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FACES IN COMMUNITY EDUCATION: AN EXAMINATION OF THE FLORIDA ARTS AND COMMUNITY ENRICHMENT PROGRAM

This qualitative case study describes the character of the Florida Arts and

Community Enrichment (FACE) program, a community arts organization, and the role it

plays in the lives and education of children and adolescents with at-risk tendencies. To

gain an insider’s perspective of the organization, I conducted research as a participant

observer. The participatory action research model enables participants and the researcher

to share knowledge as equal partners in research, while the appreciative inquiry method

focuses on the organization’s best qualities as a starting point for future improvement.

To collect a variety of data, this study incorporated on-site interviews recorded on

audiocassette, photographs, historical documents, student art, and observations recorded

in the researcher’s journal.

Based on two years of observation and data collection, I learned about FACE’s

employees and students. Its employees do not earn a substantial amount of money,

however, they do their jobs because of their love for the arts and the children. FACE’s

students greatly enjoy attending their organization because it provides them with a safehaven,

meaningful friendships, positive relationships with caring adults, and a place to

explore their many talents.

In addition to learning about the participants, four emergent themes developed.

First, I learned the type of arts organization that best serves children with at-risk

tendencies. Based on what I found at FACE, I argue that an arts organization should be

child centered, located close to children’s homes, unique, offer comprehensive services,

and operate as active learning centers. Second, I discovered the type of characteristics of

a community arts organization’s leader. Third, I learned that FACE, like most child

centered arts organizations, is more recreational than school. FACE balances fun

activities such as structured play with educational activities to capture its students’

interests. Fourth, although FACE’s students attend an arts organization located on the

grounds of a public housing project, some students had negative images of children living

in project housing.

Implications for educational practice showed that children like their art

organization better than school because they felt more valued and respected at their

program. Organizations like FACE capture their interests and make them feel good about

themselves. With this in mind, arts organizations appear to be an inexpensive way to

reduce risk factors in the nonschool hours to children with at-risk tendencies because they

give them something meaningful to do with their free time. Learning lessons from what

works well at FACE, schools can benefit their students with at-risk tendencies by

integrating the arts into academic subject areas, incorporating the community into the

classroom, giving children a choice of what they would like to participate in or how to

create a project, and most importantly, providing them with a nurturing environment. / Dissertation / PhD

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:fsu.edu/oai:fsu.digital.flvc.org:fsu_15793
CreatorsSickler-Voigt, Debrah
Source SetsFlorida State University
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeText
Rightsunrestricted

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