Return to search

Measuring arts integration teacher effectiveness in non-arts classrooms through student growth

John Dewey is known as the father of American experiential education. His
views on building understanding in children through experiences in a correlated
curriculum continue to influence educational practice to this day. His writings and
experiments with experiential education also influenced music and arts education,
most recently through the formation and implementation of arts integration
programs.

Several well-known arts integration program leaders cite Dewey as a
foundational figure in the existence of their initiatives. While influenced by Dewey,
programs such as the Kennedy Center Changing Education Through the Arts (CETA)
and the Chicago Arts Partnership in Education (CAPE) also are directly connected to
the modern testing movement, and often gauge program success through reporting
on a comparative analysis of standardized test scores. Current teacher evaluation
models also measure student growth, along with teacher effectiveness, through the
use of student test scores. Several arts education figures make an argument against
measuring success in the arts through the use of test scores, stating that the true
impact of study in the arts cannot be measured in this way.

This study piloted a model of measuring growth in arts integration
classrooms through the use of the Tennessee Fine Arts Student Growth Measures
(TFASGM) system, a portfolio-based teacher evaluation and student growth
measurement model. Teachers worked in control and treatment groups to
implement the TFASGM in general education classrooms. Along with using the
model, a teacher treatment group received targeted arts integration training, and
through the model’s results, the impact of the training through teacher effect scores
was also measured.

Results showed teachers receiving arts integration training produced more
significant student growth, and had a greater effect on student performance. Higher
levels of arts integration that are more closely aligned with Dewey’s experiential
education philosophy, such as process-based learning and the exploration of
concepts common to arts and non-arts subjects, were also observed. More study,
including a wider-scale implementation of the TFASGM in arts integration
classrooms, is needed to make more substantial conclusions. However, this study
demonstrates the viability of a growth-based arts teacher evaluation model in arts
integration classrooms, and a new way of reporting on the success of arts
integration programs that is in line with Dewey’s experiential, growth-based
philosophy.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bu.edu/oai:open.bu.edu:2144/26422
Date30 October 2017
CreatorsFoust, Brad
Source SetsBoston University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation

Page generated in 0.0024 seconds