Arts education in all schools needs to be a priority and better funded, advocates say
L.A. Unified School District Arts Education Executive Director Rory Pullens, center, visits Normandie Elementary School. (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)
tting school districts on track to offer state-mandated arts programs could require incentives, legislation and enforcement, arts advocates said at a hearing Friday in Beverly Hills.
Arts programs across California have waned in the wake of budget cuts and a sharpened focus on academic subjects measured on standardized tests. Thousands of students in the state don’t have access to arts classes, a violation of state law.
“How do we really force compliance?” said state Sen. Ben Allen (D-Santa Monica), chairman of the Legislature's Joint Committee on the Arts, at a hearing focused on improving arts education.
“How do we really make the case to our school boards and to our superintendents that this is an important part of code?” Allen said. “We’re going to help them put in place good programs, but it’s got to be a non-negotiable portion of the curriculum.”
State law requires that schools provide music, art, theater and dance at every grade level. But the law lacks teeth and few districts across the state live up to the requirement.
Lupita Cortez Alcala, deputy superintendent of the California Department of Education, said the state should focus on providing incentives to school districts such as offering professional learning opportunities, providing funding to share best practices and working to make sure teachers are certified in teaching the arts.Arts education in all schools needs to be a priority and better funded, advocates say - LA Times: