HomeMy WebLinkAbout2005-06-02; Arts Commission; MinutesARTS COMMISSION MINUTES
Present: all except Felicia Shaw
Guests: Carolyn Grant, Executive Director, Museum of Making Music
Meeting called to order at 8:01 a.m.
Minutes of May 5 approved without change.
n Carolyn Grant presented information about the Museum of Making Music located in Carlsbad.
The Museum exhibits the changes in the industry of retail music sales in America. It maintains a
permanent collection of instruments and artifacts, an inter-active area and a gift shop; it conducts
tours of the museum and holds performances by professional musicians; it operates programs,
including New Horizons Band for adults, Music Ventures standards-based K-8 educational
activities, Family Activity Days and a variety of workshops and clinics related to the music field.
Volunteers and interns are critical to its operations, and tourists rather than residents are the
majority of its visitors. Strategic objectives for the next few years are to refine and expand
programming, build awareness toward perception of the museum as a tourist destination, become
a cultural asset and leader in music education, and tell the story of the music products industry.
Chairman Hill asked what the Museum's viewpoint is concerning Carlsbad's future. Ms. Grant
responded that North County has no hub for music, the arts and cultural experiences and she
believes that Carlsbad could become that hub given some of the excellent organizations
developing here, like New Village Arts Theatre, the Carlsbad Music Festival and the Museum.
She encourages collaborations among such groups, such as the partnership the Museum made
with the Music Festival in presenting some of its programming. Commissioner Juncal suggested
that ArtSplash might offer a good opportunity to collaborate.
in The Commissioners discussed the article, "Ten Lessons the Arts Can Teach Us" by Elliot
Eisner (see attachment) on how the arts can be used to achieve more effective learning skills.
Chairman Hill posed the questions of how the Commission could communicate this message to
the community and suggested that Commissioners serving on the grants panel in the autumn
review it then with regard to connecting points in proposed projects.
IV. The Commissioners discussed changing the meeting time. Each member was polled
concerning relative ease or difficulty of convening at specific times of the day. A new meeting
time of 9:00 a.m. was proposed, moved, seconded and unanimously passed. The Commission
directed staff to change the room reservation time and the meeting time noted on the City website
to reflect the new time.
Public Comment Carolyn Taylor announced that this is her last meeting as observer for the
League of Women Voters. She noted that it is a difficult feat to serve in a role that is only
advisory, as the Commission does, but urged the members to continue to advocate, especially for
a community arts center which is sorely needed. She also noted that there seems to be little
connection to the School Board, and that they and the public need to hear the arts education
issues the Commission has been discussing.
Committee Reports
Rita Francis attended "Beauty and the Beast" by the Carlsbad High School Drama Club and
found it very impressive.
Barbara Iserloth amended her May report to include that Judy Poole is attempting to form a
SUAVE program here for Carlsbad schools. She also went to the COAL Children's Art Show
and was very impressed with the quality of the works on display.
Ron Juncal has been creating freestanding rock sculptures at the Tamarack Beach lagoon outlet
that have attracted attention, including Good Morning America which plans to air a segment on
July 15tn about the activity.
Gary Hill also saw "Beauty and the Beast" and agreed that it was of excellent quality. He will be
attending the University of Massachusetts Arts Management Conference June 20-22 and hopes
the "Creative Community" section will provide some guidelines on cultural development. He
has asked Ms.Shaw to work with Ms. Carrillo to develop a presentation on the San Diego Arts
and Culture Commission to capture their information on education. Ms. Carrillo added that
together they can provide both city and state overviews of current activities, issues and strategies.
Manager's Report
Peter Gordon reported that the Opera Competition was not held due to a lack of entrants and the
Sister City Committee is revamping the project. The exhibition "Painted ladies" opens with a
reception for the artists on Sunday and all Commissioners are encouraged to attend. The show is
an interesting mix of very different painting styles on the theme of the female figure.
He distributed the new Jazz Concert Schedule postcards and noted that the series has left Magee
Park because the growth of the audience now exceeds the park's capacity, but it is the intention
to return to the northwest quadrant when possible and that new parks being planned now will
most likely bring other changes of venue in the future. He announced that the Carlsbad Friends
of the Arts will present a check for $28,000 to the City Council on June 14th for TGIF Jazz in the
Parks and Three-Part-Art. The Jazz Program has been expanded this year by 16 pages due to the
interest of advertisers. The concert lineup has several nationally touring acts from outside of our
region. He noted that the Arts Office appreciates the talent of local musicians but also values the
opportunity to bring new music influences to our audience.
