addition to these, thepupils can take another design activity as an exam<strong>in</strong>ation or a non-exam<strong>in</strong>ationoption.<strong>The</strong> pupils<strong>The</strong> school has a yearly <strong>in</strong>take of 500 pupils. <strong>The</strong>se are divided on entry<strong>in</strong>to four mixed ability divisions, and then <strong>in</strong>to seven tutor groups. Pastoralcare is the responsibility of the Division Heads, Group Tutors and Heads of146


Year. As far as possible students stay <strong>in</strong> their tutor groups for parts of thecurriculum <strong>in</strong> other parts they are allocated — as late as possible — <strong>in</strong>toGCE or C8E groups. In these respects the school follows the pattern of manyUpper <strong>Schools</strong>. <strong>The</strong> special features of the school derive <strong>in</strong> part from theCommunity Education Programme and its relations to the curriculum.<strong>The</strong> Community College — organisation and structure<strong>The</strong> Community College is situated on, and shares the facilities of, theschool campus. It is self-budget<strong>in</strong>g and organises its own programme ofcourses and events. It is thus closely associated with the day-to-day workof the school but <strong>in</strong>dependent of it. <strong>The</strong> programme is under the controlof the Assistant Pr<strong>in</strong>cipal and of a College Council elected from membersand representatives of affiliated groups and organisations. <strong>The</strong> CommunityEducation Programme is f<strong>in</strong>anced by class fees, by lett<strong>in</strong>g facilities to affiliatedgroups and organisations and by revenue from a licensed bar, a cafeteriaand coffee lounge. <strong>The</strong> authority gives free use of the facilities to the Collegecharg<strong>in</strong>g only for additional caretak<strong>in</strong>g.Underly<strong>in</strong>g pr<strong>in</strong>ciples<strong>The</strong> pr<strong>in</strong>cipal aims of the programme are:a to open the facilities of the campus to the local community for itsown useb to <strong>in</strong>crease educational and recreational opportunities for the schooland for the whole areae to foster l<strong>in</strong>ks between the school and the local communityd to blur the boundaries between themGeneral facilitiesTo these ends the College has developed a range of general -facilitieswhich are available to members of the school and of the community. <strong>The</strong>orig<strong>in</strong>al kitchens of the school have been converted <strong>in</strong>to a youth club andcoffee bar which is open dur<strong>in</strong>g the day to the 6th Form and to youngpeople from outside the school. <strong>The</strong>se <strong>in</strong>clude those employed <strong>in</strong> local<strong>in</strong>dustry and bus<strong>in</strong>ess as well as the unemployed. School rules do not applyat the club and there is a variety of activities and facilities <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g pool,bar football, table tennis, draughts, darts and television. In addition to theclub there is a lounge and quiet room open to the general public provid<strong>in</strong>gdaily papers, magaz<strong>in</strong>es, board games and so on. A lounge bar is open dur<strong>in</strong>gthe even<strong>in</strong>gs. <strong>The</strong> public library is also on the campus and is open dur<strong>in</strong>gnormal library hours. <strong>The</strong>re is a creche which is open for all children underfive and is available for the use of mothers attend<strong>in</strong>g day-time courses ormeet<strong>in</strong>gs at the College.Courses and meet<strong>in</strong>gs<strong>The</strong> College organises both one-day and even<strong>in</strong>g courses cover<strong>in</strong>g a widerange of arts and crafts and special topics. <strong>The</strong>se <strong>in</strong>clude: literary meet<strong>in</strong>gs,women's groups, local history, book-b<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>g, fenc<strong>in</strong>g, yoga and so on.147


Even<strong>in</strong>g classes range from life-draw<strong>in</strong>g, suede and leathercraft, calligraphyand silver-smith<strong>in</strong>g to language courses and gymnastics.Community activities and clubsClubs and societies make extensive use of the school facilities. <strong>The</strong>se now<strong>in</strong>clude choral s<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g, badm<strong>in</strong>ton, folk dance, the local orchestra, youththeatre, judo, karate, under-fives playgroup and old time and modem ballroomdanc<strong>in</strong>g. In 1974 when the present Assistant Pr<strong>in</strong>cipal was appo<strong>in</strong>ted therewere 10 affiliated associations and three clubs. <strong>The</strong>re are now 60 associationsand 20 clubs with an estimated 2,500 people us<strong>in</strong>g the facilities dur<strong>in</strong>g anyweek <strong>in</strong> addition to the 1,150 pupils dur<strong>in</strong>g the day.Adults GCE course<strong>The</strong> College is open to adults from school-leavers onwards to study forO and A level GCE exam<strong>in</strong>ations <strong>in</strong> arts, sciences and humanities. <strong>The</strong>sebecome members of the normal teach<strong>in</strong>g groups with the full-tune pupils.<strong>Arts</strong> activities<strong>The</strong> College puts a firm emphasis on arts activities of all k<strong>in</strong>ds. <strong>The</strong>seare organised by the <strong>Arts</strong> Committee of the College Council. <strong>The</strong> Committeeorganises performances, concerts and exhibitions — at the College ArtCentre — by professional and amateur groups and <strong>in</strong>dividuals and by localartists. In the past these have <strong>in</strong>cluded <strong>The</strong> K<strong>in</strong>gs S<strong>in</strong>gers, Black DykeMills Band, Mov<strong>in</strong>g Picture Mime Show, John Ogden, the local orchestraand the youth theatre. Many of these events are organised <strong>in</strong> conjunctionwith the local arts association. This was formed <strong>in</strong> 1976 specifically topromote local activity <strong>in</strong> the arts and is now funded by the Regional <strong>Arts</strong>Association and by the Borough Council. <strong>The</strong> local association has specialistcommittees <strong>in</strong> Dance, Drama, Visual <strong>Arts</strong>, Film, Community <strong>Arts</strong> andLiterature, compris<strong>in</strong>g teachers and other <strong>in</strong>terested <strong>in</strong>dividuals from thearea. <strong>The</strong> College provided the facilities for some of these events and alsoco-ord<strong>in</strong>ates with the Association <strong>in</strong> plann<strong>in</strong>g programmes. Specifically,for example, there are workshops on Saturdays <strong>in</strong> art, craft, drama, anddance, for 8—12 year olds which draw together children and staff fromschools across the local area.<strong>The</strong> Community Education Programme and the curriculum<strong>The</strong> school is <strong>in</strong>volved both directly and <strong>in</strong>directly, therefore, <strong>in</strong> the workof the College. <strong>The</strong>re are two specific ways <strong>in</strong> which this relationship isformalised. First, there is a CSE Social Studies course for all pupils whichencourages research <strong>in</strong>to local issues and concerns — <strong>in</strong>to <strong>in</strong>dustries, hous<strong>in</strong>g,services, structures of local government and so on. A central aim of this isto <strong>in</strong>crease the pupil's knowledge of, and <strong>in</strong>volvement <strong>in</strong>, the work<strong>in</strong>gs ofthe community. Second, there is the Community Service Programme.Pupils <strong>in</strong> the 6th or 7th year work for two periods each week on communityprojects with, for example, the physically disabled, mentally handicappedand with old people. <strong>The</strong> College also runs a day centre for the elderly,disabled and mentally handicapped offer<strong>in</strong>g a variety of activities <strong>in</strong> which148


the pupils are encouraged to become <strong>in</strong>volved.Through the local arts association, the College Community Staff and thelocal education drama advisory service and the commitment and voluntarywork of school drama staff it has been possible to build up a network of12 junior drama groups, senior drama groups and youth theatres cover<strong>in</strong>g thewhole of the area with fund<strong>in</strong>g com<strong>in</strong>g from the Local Education Authority,the Borough Council and the Regional <strong>Arts</strong> Association (via the local artsassociation). All of these although 'School' based are community groups andform a natural l<strong>in</strong>k between school and community and a bridge so thatstudents do not have to make a break on leav<strong>in</strong>g school.When the local arts association promotes performance by small scaleprofessional drama and dance groups it negotiates daytime workshops forschools with<strong>in</strong> the fee. <strong>The</strong>se are often at only a marg<strong>in</strong>al extra charge tothe arts association but are highly valued by the schools <strong>in</strong> the area.2 <strong>The</strong> Manchester Dance Centre<strong>The</strong> Manchester Dance Centre came <strong>in</strong>to be<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> January 1979 and wasbased <strong>in</strong> the hall at Plymouth Grove Primary School. It operated thereuntil September 1979 when it moved to larger premises <strong>in</strong> the formerMather College of Education. <strong>The</strong> accommodation consists of a large hall,a studio with mirrors, a chang<strong>in</strong>g/common room, a library/classroom and anoffice and various store-rooms. <strong>The</strong> Centre comes under the aegis of theManchester Inspectorate and has a full-time Dance Leader based there,assisted by visit<strong>in</strong>g lecturers and Manchester school teachers.<strong>The</strong> aim of the Dance Centre is to give as many Manchester schoolchildrenas possible the opportunity to study dance, to immerse them <strong>in</strong> the atmosphereof the Centre for a whole week and also to refresh and give new ideasto the teach<strong>in</strong>g staff who come with the children. <strong>The</strong> children come to theCentre for a week with their own dance teacher from school. <strong>The</strong> averageclass size is 30. <strong>The</strong> schools select the pupils they wish to send and thechildren are often selected for their <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> dance rather than theirdanc<strong>in</strong>g ability. <strong>The</strong> class teacher shares the teach<strong>in</strong>g with the Dance Leaderand also helps with supervision dur<strong>in</strong>g break and lunchtime. Each pupil isrequired to have a school meal to ensure that she is able to complete therigorous timetable.<strong>The</strong> pupils make their own way to the Dance Centre for 9.00 am andmake their own way home at the end of the afternoon. No transport isprovided and they pay their own fares. Practical sessions are <strong>in</strong>terspersedby periods spent <strong>in</strong> the classroom, where work may be done on CSE projects,dance diaries or creative writ<strong>in</strong>g and art work. At some po<strong>in</strong>t dur<strong>in</strong>geach week the pupils are videoed and they are able to assess their ownperformance.Two weeks before the visit to the Dance Centre the leader and the teachertogether discuss and plan the programme.Each week ESN(S) children spend one and a half hours work<strong>in</strong>g with thegroup <strong>in</strong> the Centre. Visit<strong>in</strong>g lecturers give practical sessions and studentsfrom colleges of Higher Education visit to talk to the children and sometimes149


to work with them. CSE groups with their own teacher are able to attend fora half day or a day to work by themselves <strong>in</strong> the library or to share workwith the resident group, their teacher and the Dance Centre leader. Headteachershave been very co-operative. <strong>The</strong> Centre is fully booked and Headteachers,Deputies and Year Tutors have visited and been most impressed bythe concentration and the attitude to work of the pupils from their school.Most of the groups are 3rd, 4th and 5th year girls but there are now threemixed groups (boys and girls).Experimental weeksSome Heads of Primary schools wished their children to be <strong>in</strong>cluded so<strong>in</strong> the experimental weeks <strong>in</strong>fant, junior and special school children areallowed to book <strong>in</strong> for half a day or a day. Several schools book for thesame time and work together with their teachers and the Dance Leader.ClubsGirls' Dance ClubStaff Dance ClubPerformance GroupHoliday CoursesHalf-term February 1980Half-term October 1980.Tuesdays 6.00—8.00 pm Any girls aged 14or over may attend this Club.Thursdays 4.30-6.00 pm This club is forany Manchester school teacher who wishesto improve his or her personal performance.Thursdays 6.00—8.00 pm For any memberof staff who wishes to be a member of aperform<strong>in</strong>g group.Children from 14 Manchester schools attendedtwo one-day courses. 150 children attendedon one day and 70 on the other.Children from 12 Manchester schools attendedtwo one-day courses. We limited numbers to60 children on one day and 40 on the other.Similar Courses are planned for each halfterm.<strong>The</strong> May FestivalIn May 1980 the Festival of Dance was held at the Manchester DanceCentre. <strong>The</strong> week's programme <strong>in</strong>cluded performances by <strong>in</strong>fant, junior,secondary and special school children, plus demonstration teach<strong>in</strong>g lessons.<strong>The</strong>re were 14 sessions (morn<strong>in</strong>g, afternoon and even<strong>in</strong>g) and dur<strong>in</strong>g thecourse of the week over 1,000 children took part and there was a totalaudience of 4,000 adults and children. A similar Festival has been plannedfor this year.Visit<strong>in</strong>g LecturersOne session per week150


February—June 1979Johnny Haynes, mime and classical balletdancer, gave weekly lessons at the DanceCentre.February 1980 cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g Patricia Macdonald, Pr<strong>in</strong>cipal of the NorthernBallet School, gives weekly lessons <strong>in</strong> Ballet.October 1980 cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>gLecture/DemonstrationsMarch 1979October 1979February 1980Bill Craven, lecturer <strong>in</strong> Dance and PE, givesweekly lessons <strong>in</strong> technique and composition.Yai Vardi from Ballet Rambert gave a techniqueclass for selected Manchester pupils.John Field from Festival Ballet and a teacherfrom London Contemporary Dance <strong>The</strong>atregave technique classes for teachers. Attendedby 70 teachers.Sue Moulson from Inside Out gave a lectureon 'Chang<strong>in</strong>g ideas on teach<strong>in</strong>g dance,'attended by 50 teachers.Residencies by professional companiesDecember 1979 Inside OutChoreographer and dancer Sue Moulson and her company Inside Outspent a week at the Dance Centre. <strong>The</strong>y worked with pupils from Card<strong>in</strong>alNewman RC High School for Girls and South Manchester High and theculm<strong>in</strong>ation of their work was a performance called Christmas given by thepupils for their parents and friends. <strong>The</strong>re were also even<strong>in</strong>g performancesgiven by the Inside Out Company.February 1980Extemporary Dance CompanyThis company came to the Dance Centre as part of the Dance Artists<strong>in</strong> Education Project sponsored by Manchester Education Authority andthe <strong>Arts</strong> Council. <strong>The</strong> company spent three days at the Dance Centre andthey held an open class, a mat<strong>in</strong>ee attended by 350 schoolchildren and twoeven<strong>in</strong>g performances which were open to the public.September 1980SpiralThree schools spent a week at the Dance Centre and attended classesgiven by choreographer and dancer Irene Dilks and her company Spiral.Pupils from Yew Tree High School, Central Girls High School and theHigh School of Art were given one technique and one workshop sessionper day by Irene or other members of staff. <strong>The</strong>y were jo<strong>in</strong>ed by pupils151


