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For Immediate Release
November 13, 2003
Contact:
Alison Cohen
617-618-2109
acohen@edc.org
Kristine Fach
603-494-1031
SmART Schools Gets $817,000 from US Dept. of Education to Enhance Arts Instruction in Selected Schools in New Hampshire and Rhode Island
NEWTON, MA – Elementary schools
in Conway and Manchester, New Hampshire and in Warwick, Rhode Island
have been selected to implement SmART Schools, a program that supports
making the arts a core academic subject in the school curriculum and
strengthens the use of high-quality arts in other academic subjects.
SmART Schools, based at Education Development Center, instruction in
Newton, Mass., has garnered nationwide attention for its results in improving
academic performance by expanding classroom focus on the arts.
SmART Schools, now in nine elementary and middle schools in Rhode Island
and New Hampshire, will be expanded to six new schools with federal funding
from the U.S. Department of Education. The grant, totaling approximately
$275,000 per year for each of three years, will fund testing, refining,
and documenting the SmART Schools program.
"In schools that have implemented this program, students have learned
new ways to create, perform, and respond to the arts," said Program
Director Eileen Mackin. "We're thrilled to be able to replicate
the program, and show students and teachers how academic performance
can improve when dance, music, and drama are integrated throughout the
curriculum," Mackin said.
An example of the SmART Schools approach can be seen in a fourth grade
science lesson about molecules. Students studying liquid, gas, and solid
molecules were asked to choreograph and perform movement pieces to demonstrate
their knowledge of the ways in which molecules behave. "Students
applied scientific principles to elements of movement in order to complete
the task," says Mackin. "Using this approach, teachers are
able to reach many different types of learners and as a result, when
students are later tested, it is easier for them to recall new concepts
they've learned -- in this example, their bodies know the answers as
well as their minds," Mackin said.
Studies show it's working. According to a study conducted by Brown University,
during the first two years of the program in Rhode Island, SmART schools
showed an 8.9% average improvement in percentage of children achieving
the high bar standard of the state testing in mathematics problem solving,
compared to a 2.1% improvement in comparison schools.
SmART Schools has been recognized by the Arts Education Partnership
and the Rhode Island Department of Education. Four of the five original
pilot schools received Creative Ticket Awards from the Kennedy Center
for the Performing Arts. Program supporters include the Rhode Island
Foundation, the Jesse B. Cox Charitable Trusts, the Baker Foundation,
and the National Endowment for the Arts.
Schools participating in the SmART Schools program:
NEW HAMPSHIRE:
- Highland Goffe’s Falls (Manchester) Jim Paul (principal)
624-6334
- Beech Street School (Manchester) Eleanor Murphy (principal) 624-6314
- Pine Tree Elementary (Conway) Laura Jawitz (principal) 447-2882
- Conway Elementary (Conway) Linda Wise 447-3369 Brian Hastings (principal)
RHODE ISLAND
- John Greene School (Warwick) Bonnie Robinson (principal) 401-734-3440
- Oakland Beech School (Warwick) Cathy Davis-Hayes (contact) 401-734-3420
Education Development Center, Inc. (EDC) is one of the world’s leading nonprofit education and health organizations, with 325 projects in 50 countries. EDC brings researchers and practitioners together to advance learning and healthy development for individuals of all ages and institutions of all types. For more information, visit www.edc.org.
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