Mr.Gordon distributed the 2005 Community Arts Grants guidelines to the Commission and
requested that they review it for any changes they would like to see in 2006. Suggestions should
be provided at the next Arts Commission meeting.
The meeting was adjourned at 9:22 a.m.
Ten
Elliot Eisner
Lee Jacks Professor of Education
Stanford University
The organizers of this meeting have
assigned me a particular topic. I have
been asked to "discuss the intellectual, cre-
ative and developmental skills students
can gain from learning in and through the
arts, the arts in general education and the
current reform movement."
First, work in the arts teaches chil-
dren to pay attention to qualitative rela-
tionships; attention to such relationships
is critical for creating a coherent and
satisfying piece of work. How qualities
interact, whether in sight or sound,
whether through prose or poetry,
whether in the choreographed move-
ment we call dance or in an actor's lines
and gestures-these relationships matter.
They cannot be neglected, they are the
means through which the work
becomes expressive.
One of the most interesting and edu-
cationally important features about
working with qualitative relationships
is that deciding how they should be
composed depends upon somatic expe-
rience, that sense, as Nelson Goodman
(1978) called it, "of Tightness of fit." Is
this the right word to use here? Does
this passage in the painting work? Does
this section need a smoother transition?
Is this color too raw? Questions like
these, which are crucial in the arts, can-
not be answered by appealing to formu-
la; their answers must be found by
appealing to what can be felt.
Now reliance on somatic experience
to know that something fits is not limit-
ed to the arts. To the extent to which
the actual practice of doing science is an
art, it too requires that judgments about
the Tightness of an idea or theory be
determined, at least in part, by somatic
experience. In the arts—and when
fields of study and practices are treated
as arts-the somatic experience of rela-
tionships is a central basis for making
judgments.
What is striking is that so little in the
school curriculum affords children the
opportunity to make such judgments.
The school curriculum is heavily
weighted towards subject matter that
gives students the illusion that tightness
means correctness and that getting
things right always depends upon fealty
to rule; spelling, arithmetic, writing as
they are usually taught are largely
mimetic or rule abiding. Not so the
arts. The arts are
What we have in the
arts is a cognitive use
of the emotions. In
this domain it is
judgment rather than
rule that prevails.
most conspicuous
in their insistence
that relationships
are central and that
good relationships
are achieved when
the mind works in
the service of feel-
ing. As Israel
Scheffler (1977)
says, what we have in the arts is a cog-
nitive use of the emotions. In this
domain it is judgment rather than rule
that prevails.
Second, the arts teach children that
problems can have more than one solu-
tion and that questions can have more
than one answer. If they do anything,
the arts embrace diversity of outcome.
Standardization of solution and unifor-
mity of response is no virtue in the arts.
While the teacher of spelling is not par-
ticularly interested in promoting the
student's ingenuity, the arts teacher
seeks it.
Third, the arts celebrate multiple
perspectives. One of their large lessons
is that there are many ways to see and
interpret the world. This too is a lesson
that is seldom taught in our schools.
The multiple-choice objective test is an
encomium to the single correct answer.
Thaf s what makes the test "objective."
It is not objective because of the way the
test items were selected; it is objective
because of the way they are scored. It
makes no allowance in scoring for the
scorer to exercise judgment, that's why
machines can do it. Reflect for a
moment on the covert lessons such tests
teach students.
When there are multiple ways of
addressing a problem, a child's individ-
ual signature can be affixed to the work.
It also enables the child to say, "Here I
am. This is how I see it."
It is ironic that at a time when educa-
tional reform pushes more and more
towards standardized assessment, uni-
formity of program and homogeneity of
aims, a field that pro-
The greater the vides balance to such
pressure on schools priorities should be
regarded as marginal.
to standardize, the From my per-
greater the need for sPeCtive ** greater
the pressure on
the arts. . . schools to standard-
ize, the greater the
need for the arts, those places where
individuality and productive surprise
are celebrated.