from other schools to watch two lecture/demonstrations entitled 'An Introductionto Contemporary Dance' and 'Dance Choreography'. One hundredand forty pupils attended the first lecture and seventy older pupils attendedthe second. <strong>The</strong> company did two even<strong>in</strong>g performances which were opento the public and Irene Dilks gave two practical sessions for Manchesterteachers.What we hope we are achiev<strong>in</strong>g is:a Opportunities for teachers to be together for a week work<strong>in</strong>g side byside — shar<strong>in</strong>g experiencesplusCross fertilisation of ideas from school to school by Dance Leaderplussee<strong>in</strong>g dance artists work<strong>in</strong>g with them from their own schoolsb Expos<strong>in</strong>g them to a variety of styles and techniques <strong>in</strong> order thatthey may use these forms to express with greater relevance and claritytheir own <strong>in</strong>ner statement of the dance.Lecture Demonstrations <strong>in</strong> Secondary <strong>Schools</strong>Dancers from Ballet Rambert, Festival Ballet and London ContemporaryDance <strong>The</strong>atre have visited schools when the Companies have been danc<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong> Manchester. Some dancers have now been to the same school for fourconsecutive years and built a relationship with the teacher at the school.<strong>The</strong>y take technique classes, short extracts from a ballet, a movementphrase, and work on the development of it.Primary <strong>Schools</strong>To further opportunities for primary school teachers to work togetherwe have set up a team of four area teachers and one co-ord<strong>in</strong>ator. <strong>The</strong>four area teachers (themselves primary teachers) work for half of the week<strong>in</strong> their own schools as class teachers and for half of the week work<strong>in</strong>galongside teachers <strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>fant and junior schools help<strong>in</strong>g them to teach dance.<strong>The</strong>y give them confidence to teach dance as part of the education programme,leav<strong>in</strong>g material for them to work with and then return<strong>in</strong>g to seewhat they have done and to help them further. <strong>The</strong> co-ord<strong>in</strong>ator (a fulltimejunior teacher) organises the programmes of the area teachers and withthem selects teachers who have flair and can be helped further. <strong>The</strong> coord<strong>in</strong>atorworks with these teachers. From these teachers work<strong>in</strong>g partiesare set up and are l<strong>in</strong>ked with the Inspector, the curriculum developmentleader and the Dance Centre leader, thus form<strong>in</strong>g a spiral system.Morn<strong>in</strong>gs and afternoons of dance<strong>The</strong>se are arranged throughout the year so that work can be seen andshared. Children from <strong>in</strong>fant, junior, special and secondary schools take part.3 Dance <strong>in</strong> the Inner City — a Teacher's AccountThis is a multi-racial, <strong>in</strong>ner city, Middle School <strong>in</strong> Leeds with 75% of the152


children of Asian or West Indian background. All the children are <strong>in</strong>volved<strong>in</strong> dance from the second to the fourth year. Dur<strong>in</strong>g the second year andthird year they have a 35 m<strong>in</strong>ute period each week. In the fourth year thepupils are allowed to choose whether they wish to cont<strong>in</strong>ue. As at least2/3 of the children opt for the dance, selection is necessary. This selectionis based on commitment and attitude rather than ability. Ultimately thef<strong>in</strong>al number of children is between 50 and 60. <strong>The</strong>se children then have1% hours of dance each week.It is with a knowledge and experience of the fourth year production asa background that the 2nd and 3rd year absorb their new language. <strong>The</strong>ysee the dance production as the fruit of their labours. <strong>The</strong> production isstaged <strong>in</strong> the Autumn term. <strong>The</strong> vocabulary they have acquired is put touse. A theme is chosen and the production is built. Each child contributeswhat he has learnt and what he has developed. <strong>The</strong> process is a work<strong>in</strong>g outtogether of a multitude of details, each detail be<strong>in</strong>g provided by the children;each detail be<strong>in</strong>g a growth upon the orig<strong>in</strong>al vocabulary with<strong>in</strong> the frameworkof tensions provided by the show. <strong>The</strong> production can be seen as aprocess whereby the children are transformed <strong>in</strong>to <strong>in</strong>terpreters of theirown emotions through the dance and music. <strong>The</strong>y become more aware ofwhat they are and what they could be. Because they come to understandthat dance has mean<strong>in</strong>g beyond itself they br<strong>in</strong>g their whole consciousnessto bear upon it. Concern for m<strong>in</strong>ute details becomes important <strong>in</strong> thelargeness of the production. <strong>The</strong> highest possible standards become thenorm s<strong>in</strong>ce they embody <strong>in</strong>dividual and collective image with<strong>in</strong> the unity.<strong>The</strong> staff <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> this do not direct every movement the childrenmake, but rather highlight the possibilities that the children discover andprovide the overall form to the production. Many 4th year pupils who arenot directly <strong>in</strong>volved <strong>in</strong> dance are drawn <strong>in</strong>to the production <strong>in</strong> other ways.Light<strong>in</strong>g, sound, costume, set build<strong>in</strong>g, written work and art work, allcentred on the theme, are their responsibility. <strong>The</strong> themes that have beenchosen ensure a wide variety of background and ideas are created. <strong>The</strong>productions have been drawn from both classical and contemporary themes:Jesus Christ<strong>The</strong> Family of Man (Sound evolution)<strong>The</strong> Lord of the R<strong>in</strong>gs<strong>The</strong> K<strong>in</strong>g Must Die (<strong>The</strong>seus)Paradise Lost<strong>The</strong> Wizard of Oz<strong>The</strong> 4th year dance course gives many opportunities for see<strong>in</strong>g professionalgroups rehears<strong>in</strong>g and perform<strong>in</strong>g, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g visits to the theatre<strong>in</strong> Leeds, Harrogate and York and to take part <strong>in</strong> and watch workshops andrehearsals. Dancers from the Ballet Rambert and the London ContemporaryDance Company come to school to take classes and they are alwaysimpressed by the enthusiasm of the children (especially the boys). We havealso travelled to London to see the Martha Graham Company and the LondonContemporary Dance Company (we camp at Crystal Palace to keep down153


the cost). Groups of children have visited many parts of the country toperform, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g a four day visit to Wales at the <strong>in</strong>vitation of the WelshInspectorate to perform at different schools. Two years ago a group travelledto Edmonton, Canada, to perform the International Conference of Danceand the Child. Last year another group performed <strong>in</strong> France for variousschools and youth groups.As might be surmised, this f<strong>in</strong>al year demands a great deal of the children.<strong>The</strong>y give much of their own time to it, work<strong>in</strong>g almost every lunchtime aswell as weekends, and dur<strong>in</strong>g the holidays. When the production is over, therealisation of three years work br<strong>in</strong>gs a desire to work harder. We are thereforeable to make progress dur<strong>in</strong>g the spr<strong>in</strong>g and summer term, <strong>in</strong>troduc<strong>in</strong>gtechniques requir<strong>in</strong>g greater maturity and sophistication. <strong>The</strong> productionseems to act as a stimulus to greater development both physically and <strong>in</strong>attitude, towards the subject.<strong>The</strong>re are now six of our ex-boys at the London School of ContemporaryDance. I th<strong>in</strong>k this is <strong>in</strong>dicative of the standards and <strong>in</strong>volvement atta<strong>in</strong>edby at least some of the children at this school. <strong>The</strong> school programme,however, is not designed to make dancers but to give the children a means ofexpression <strong>in</strong> the skills required, and to be able to translate and develop theseskills <strong>in</strong>to self expression with<strong>in</strong> a community of dance.<strong>The</strong> depressed urban environment the children live <strong>in</strong> makes the success theyachieve at school of the utmost importance. From impoverished backgrounds,they receive, <strong>in</strong> many cases, little help from home. <strong>The</strong>ir self-image and theirimage of society would, if this were all they had, be a self-destructive andsocially destructive force. As many of these children are not academicallybright, dance provides a form of success upon which they can grow as people— perhaps the only one they have. Further it provides stimulus to greatereffort <strong>in</strong> areas where they have not succeeded before. One boy who is nowtra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g at the London School of Contemporary Dance, when asked what hewould have done had he not been a dancer, replied — 'a thug.'It may seem that I have overstated the importance of dance to the childrenat this school but I believe they display a commitment and enthusiasmwhich is unique. <strong>The</strong>y demonstrate a self discipl<strong>in</strong>e and dedication not oftenfound <strong>in</strong> children of this age and background. <strong>The</strong>y become able to overcomeattitudes derived from an impoverished and prejudiced environment,learn<strong>in</strong>g how to accept criticism and new ideas. <strong>The</strong>se may seem wild claimsbut I have seen these children grow from immature confusion and ignoranceto sensitive and tolerant maturity as they escape the mentality of the ghetto.4 Works of Art — the Ethos of the SchoolWe see a clear case for the provision of works of art <strong>in</strong> schools as a matterof policy. One reason for this is to provide a more stimulat<strong>in</strong>g school environment,on the practical pr<strong>in</strong>ciple that if the school looks good it will betreated well and with disrespect if it looks bad. But while concern with theschool environment can have an important bear<strong>in</strong>g there are far more cogentreasons for encourag<strong>in</strong>g contact with works of art. In Leicestershire anoutward and visible sign to children of a positive attitude on the part of the154