Fourth, the arts teach children that
purposes in complex forms of problem
solving are seldom fixed, but change
with circumstance and opportunity. In
so-called rational approaches to prob-
lem-solving, tike standard paradigm
holds that goals and objectives must be
clear and that once clear, means can be
designed to attain those goals. Once
means are implemented, evaluation pro-
cedures can be used to determine if the
goals and objectives have been reached.
If they have not, new and more effective
means can be used to recycle the
process. It's all very tidy. It's all very
spic and span. Action is thought to fol-
low purpose, and
while means may Learning in the arts
vary, objectives do requires the ability
The problem and willingness to
with this model is surrender to the
that this is not the
way life works; and unanticipated
it's certainly not the •I_M«.- /• .i_
way work in the arts Possibilities of the
proceeds. Purposes, work as it unfolds.
as James March
(1972) reminds us, evolve, they grow
out of action, action does not always
follow purpose. Learning in the arts
requires the ability and willingness to
surrender to the unanticipated possibil-
ities of the work as it unfolds. At its
best, work in the arts is not a mono-
logue delivered by the artist to the
work, but a dialogue. It is a conversa-
tion with materials, a conversation
punctuated with all of the surprises
and uncertainty that really stimulating
conversation makes possible. In the
arts one looks for surprise, surprise that
redefines goals; purposes are held flexi-
bly. The aim is more than impressing
into a material what you already know,
but discovering what you don't.
Fifth, the arts teach children that
despite the cultural bias that assigns to
literal language and number a virtual
monopoly on how understanding is
advanced, the arts make vivid the fact
that neither words in their literal form
nor number exhaust what we can know.
Put simply, the limits of our language
do not define the limits of our cogni-
tion. As Michael Polanyi (1966) says,
we know more than we can tell.
The reduction of knowing to the
quantifiable and the literal is, in my
view, too high a price to pay for defin-
ing the conditions of knowledge. What
we come t6 know through literature,
poetry and the arts is not reducible to
the literal. Why else would we read
Charles Dickens, Elie Weisel, Arthur
Miller, Tennyson of "Emily Dickinson?
Their work hejps us walk in someone
else's shoes.
But empathic participation in the
lives of others is not the only way the
arts enlarge understanding. The arts
help us share the distinctive qualities of
experience that a work of art itself
makes possible.
The delicate contours of a Tang
dynasty vessel, the power of a Colima
effigy, the complex harmonies of a late
Beethoven quartet can be experienced
whether you live in London, Beijing or
Los Angeles, as long
as you know how to
inquire into them.
Learning how to con-
duct such inquiries is
part of what it means
to have an arts edu-
cation. I would go so
far as to say that if
the arts are thought
of as carriers of
meaning, and if the concept of literacy
is extended to mean the ability to
express and recover meaning within the
cultural forms in which meaning can
appear, then an education in the arts is
one way to expand our literacy.
Sixth, the arts teach students that
small differences can have large effects.
The arts traffic in subtleties. Paying
attention to subtleties is not typically a
dominant mode of perception in the
ordinary course of our lives. We typical-
ly see in order to recognize rather than to
explore the nuances of a visual field;
how many of us here have really seen
the facade of our own house? I suspect
few. One test is to try to draw it. We
tend to look at our house or for our
The arts make vivid
the fact that neither
words in their literal
form nor number
exhaust what we can
know.
house in order to know if we have
arrived home, or to decide if it needs to
be painted, or to determine if anyone's
there. Seeing its visual qualities and
their relationships is much less common.
Yet learning to see and hear is pre-
cisely what the arts teach; they teach
children the art, not only of looking, but
also of seeing, not only of listening, but
also of hearing. They invite students to
explore the auditory contours of a musi-
cal performance, the movements of a
modern dance, the proportions of an
architectural form so that they can be
experienced as art forms. Seeing in
such situations is slowed down and put
in the service of feeling.
But if you think my interests are lim-
ited to the fine arts, let me assure you
that I have no appetite to limit the scope
of aesthetic experience to the fine arts.
Reflections on the wet pavement of city
streets, cloud formations, billboard
posters ripped from the walls of a
building and displaying the luscious
surface of a collage are also candidates
for the kind of seeing I am talking
about. There is, however, a difference
between such forms and what we think
of as works of art. Works of art partici-
pate in a tradition, they are invested
with intention by their creators, they are
a part of a social context, and they have
been influenced
by their history.