Authority has been its acquisition for schools of a wide variety of contemporaryworks of art, especially by young artists of national repute orpromise.Andrew Fairbairn comments:'In a world of change the pacemakers <strong>in</strong> the arts are travell<strong>in</strong>g as fast asthe scientists. We have tried so far as possible to expose the children <strong>in</strong>Leicestershire schools to the arts of the contemporary world . . . Possiblythe greatest advantage of the arts is that they act as a catalyst <strong>in</strong> thegeneral life of the school. So long as they are treated not as an academicexercise, but with vitality, they appear to release energy and add sparkleand <strong>in</strong>ventiveness to the general life of the school. <strong>The</strong>y pay for themselvesby quicken<strong>in</strong>g the whole tempo.'F<strong>in</strong>d<strong>in</strong>g the moneyBuy<strong>in</strong>g works of art can be costly for <strong>in</strong>dividual schools. How thenhas Leicestershire helped schools and colleges to make acquisitions andma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong> the k<strong>in</strong>d of turnover which this policy implies? <strong>The</strong>re are fourma<strong>in</strong> strategies. Works are bought:i as part of the capital cost of a new school build<strong>in</strong>g or extension. <strong>The</strong>authority for this depends upon:a the Department of Education and Science's advice to local educationauthorities that a ceil<strong>in</strong>g of one half of one percent of the gross build<strong>in</strong>gcost may be spent on works of art for new educational build<strong>in</strong>gsb on the resolution of the F<strong>in</strong>ance Committee of the former CountyCouncil <strong>in</strong> May 1969 that one quarter of one per cent of the build<strong>in</strong>gcost of educational capital projects should be expended on the provisionof sculptures, works of art or other similar emblishments, as partof the authorised capital cost of new school build<strong>in</strong>gs or extensions —this be<strong>in</strong>g one half of the amount which the DBS would be preparedto supportii by direct purchase of stock. Issues from stock are made for a number ofspecified purposes, e.g.a the County Collection — a collection of pictures paid for by the LeicestershirePublications Accountb Capitation Allowances — pictures chosen by schools and charged to theCounty Fund as part of their Capitation Allowancee Special Grants — specifically authorised by the Local Education Authorityand charged to the County Fund (usually part of furniture andfitt<strong>in</strong>gs)d private funds — paid for out of some special school funde capital accounts (<strong>in</strong>itial stock) — the <strong>in</strong>itial furniture vote of every newschool conta<strong>in</strong>s a sum for pictures155


iii as a special authorised charge to the Leicestershire Publications Account.Each year, the Education F<strong>in</strong>ance and General Purposes Committee hasauthorised expenditure from Leicestershire Publications Account, theamount depend<strong>in</strong>g on the net amount available from royalties etc. It hasbeen usual for the former Authority to cover purchases for the CountyCollection and, <strong>in</strong> most years, sums of between £500 and £1,000 havebeen so authorised.iv as part of the capitation allowances for schools. <strong>The</strong> works of art whichare charged to capitation allowances are ma<strong>in</strong>ly those from stock as<strong>in</strong>dicated above, and small items might be purchased direct.Once a year the Authority holds a Sale of Works of Art, pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>gs, ceramics,textiles from young and from established artists. All schools are <strong>in</strong>vited tothis sale to buy from their allowances and private funds for their schoolhalls, libraries, corridors and classrooms. More recently the Authority hasacquired from the Tate Gallery's Institute of Contemporary Pr<strong>in</strong>ts therema<strong>in</strong>der of a collection of limited editions of lithographs. <strong>The</strong>se will besent out to a small number of schools with fifth and sixth forms for circulationto students who will be able to have them at their home for a termor so — the only condition be<strong>in</strong>g that the school buys a picture or lithographfrom the Annual Sale, pass<strong>in</strong>g one of the orig<strong>in</strong>al lithographs to anotherschool.In Devon the Authority is also press<strong>in</strong>g to <strong>in</strong>crease the availability ofworks of art to schools. One scheme <strong>in</strong>volves a negotiated purchas<strong>in</strong>g l<strong>in</strong>kbetween the artists-<strong>in</strong>-schools scheme and the County's own collection oforig<strong>in</strong>al works of art. It has been agreed that 30% of funds available topurchase works of art should be used to purchase works by artists whohave worked <strong>in</strong> schools <strong>in</strong> Devon. This will enable schools to have, on loan,first-hand examples of the work of artists they have been <strong>in</strong>volved with.<strong>The</strong>re is also a l<strong>in</strong>k between the County collection and the collection ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>edby South West <strong>Arts</strong>. <strong>The</strong> County makes works available, throughSouth West <strong>Arts</strong>, to local community arts festivals. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> Associationsreciprocate by allocat<strong>in</strong>g sections of their own collection for use by theCounty.5 Artists and Children: Speak<strong>in</strong>g from ExperienceFor artists the experience of work<strong>in</strong>g with children can have direct rewardsby enrich<strong>in</strong>g their own work. Edward Storey has had long experience ofwork <strong>in</strong> schools:156'As a writer, I am frequently <strong>in</strong>vited through the Eastern <strong>Arts</strong> Association,to work <strong>in</strong> schools: not necessarily with children who want to write butwith classes of mixed ability. <strong>The</strong> age group I prefer is 9—12 year olds,though I have worked with younger and older children. <strong>The</strong> scheme hasprovided me with some of the most reward<strong>in</strong>g experiences I have had andI am totally committed to the value of this work <strong>in</strong> education. <strong>The</strong>


ewards and the excitement come not always from the bright child butfrom those who might have been by-passed because of their generalacademic slowness: this is one of the advantages of tak<strong>in</strong>g a class ofmixed-ability. I do not know the background or potential of each childand start with them therefore as equals. As writ<strong>in</strong>g is as much aboutfeel<strong>in</strong>g as about th<strong>in</strong>k<strong>in</strong>g, I persuade the children that they are all capableof writ<strong>in</strong>g someth<strong>in</strong>g. In this way, several children who have been presentedto me as 'slow' or 'backward' have, by the end of a session, probablyproduced the most orig<strong>in</strong>al and imag<strong>in</strong>ative piece of work.Gary, for example, was not considered bright. He was allowed to come<strong>in</strong>to my class because he wanted to know why I was there. I was told,'Just let him sit and listen'. But I forgot and <strong>in</strong> the excitement of somediscussion we were hav<strong>in</strong>g about life on a river, we started talk<strong>in</strong>g aboutthe k<strong>in</strong>gfisher. I asked the children to describe the bird, with some fairlydull results. I tried aga<strong>in</strong> and, forgett<strong>in</strong>g Gary's background, said 'Come onGary, you describe the k<strong>in</strong>gfisher for me.' He said, 'I th<strong>in</strong>k the k<strong>in</strong>gfisher'slike a liv<strong>in</strong>g ra<strong>in</strong>bow.' I said that was the sort of th<strong>in</strong>g I was look<strong>in</strong>g for:'That's poetry . . . that boy's us<strong>in</strong>g his imag<strong>in</strong>ation . . . Write it down,Gary, before you forget.' <strong>The</strong> poor lad blushed and confessed that hecould neither read nor write and didn't know how to spell the words. <strong>The</strong>fear of spell<strong>in</strong>g paralysed his imag<strong>in</strong>ation until he could see that imag<strong>in</strong>ationought to come first and the spell<strong>in</strong>g would eventually look after itself.With<strong>in</strong> weeks, his read<strong>in</strong>g and writ<strong>in</strong>g had caught up with his age-groupand he became a regular contributor to the school's anthology. Whenasked to write about the sea he wrote:"<strong>The</strong> waves are roar<strong>in</strong>g as if they are angryBecause the big boats keep sail<strong>in</strong>g over them.I th<strong>in</strong>k the sea's tired of be<strong>in</strong>g sailed upon."Gary was ten. His imag<strong>in</strong>ation and his natural curiosity, when liberated,<strong>in</strong>spired him <strong>in</strong> the rest of his school lessons. Consequently the othersubjects improved as well. Children do receive someth<strong>in</strong>g special whenthey work with an artist, a writer, or anyone who can see the importanceof education through art. I believe that through the arts people — andespecially children — become whole human be<strong>in</strong>gs. Art must be made toappeal to them as someth<strong>in</strong>g liv<strong>in</strong>g, someth<strong>in</strong>g alive, that is about theirlives. This is what happens <strong>in</strong> our poetry classes <strong>in</strong> schools and the childrenrespond. <strong>The</strong>y give it its heartbeat. <strong>The</strong>y are better scholars when they arebetter people.'157


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Kerr, J F 1968 Chang<strong>in</strong>g the Curriculum, University of London PressKhan, N 1976 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> Brita<strong>in</strong> Ignores, Community Relations Commission, LondonKoestier, A 1959 <strong>The</strong> Sleepwalkers, Hutch<strong>in</strong>son, LondonLane, J1978 <strong>Arts</strong> Centres: Every Town Should Have One, Paul ElekLarge, P 1980 <strong>The</strong> Micro Revolution, Fontana (Coll<strong>in</strong>s), LondonLeavis, F R 1952 <strong>The</strong> Common Pursuit, Chatto and W<strong>in</strong>dus, LondonLevitas, M 1974 Marxist Perspectives <strong>in</strong> the Sociology of Education, Routledge andKegan Paul, LondonLytton, H 1973 Creativity and Education, Routledge and Kegan Paul, LondonMacdonald, I 1980 Professional <strong>Arts</strong> and <strong>Schools</strong>: A Discussion Document, <strong>Arts</strong> Councilof Great Brita<strong>in</strong>, LondonMacFarlane, N 1981 Education for 16—19 year-olds, DES, LondonMacGregor, L; Tate, M & Rob<strong>in</strong>son, K 1977 Learn<strong>in</strong>g Through Drama, He<strong>in</strong>emannEducational Books, LondonMorris, H 1925 <strong>The</strong> Village College: Be<strong>in</strong>g a memorandum on the provision of educationaland social facilities for the countryside with special reference to Cambridgeshire, CambridgeUniversity PressNuttgens, P 1977 Learn<strong>in</strong>g To Some Purpose, Society of Industrial Artists and Designers,LondonOgilvie, E 1973 Gifted Children <strong>in</strong> Primary <strong>Schools</strong>, MacMillan, LondonOmste<strong>in</strong>, R 1975 <strong>The</strong> Psychology of Consciousness, Pengu<strong>in</strong>, HarmondsworthPolanyi, M 1969 Personal Knowledge, Routledge and Kegan Paul, LondonPopper, K 1943 <strong>The</strong> Open Society and its Enemies, Routledge and Kegan Paul, LondonPrimary <strong>Schools</strong> Research and Development Group 1978 Primary School Teachers'Attitudes to Issues Raised <strong>in</strong> <strong>The</strong> Great Debate, University of Birm<strong>in</strong>gham, Faculty ofEducationRead, H 1957 Humanity, Technology and Education Report of the Conference held byJo<strong>in</strong>t Council for Education Through Art, London Royal Festival Hall 22—27 April,1957Redcliffe-Maud 1976 Support for the <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> England and Wales, <strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong><strong>Foundation</strong>, LondonReid, L A 1957 '<strong>The</strong> Philosophy of Education Through <strong>Arts</strong>' <strong>in</strong> Jo<strong>in</strong>t Council for EducationThrough Art Conference Report.Rob<strong>in</strong>son, K Rt Hon 1978 '<strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong>, Society and Education' <strong>in</strong> Ross, M (Ed)Ross, M (Ed) 1978 <strong>Arts</strong> Education: Towards 2000, Conference Report, University ofExeter, School of EducationRoss, M 1975 <strong>Arts</strong> and the Adolescent: <strong>Schools</strong> Council Work<strong>in</strong>g Paper 54, Evans/Methuen EducationalRowlands, P 1974 Gifted Children and <strong>The</strong>ir Problems, Dent, LondonRowntree, D 1977 Assess<strong>in</strong>g Students: How Shall We Know <strong>The</strong>m!, Harper and Row,LondonRussell, Sir Lionel 1973 Adult Education: A Plan for Development, Report by a Committeeof Inquiry under the Chairmanship of Sir Lionel Russell CBE, HMSO, LondonRyle, G 1949 <strong>The</strong> Concept of M<strong>in</strong>d, Hutch<strong>in</strong>son, London1967 'Teach<strong>in</strong>g and Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g' <strong>in</strong> <strong>The</strong> Concept of Education, Peters, R S (Ed), Routledgeand Kegan Paul, London<strong>Schools</strong> Council 1975 Report of the <strong>Schools</strong> Council Work<strong>in</strong>g Party on the Whole Curriculum(1971—4): <strong>Schools</strong> Council Work<strong>in</strong>g Paper 53, Evans Methuen Educational,London. 1979 Pr<strong>in</strong>ciples and Priorities, <strong>Schools</strong> Council, London1981a <strong>The</strong> Practical Curriculum: Work<strong>in</strong>g Paper 70, Evans Methuen Educational,London1981b Resources for Visual Education, <strong>Schools</strong> Council Art Committee, London160


Scottish Council for Research <strong>in</strong> Education 1977 Pupils <strong>in</strong> Profile: Mak<strong>in</strong>g the Most ofTeachers'Knowledge of Pupils, Hodder and StoughtonScottish Education Department 1976 Gifted Young Musicians and Dancers, HMSO,LondonScriven, M 1967 '<strong>The</strong> Methodology of Evaluation' <strong>in</strong> Tyler, R et al (Eds) Perspectives onCurriculum Evaluation. AERA Monograph Series on Curriculum Evaluation No 1,Rand McNally, ChicagoStansbury, D Record of Pupil Experience: Qualities and Qualifications, RPE Publications,25 Church St, South Brent, DevonSwales, T 1979 Record of Pupil Achievement: An Independent Evaluation of the Sw<strong>in</strong>donRPA Scheme, <strong>Schools</strong> Council Pamphlet 16, <strong>Schools</strong> Council, LondonTaylor, O W (Ed) 1964 Creativity: Progress and Potential McGraw Hill, New YorkTolstoy, L 1930 What is Art? World's Classics, Oxford University Press, OxfordTorrance, E P 'Education and Creativity' <strong>in</strong> Taylor O W (Ed) Give the Devil His DuesVernon, P E 1969 Intelligence and Cultural Environment, Methuen, LondonVernon, P E (Ed) 1964 'Creativity and Intelligence' <strong>in</strong> Educational Research Vol VI No 3Waddell, Sir J 1978 School Exam<strong>in</strong>ations: Report of the Steer<strong>in</strong>g Committee establishedto consider proposals for replac<strong>in</strong>g the General Certificate of Education, Ord<strong>in</strong>aryLevel and the Certificate of Secondary Education exam<strong>in</strong>ation by a common systemof exam<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g, HMSO, LondonWarnock, M 1978 Special Educational Needs; Report of the Committee of Inquiry <strong>in</strong>tothe Education of Handicapped Children and Young Persons Cmnd 7212, HMSO,LondonWamock, M 1977 <strong>Schools</strong> of Thought, Faber, LondonWhite, J P 1972 'Creativity and Education' <strong>in</strong> Education and the Development of Reason,Peters, R S et al (Eds), Routledge and Kegan Paul, LondonWhitechapel Art Gallery 1978 Artists <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong>: Papers for a Conference held at theWhitechapel Art Gallery, 28th April 1978, Whitechapel Art Gallery, LondonWilliams, R 1971 <strong>The</strong> Long Revolution, Pengu<strong>in</strong>, HarmondsworthWillis, P 1977 Learn<strong>in</strong>g to Labour, Saxon House (Gower), Famborough, HantsWilson, M & Evans, M 1980 Education of Disturbed Pupils <strong>Schools</strong> Council Work<strong>in</strong>gPaper 65, Eyre Methuen Educational, LondonWittgenste<strong>in</strong>, L 1953 Philosophical Investigations, (trans. Anscombe, GEM) Basil Blackwell,OxfordWoods, R G & Barrow, R1975'Creativity' <strong>in</strong>An Introduction to Philosophy of Education,Methuen, LondonYouthaid, 1979 Life Is Not an Academic Subject, Youthaid, London1980 Youth Unemployment: A Background Paper, Youthaid, London161