Understanding
such conditions
matter. After all,
anything seen can
be seen from a
purely formal per-
spective, from
garbage cans to
snowflakes. The
perception of
works of art, and I
The arts traffic in
subtleties.... They
teach children the
art, not only of
looking, but also of
seeing, not only of
listening, but also of
hearing.
include the arts of
popular culture as well, require more.
Seventh, the arts teach students to
think through and within a material.
All art forms employ some means
through which images become real. In
music it is patterned sound; in dance it
is the expressive movement of a dancer
in motion; in the visual arts it is visual
form on a canvas, a block of granite, a
sheet of steel or aluminum; in theater
it's a complex of speech, movement and
set. Each of these art forms uses materi-
als that impose upon those using them a
certain set of constraints. They make
certain demands. They also provide an
array of affordances.
Materials offer distinctive opportu-
nities. To realize such opportunities,
the child must be able to convert a
material into a medium. For this to
occur, the child must learn to think
within the affordances and constraints
of a material and to employ techniques
to make the conversion of a material
into a medium possible. A material is
not the same as a medium or vice
versa. Material is the stuff you work
with. A medium is something that
mediates. What does something medi-
ate? It mediates the choices, decisions,
ideas and images
that the individual
has. The problem for
uses materials that the child is to take
., some material—impose upon those drawings/ paintings/
using them a certain sculptures—and
think within the con-set of constraints. straints and affor.
They make certain dances of that mate'
rial the shape that
demands. that image needs to
take. For example, if
you give a youngster
a ball of plasticine clay and ask him to
sculpt a tree, you'll get one kind of an
image. If you ask him to draw a tree,
you'll get another kind of image. What
the youngster is doing is working with
the structural equivalents of the idea of
tree within the constraints and the
Each of the art forms
affordances of the material-a sophisti-
cated form of thinking.
This conversion process occurs not
only within the material; it also occurs
within the child for it is through the
work of art that we make ourselves.
The "work of art" is what one does
when engaged in an activity in which
the end view is something aesthetic.
Thus the phrase "work of art" refers to
both the task of making art and the
result of such work. It is both a noun
and a verb. It is activity whose conse-
quences live not
only in the object One of the great aims
but also in the of education is tomaker. The work
of art is both a make it possible for
product and a , . , ,
means through Pe°Ple to be engaged
which we make in the process of
ourselves.
The arts are creating themselves.
about recreation,
the emphasis on "re-creation." What is
being re-created? Oneself. One of the
great aims of education is to make it
possible for people to be engaged in the
process of creating themselves. Artists
and scientists are alike in this respect.
The inventive ones are troublemakers.
The trouble that they make is for them-
selves because what they do is generate
problems. The generation of those
problems creates disequilibrium in their
homeostatic system, which is a motivat-
ing force in trying to resolve that prob-
lem. In that process of resolution, the
individual gets redefined by the quali-
ties, ideas and skills that he or she
develops in trying to cope with those
problems. With the arts, we have a set
of activities that deal with the problem
of trying to create qualitative relation-
ships that satisfy some image of aesthet-
ic virtue as the youngster sees it.
How does the remaking of ourselves
occur? First, works of art often de-
familiarize aspects of the world by
recontextualization. Marcel Duchamp's
urinal entitled The Fountain and placed
in a museum, represents an invitation to
see, in a new way and, in the process,
calls attention not only to the work itself
but to what counts as art.
A second source of remaking is that
works of art focus attention on what
would normally go unseen. When the
arts are well taught they can reframe the
student's perception of the world.
This reframing can take place from
the "lessons" that the works of others
teach, as well as through the students'
efforts to reframe them on their own.
The arts provide permission for such
reframing. Although new theories in
science also represent a reframing, in
science we usually expect some corre-
spondence between a scientific repre-
sentation and what we refer to as reali-
ty. In the arts the scope for a "no holds
barred" imaginative reframing is not
constrained by such expectations.
An eighth lesson the arts teach has
to do with the nature of discourse about
art. Talk about the arts makes some
special demands on those who speak
about them. Think, for a moment,
about what is required to describe the
qualities of a jazz saxophone solo by
John Coltrane, the surface of a painting
by Helen Frankenthaler or the expres-
sive character of a bronze sculpture by
Barbara Hepworth. The task is not to
replicate in language the qualities these
works possess because clearly no such
replication is possible. It is rather to
imply through language qualities that
are themselves ineffable, hence the trick
is to say what cannot be said. It is here
that innuendo and connotation are
among our strongest allies. It is here
that that most powerful of linguistic
capacities, metaphor, comes to the res-
cue. Using metaphor, Suzanne Langer
(1952) reminds us, is a way of saying
something one way and expecting to be
understood in another. Metaphor
adumbrates, it does not translate.