Notes<strong>The</strong> Issues1 For a description of the trends <strong>in</strong>, and underly<strong>in</strong>g causes of, youthunemployment, see Youth Unemployment: A Background PaperYouthaid, 19802 See for example Large, P <strong>The</strong> Micro Revolution, 19803 Reports on Education. No 92: School Population <strong>in</strong> the 1980's DBS,19784 This was the fourth annual report prepared by the Inspectorate for theExpenditure Steer<strong>in</strong>g Group on Education. It was the first of its k<strong>in</strong>dto be made public.5 As Patrick Nuttgens has argued the decision taken by the Government<strong>in</strong> 1917 to make the Universities responsible for conduct<strong>in</strong>g schoolleav<strong>in</strong>g exam<strong>in</strong>ations has had far-reach<strong>in</strong>g educational effects. Foralthough the exam<strong>in</strong>ations were supposed to be school leav<strong>in</strong>g exam<strong>in</strong>ationsthey <strong>in</strong>evitably became qualify<strong>in</strong>g exam<strong>in</strong>ations for entry to theuniversities:'And that had a profound effect upon the whole orientation ofstudies and teach<strong>in</strong>g. It made entry to the universities the highestaspiration for teachers and pupils and thus had a profound bear<strong>in</strong>gupon the subjects which could be taught, their nature and scope,and the character of the educational experience of the pupils.'(Nuttgens, 1977, p7)6 See Primary Education <strong>in</strong> England DBS, 1978, paras 8.17, 8.23, and8.28.7 Further <strong>in</strong>formation is available from <strong>The</strong> Education Officer, <strong>The</strong>Crafts Council, 12 Waterloo Place, London SW1Y 4AU.8 <strong>The</strong> need to develop pupils' 'aesthetic awareness and creative ability'was emphasised by the Confederation of British Industry <strong>in</strong> a statementissued <strong>in</strong> March 1980. This came as a response to the DBS consultativepaper A Framework for the School Curriculum, DBS, 1980162


9 A Consideration of Humanity, Technology and Education, RoyalFestival Hall, 22nd—27th April 1957Chapter 11 See Aristotle: Nicomachean Ethics book 1,1094, b252 Quoted <strong>in</strong> F R Leavis, <strong>The</strong> Common Pursuit, p238.3 <strong>The</strong> notion of the 'aesthetic' is much broader than that of 'art'. Wecan have aesthetic experiences of, for example, nature and of objectsnot made as art. Nor is it only <strong>in</strong> the arts that people are creative, aswe argue <strong>in</strong> the next chapter. <strong>The</strong> arts exemplify these th<strong>in</strong>gs.4 As George Kelly argues, experience means more than endur<strong>in</strong>g. It<strong>in</strong>volves constru<strong>in</strong>g and mak<strong>in</strong>g sense of th<strong>in</strong>gs:'It is not constituted merely by the succession of events themselves.A person can be witness to a tremendous parade of episodesand yet, if he fails to make someth<strong>in</strong>g out of them, or if he waitsuntil they have all occurred before he attempts to reconstruethem, he ga<strong>in</strong>s little <strong>in</strong> the way of experience from hav<strong>in</strong>g beenaround when they happened.' (Kelly, 1963, p73)5 This example is taken from Sonia Egret's 'Aesthetic Mean<strong>in</strong>g' <strong>in</strong> Proceed<strong>in</strong>gsof the Philosophy of Education Society of Great Brita<strong>in</strong>,1972, Vol 6, No. 26 This is clearly argued by Michael Polanyi. In Personal Knowledge,he writes:'True discovery is not a strictly logical performance and accord<strong>in</strong>glywe may describe the obstacle to be overcome <strong>in</strong> solv<strong>in</strong>g a problemas a logical gap and speak of the width of the gap as the measureof <strong>in</strong>genuity required for solv<strong>in</strong>g the problem. Illum<strong>in</strong>ation is ...the leap by which the logical gap is crossed . . . the plunge bywhich we ga<strong>in</strong> a foothold on another shore of reality. On suchplunges the scientist has to stake bit by bit his entire professionallife.' (Polanyi, 1969, p!23)7 Arnaud Reid po<strong>in</strong>ts to the importance of this when he writes:'It is an achievement to learn to behave as a whole person, bodyand m<strong>in</strong>d work<strong>in</strong>g together as one, not body or <strong>in</strong>tellect alone . . .Watch a pa<strong>in</strong>ter, or a cellist, or a dancer: here is the complete<strong>in</strong>divisibility and <strong>in</strong>tegrity of the <strong>in</strong>ternal and the external.'(Reid, 1957, p46)8 <strong>The</strong> activities of <strong>in</strong>dustrialists and bus<strong>in</strong>essmen are not always aimedexclusively at greater productivity and higher profit marg<strong>in</strong>s.<strong>The</strong> eng<strong>in</strong>eer<strong>in</strong>g activities of an Austrian family led to a brilliantpiano concerto for the left hand, to <strong>in</strong>novations <strong>in</strong> architecture and to163


the philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenste<strong>in</strong>. <strong>The</strong> eng<strong>in</strong>eer<strong>in</strong>g activities ofRobert Mayer have led to an upsurge of <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> Youth and Music.Currently, there is a welcome though as yet modest <strong>in</strong>volvement ofa number of commercial and <strong>in</strong>dustrial concerns <strong>in</strong> sponsor<strong>in</strong>g thearts.Chapter 21 See for example the F<strong>in</strong>niston Report, HMSO, 19802 See for example Ryle, <strong>The</strong> Concept of M<strong>in</strong>d, 1949; Vernon, Intelligenceand Cultural Environment, 1969; and for a good review ofrecent literature on the subject see Downey and Kelly, <strong>The</strong>ory andPractice of Education, 1979, Chapter 3.3 See for example Guilford, 1950; Getzels and Jackson, 1962 and Torranee,1964 all <strong>in</strong> the USA and Haddon and Lytton, 1968; Hasan andButcher, 1966 and Vernon, 1966 <strong>in</strong> the United K<strong>in</strong>gdom.4 See for example, Hudson, Contrary Imag<strong>in</strong>ations, 19665 See for example Getzels and Jackson, 1962, p!06 and Lytton, 1973,P36 <strong>The</strong> example is from Gribble, 1969, p677 Of course we might question whether we ought to call a writer, composeror pa<strong>in</strong>ter 'creative' on the basis of one work alone, althoughwe do not always doubt this. Consider, for example, our judgementsof Julius Reubke's s<strong>in</strong>gle masterpiece, Sonata on the 94th Psalm.8 See for example Jackson and Messick, 1969; Haddon and Lytton,1971; Hasan and Butcher, 1966.Chapter 31 Rt. Hon Kenneth Rob<strong>in</strong>son <strong>in</strong> a speech on <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> Society at theCockpit <strong>The</strong>atre <strong>in</strong> London. In Ross, M (ed) 1978.2 <strong>The</strong> term 'culture' orig<strong>in</strong>ally meant the tend<strong>in</strong>g of crops and animals.It developed dur<strong>in</strong>g the 18th Century <strong>in</strong>to a conception of 'civilisation'before embrac<strong>in</strong>g the notion of a general process of <strong>in</strong>ner development.It was only <strong>in</strong> the 19th Century that it became widely associated withartḞor a discussion of this development see, for example, Williams, <strong>The</strong>Long Revolution, 1971.3 Information on these is available from the <strong>Schools</strong> Council, InformationSection, 160 Gt Portland Street, London Wl.Chapter 41 See MacGregor, Tate and Rob<strong>in</strong>son, Learn<strong>in</strong>g Through Drama, 1977,chapter seven.2 We do not deal separately with Middle <strong>Schools</strong>. This is because of theconsiderable variations <strong>in</strong> the age ranges for which they provide. <strong>The</strong>application of our comments to Middle <strong>Schools</strong> is, we hope, apparent164


<strong>in</strong> our discussion of primary and secondary schools and of the need forcont<strong>in</strong>uity throughout the compulsory stages of education as a whole.3 For a discussion of this notion, see Bernste<strong>in</strong>, 19714 Primary Education <strong>in</strong> England, DBS, 19785 Primary School Teachers' Attitudes to Issues raised <strong>in</strong> the Great Debate,Primary <strong>Schools</strong> Research and Development Group, 1978.6 For a detailed discussion of a number of these po<strong>in</strong>ts, see Resourcesfor Visual Education, <strong>Schools</strong> Council Art Committee, <strong>Schools</strong> Council,1981Chapter 51 Notably a survey of 1,000 secondary schools <strong>in</strong> the Times EducationalSupplement, 30th October 1980; reports of HMI to the ExpenditureSteer<strong>in</strong>g Group on Education (See Issues, Note 5); and articles <strong>in</strong> theGuardian, 7th October and 14th October 1980.2 Joan Freeman, Gifted Children, 19793 <strong>Schools</strong> Council Work<strong>in</strong>g Paper 53, <strong>The</strong> Whole Curriculum 13—16,Evans Methuen Educational, 1975.4 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2 rueAndr6 Pascal, 75775 Paris, Cedex 16.5 Dance and drama, for example, are often banded together as 'perform<strong>in</strong>garts' although their needs, <strong>in</strong> some respects, are quite different.<strong>The</strong> dance teacher needs a somewhat bigger studio than drama —someth<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> excess of 2,000 square feet. This is not an arbitraryfigure but one based on the floor space needed for extended runs andjumps with a class of about 25 young people. Drama teachers can makedo with a little less. For dance it is imperative that the floor be sprung,to avoid muscular damage. <strong>The</strong> teach<strong>in</strong>g of some forms of dance,notably classical ballet and some styles of contemporary dance, willrequire mirrors on the wall. Ballet also needs barres. Such facilitiescan make it difficult to adapt dance studios for public performancesalthough examples of successful adaptation do exist. As for drama,performances require suitable seat<strong>in</strong>g and light<strong>in</strong>g.6 From material submitted to the Committee.7 John Holden, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> Society, an address given to a DBS conferenceof art teachers <strong>in</strong> Bournemouth, 10th October 1977 (mimeo).Chapter 61 <strong>The</strong> current system of public exam<strong>in</strong>ations is designed to make relativejudgements between only 60% of all children <strong>in</strong> the public educationsystem <strong>in</strong> Brita<strong>in</strong>. <strong>The</strong> Waddell Report on School Exam<strong>in</strong>ations emphasisesthis <strong>in</strong> its open<strong>in</strong>g remarks on the ability range of pupils. For thepurposes of public exam<strong>in</strong>ations this is expressed <strong>in</strong> percentiles, orpercentages, from 0—100.'Thus, GCE O level exam<strong>in</strong>ations are designed to cater, primarily,165


for candidates between the 100th and 80th percentile — the top20% of the whole ability range — and CSE exam<strong>in</strong>ations primarilyfor the 80th to the 40th percentile — the next 40% of the wholeability range . . . <strong>The</strong> percentile sets out to def<strong>in</strong>e, at any po<strong>in</strong>tbetween O and 100 the level at which <strong>in</strong>dividuals perform <strong>in</strong>relation to their group. Thus, someone at the 60th percentilehas performed better than 60% of his/her peers.' (Waddell, 1978,P2)<strong>The</strong> abid<strong>in</strong>g problem here is that it is not, of course, the whole abilityrange which is tested but only those particular abilities — <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g shortterm memory — which are needed to pass exam<strong>in</strong>ations. Success orfailure <strong>in</strong> exercis<strong>in</strong>g these abilities is then taken as the <strong>in</strong>dicator of allother abilities.2 Attempts are be<strong>in</strong>g made to devise graded tests <strong>in</strong> modern languagesthrough schemes <strong>in</strong> Oxfordshire, the South Western Counties, InnerLondon, Hertfordshire, Northumberland and at the Language Teach<strong>in</strong>gCentre <strong>in</strong> York. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> Council has also undertaken a study ofgraded tests and will be report<strong>in</strong>g early <strong>in</strong> 1982. Information on thisand the study of profile report<strong>in</strong>g can be obta<strong>in</strong>ed from <strong>The</strong> InformationSection, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> Council, 160 Great Portland Street, LondonWl.Chapter 71 Mary Warnock, comment<strong>in</strong>g on the Government's White Paper onSpecial Needs, Times Educational Supplement 19th September 19802 See, for example, Joan Freeman, Gifted Children, 19793 <strong>The</strong>se figures were supplied by the Commission for Racial Equality.4 Among research published <strong>in</strong> the 1970s, for example, Gibson andChennell's Gifted Children, 1976, report<strong>in</strong>g the first world conferenceon gifted children; Hitchfield's In Search of Promise 1973, a long-termnational study of able children and their families <strong>in</strong> the NationalChildren's Bureau's Studies <strong>in</strong> Child Development; Hoyle and Wilks'Gifted Children and their Education, 1975, commissioned by theDepartment of Education and Science; Rowlands' Gifted Children andtheir Problems, 1964; Ogilvie's, Gifted Children <strong>in</strong> Primary <strong>Schools</strong>,1973; HM Inspectorate's Gifted Children <strong>in</strong> Middle and Comprehensive<strong>Schools</strong>, DBS, 1977; and Joan Freeman's Gifted Children, 1979 basedon the <strong>Gulbenkian</strong> Research Project on gifted children.5 Shape, 9 Fitzroy Square, London W1P 6AE. Tel. 01 388 9622 or01 388 9744. Regional addresses available through Shape.6 Further <strong>in</strong>formation on this work is available from <strong>The</strong> British Associationof Art <strong>The</strong>rapists, 13c Northwood Road, London N6 STL7 Horace Lashley and Tania Rose Cultural Pluralism: Implications forTeach<strong>in</strong>g <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> We are <strong>in</strong>debted for many facts and arguments<strong>in</strong> this area of our study to this paper by Lashley and Roseprepared for the Commission for Racial Equality, December 1978166