When children are given the oppor-
tunity to describe, discuss and interpret
what they see, when they are invited to
disclose what a work helps them feel,
they must reach into their poetic capaci-
ties to find the words that will do the
job. This is a job that is well known to
them for it emerges in the neologisms of
toddler talk and it appears in the ver-
nacular poetry we call slang. Criticism
in the arts is not only a way to describe
what you have seen, it is also a road to
sight. The critical act, the task of trying
to articulate what is before us, is also a
way of discovering what is there.
Ninth, the arts enable us to have
experience we can have from no other
sources and through such experience to
discover the range and variety of what
we are capable of feeling.
Consider the
experience we Criticism in the artsundergo in the pres-
ence of a truly great is not only a way to
piece of architecture, , ., , .Frank Lloyd descnbe what you
Wright's Falling have seen, it is also
Water, for example, .
or music such as a road to **&*- ^
Beethoven's critical act, the task
"Hallelujah Chorus"
from Christ on the of frymg to articulate
Mount of Olives. what is before us,
Some works of art
have the capacity to is also a way of
put us into another
world, bo starring is
the journey that we there.
surrender to where
the work takes us.
I am fully aware that such experi-
ences are not the common stock-in-trade
of the average eight-year-old. As one of
my former painting teachers once told
me, great works of art require great
audiences. Eight-year-olds typically are
not yet great audiences, but we wish to
help them be. We wish to help them
s
learn how to read—and create—such
images. In short, we want to help them
acquire the forms of literacy that will
give them access to such work and to
the joy, delight and insight they make
possible. If this is elitism then we
should try to expand the elite.
I have been describing what the arts
teach by identifying some of the cogni-
tive processes they require, but I have
been describing these processes as if they
functioned independently. They do not.
They interact. What this means, for
example, is that attention to nuance must
be addressed at the same time one is
attending to matters of composition, that
purposes must be treated flexibly while
one is attending to matters of technique,
that thought in language and thought in
image function simultaneously. Far from
being simple, the creation of an image,
whether visual, musical, choreographic
or dramatic, is a complex form of human
achievement in which everything affects
everything else.
Such educational achievements have
deep importance and they take time.
We are all too eager to attain education-
al ends that might not really matter.
The national preoccupation with
"world-classness" in this or that subject
"by the year 2000" typically pushes us
toward short-term goals, not lasting
effects. We are too
The lessons that the eaSer to settle for
attention to symp-
arts teach require toms and to problem-
time, attention and atic Proxies for <luali-ty education.
skilled teachers ... We need to learn
how to take a longer-
term view and to be held accountable
for more than the merely measurable.
The lessons that the arts teach require
time, attention and skilled teachers who
know what they are after.
We are after much more than what
can be displayed on the refrigerator
door. When that image dominates the
public's conception of what the arts are
for, the arts will remain marginal, and
when that image dominates the teaching
of the arts, they should remain marginal.
A tenth lesson the arts teach, and the
last one I will describe, pertains to mat-
ters of value. The position of the arts in
the school curriculum symbolizes to the
young what adults believe is important.
The values the young internalize are sel-
dom internalized by admonition; they
permeate the environment and seep in
slowly like water through the sand.
Values are conveyed through the forms
of life in which they
participate. For chil- The position of the
dren these forms of arts in the school
curriculum
young what adults
life are made palpa-
ble by the value
choices that the
adults around them Symbolizes to the
make. Among the
most important of
these choices is what believe is important.
schools should
teach. The curriculum of the school
shapes children's thinking. It is a mind-
altering device; it symbolizes what
adults believe is important for the young
to know, what is important to be good at.
It tells the young which human aptitudes
are important to possess. It gives or
denies children opportunities to leam
how to think in certain ways.
Since children are compelled by law
to spend the major portion of their child-
hood in school, the modus vivendi of the
school, and especially the course they
must run and the criteria used to deter-
mine who among them is the swiftest,
matters a great deal. Curriculum deci-
sions, therefore, about content inclusion,
content exclusion and content marginal-
ization help shape the forms of life that
constitute school. The school socializes in
such powerful and ubiquitous ways that
how it does so is hardly noticed.