Chapter 81 Lists of writers will<strong>in</strong>g to participate <strong>in</strong> this scheme are available fromRegional <strong>Arts</strong> Associations. General <strong>in</strong>formation about Writers <strong>in</strong><strong>Schools</strong> can be obta<strong>in</strong>ed from the Literature Director, <strong>Arts</strong> Councilof Great Brita<strong>in</strong>, 105 Piccadilly, London W1V OAU.2 Further <strong>in</strong>formation about Poets <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> can be obta<strong>in</strong>ed from theEducation Officer, <strong>The</strong> Poetry Society, 21 Earls Court Square, LondonSW5.3 For a description and discussion of a range of other schemes see Artists<strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong>: Papers for a Conference held at the Whitechapel Art Galleryon 28th April 1978. Available from the Gallery, Whitechapel HighStreet, London El 7QX.4 See Dance Education and Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> Brita<strong>in</strong>, <strong>Calouste</strong> <strong>Gulbenkian</strong><strong>Foundation</strong>, 1980.5 Further <strong>in</strong>formation can be obta<strong>in</strong>ed from the Literature Officer,Greater London <strong>Arts</strong> Association, 25—31 Tavistock Place, London WC1.6 For a description and discussion of these schemes, see Artists andPeople by Su Braden, Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1978.7 For a discussion of the work of <strong>The</strong>atre <strong>in</strong> Education Companies seeLearn<strong>in</strong>g Through <strong>The</strong>atre, edited by Tony Jackson, ManchesterUniversity Press, 1980.8 This is given <strong>in</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> Centres: Every Town Should Have One, by JohnLane, Paul Elek, 1978.9 Ripp<strong>in</strong>g Yarns, an article <strong>in</strong> the Times Educational Supplement, 4thJanuary 198010 From When is the Poet Com<strong>in</strong>g Aga<strong>in</strong>, an article on the Poets <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong>cheme by Pat Swell, Education Officer with <strong>The</strong> Poetry Society.11 From a report <strong>in</strong> <strong>The</strong> Times Educational Supplement, 19th May 1979.12 Zoe Fairburn comment<strong>in</strong>g on her C Day Lewis Fellowship 1977—78,<strong>in</strong> Writers <strong>in</strong> Residence, Education Supplement of the Greater London<strong>Arts</strong> Association, 1979.13 Ibid., Note 11.14 See, for example, Su Braden Op. cit.Chapter 91 See Fairburn, <strong>The</strong> Leicestershire Community Colleges and Centres,1978; and Henry Morris, <strong>The</strong> Village College; be<strong>in</strong>g a memorandum onthe provision of educational and social facilities for the countrysidewith special reference to Cambridgeshire, 1925.2 A detailed study of <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> and Community Education is be<strong>in</strong>gundertaken by the <strong>Arts</strong> Council of Great Brita<strong>in</strong>. <strong>The</strong> report looksat problems and difficulties, together with benefits, through detailedcase studies. <strong>The</strong>se <strong>in</strong>clude a school we describe <strong>in</strong> the Appendix.3 A Youthaid statement on education <strong>in</strong> April 1979 confirmed this <strong>in</strong>look<strong>in</strong>g at the pattern of education among 16—18 year olds. Of the2,000,000 people <strong>in</strong> this age range 18% (357,000) were cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g167


their education full-time <strong>in</strong> school; 9.6% (191,000) did so <strong>in</strong> nonadvancedfurther education; 2.4% (47,000) were already <strong>in</strong> highereducation. Thus about 30% were <strong>in</strong> full-time education. A further13.4% of the age group (268,000) were study<strong>in</strong>g part-time <strong>in</strong> the dayand 5.4% (108,000) <strong>in</strong> the even<strong>in</strong>g. In other words about half the agegroup had no contact with the ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed education system: over 10%of the age group were unemployed overall with much higher percentages<strong>in</strong> some areas of the country. At 18+, only 14.5% were <strong>in</strong> full-timehigher education. <strong>The</strong> majority had, by then, lost all touch with theeducation service. For about half the population as a whole, the end ofcompulsory education is the end of formal education of any k<strong>in</strong>d. (SeeYouthaid, 1979, para 10.3)Most of the provision comes from:a) ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed schools and collegesb) <strong>in</strong>dustrial, commercial and public sector concerns meet<strong>in</strong>gtheir own tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g needs and respond<strong>in</strong>g to requests to providework, experience and tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g for the unemployede) public sector establishments such as the Manpower ServicesCommission and the Industrial Tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g Boards offer<strong>in</strong>g tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>gand work experience<strong>The</strong> terms of reference of the Council, as laid down by the Secretaryof State for Education are:To advise generally on matters relevant to the provision of educationfor adults <strong>in</strong> England and Wales, and <strong>in</strong> particulara) to promote co-operation between the various bodies engaged<strong>in</strong> adult education and review current practice, organisationand priorities with a view to the most effective deployment ofthe available resources; andb) to promote the development of future policies and priorities,with full regard to the concept of education as a process cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>gthrough life.G. Adk<strong>in</strong>s, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> and Adult Education, Advisory Council for Adultand Cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>g Education, Leicester, 1981.Dur<strong>in</strong>g the period of the <strong>Arts</strong> Council's survey, for example, 2,750courses were run at such centres and of these approximately 40%were <strong>in</strong> the arts and crafts. University extra-mural departments mountedabout 8,500 courses over the same period of which 20% were <strong>in</strong> artssubjects.168


<strong>The</strong> arts have an essential place <strong>in</strong> education whatever the social andeconomic circumstances of the day. However, we are now faced with anew world with new attitudes towards social relations, employment,work and non-work. <strong>The</strong>se raise fundamental questions about thepurposes of school<strong>in</strong>g, about the balance of the curriculum and aboutthe whole character of education <strong>in</strong> Brita<strong>in</strong>.<strong>The</strong> recent major reports and statements which have been issued by theSecretaries of State, HMI and the <strong>Schools</strong> Council, for one reason oranother, have <strong>in</strong>cluded only brief references to the arts. It would be aserious matter if this were to lead to arts be<strong>in</strong>g given low priorities <strong>in</strong>schools, now or <strong>in</strong> the future.This book argues the case for the arts <strong>in</strong> schools and considers theconsequent implications and conclusions. Our conviction is that schoolsmust develop broader not narrower curricula and that the arts have animportant place with<strong>in</strong> this approach.'. . . it should be not merely placed but forced <strong>in</strong>to the hands of allheads, governors and adm<strong>in</strong>istrators. . . <strong>The</strong> book bristles with practicalorganisational suggestions, most of which depend more on the exerciseof <strong>in</strong>genuity and imag<strong>in</strong>ation than on the <strong>in</strong>fusion of large amounts ofcash.'Michael Church, Times Educational SupplementThis is an excellent work which should be studied by everyoneconcerned with the future of the arts <strong>in</strong> our society. . . <strong>The</strong>ir <strong>in</strong>quiry hasbeen thorough an i pa<strong>in</strong>stak<strong>in</strong>g, every aspect of arts education has beenlooked at, and the conclusions are set out with clarity and concision.'Norman St John Stevas, <strong>The</strong> Standard (London)<strong>The</strong> book conta<strong>in</strong>s a wide-rang<strong>in</strong>g rationale for arts tra<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g as a way tocounteract the grow<strong>in</strong>g academic bias <strong>in</strong> schools and as a way ofdevelop<strong>in</strong>g other capabilities . .. It conta<strong>in</strong>s a great deal of useful<strong>in</strong>formation about what is be<strong>in</strong>g done and where; abouthow the arts are fitted <strong>in</strong>to timetables, option systems, build<strong>in</strong>gsAuriol Stevens, <strong>The</strong> Observer<strong>The</strong> report ends with 32 recommendations.. . If they were to beimplemented, our schools would surely become truly humane <strong>in</strong>stitutions.I urge readers. . . to place it squarely on their headteacher's desk afterread<strong>in</strong>g it themselves.'William Salaman, Music Teacher<strong>The</strong> <strong>Arts</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Schools</strong> has no whimsy and makes no vague appeals to theheart.. . it establishes the educational reasons why the arts <strong>in</strong> schoolsmust be protected and enhanced.'Peter Dormer, Journal of Art and Design Education

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