The value of a subject of study is not
only a function of its presence in the
curriculum; it is also a function of the
amount of time the school devotes to it.
Indeed, the most telling index of the
importance of a field of study is not
found in school district testimonies, but
in the amount of time it receives and
when it is taught in the school day and
week. Add to these considerations the
relationship between what is tested and
what is regarded as important and you
have a recipe for defining what counts
in school.
I want to make it clear that in point-
ing out the virtual absence of testing in
the arts, I am not advocating that stu-
dents be tested in the arts. I do, of
course, advocate that teachers evaluate
the student's work, their curriculum
and their own teaching so that the pro-
grams they provide can be strength-
ened, but that is another matter.
The point here is that as a result of a
collection of decisions, the general mes-
sage conveyed to students regarding the
arts is that they are marginal to the
school's central purposes. That is a
message that needs to be changed.
Bringing about that change will require
both educational and political initia-
tives. Educational initiatives enable
those who shape curriculum decisions
to secure a deeper understanding of
what the arts teach, and political ones
bring to bear on those same individuals
a collective pressure to provide the
young with opportunities to have
meaningful access to the arts.
In my comments to you I described
ten lessons the arts teach. These lessons
pertained to the kind of thinking the
arts promote. Far from the ornamental
functions usually assigned to them, the
arts practice and develop modes of
thought that are most complex and sub-
tle. The ability to make choices about
relationships in the absence of rule,
attention to nuance, the ability to
exploit the unexpected, learning how to
deal effectively with tasks that have
multiple solutions, finding words that
say what words cannot say — these are
some of the lessons I have described.
If I were to summarize these contri-
butions in three simple terms, I would
say that the arts contribute to the
growth of mind, meaning and experi-
ence. They contribute to the growth of
mind for all the reasons I described.
They afford the young opportunities to
learn how to think in particular ways,
ways that may be closer to the tasks of
the life they will lead than what they
normally encounter in school.
The arts contribute to the growth of
meaning because they teach the young
how to access meanings that elude the
impress of the literal. The arts are
appealed to at marriages, courtships,
religious rites and funerals. We use
them in our most tender moments to
express what transcends ordinary lan-
guage. We also use them to walk in
someone else's shoes. They help us
understand what
theory cannot To summarize . . .
explain.
The arts con- the arts contribute to
tribute to the ^ wth
growth of expen- °
ence because they meaning and
remind us of how
it feels to be alive, «penence.
to be moved by
what others or we have made. The arts,
for all of their instrumental value, are,
in the end, about learning how to be
touched. They are about the enrich-
ment of life.
Happily our nation is seeing a grow-
ing interest in the arts and what they
can do for the young. Happily you are
here to help that interest grow and to
help make our children its beneficiaries.
As someone who has been working at
this task for over three decades, I'm
very glad to have you aboard.
Ten »' *f V
Elliot Eisner
The arts teacHchildren to make good judgments about qualitative relationships.
Unlike dfpch of the curriculum in which correct answers and rules prevail, in the arts, it
is judgrnjfht rather than rules that prevail.
The arts teach childremhat problems can have more than one solution
and that quesa'ojjjfcan have more than one answer.
c -- - ,s
The arts celebrate multiple perspectives.
One of their large lessons is that tHfete are many
ways to see and interpret the world. -'
The arts teach children that inJjbmplex forms of problem solving
purposes are seldom fixed/bw change with circumstance and oppor-
tunity. Learning in the aftSTEAuires the ability and a willingness to
surrender to the unantitipafeopossibilities of the work as it unfolds.
The arts make \|v|cl the fact that neither words in their literal form nor number exhaust what
we can know. limits of our language do not define the limits of our cognition.
The arts teach students that small differerj|gs can have large effects.
The arts traffic in subtleties.
The arts teach students to think through and within a material.
All art forms employ some means through which images become real.
The arts help children learn to say what cannot be said.
When children are invited to disclose what a work of art
helps them feel, they must reach into their poetic capacities
to find the words that will do the job.
The arts enable us to have experience we can have from no other source
and through such experience to discover the range and variety of what we are capable of feeling.
The arts' position in trap sfhoral curriculum symbolizes to the young
what adults believl is mpJrtant.