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Guest Blog: Ted Wiprud, Director of Education/NY Philharmonic: Arts Education Advanceman for the NY Phil on Tour

Please join me in welcoming to Dewey21C, my dear friend Ted Wiprud, Director of Education at the New York Philharmonic. I've known Ted for over 10 years, going back to his days at Meet The Composer. We used to do professional development workshops together for composers, and I have been a big fan of his music (yes, he's a composer!). Ted is on the road right now, in Japan, Korea, and Abu Dhabi. He's leading arts education work in those cities in advance of the New York Philharmonic musicians who are on tour.Ted wanted to share some of his … [Read more...]

Looking For a Few Good Panelists…

Peer reviewers to be exact. And, hey, it's not me that's looking, but it's the USDOE.That's right the USDOE is looking for peer reviewers for it's Race to the Top Fund.So, if you have "experience providing thoughtful, objective, constructive, and timely oral and written feedback to applicants and/or organizations on successes and opportunities for improvement," or a "deep understanding of teaching and learning, specifically K-12; or an "understanding of and experience with implementing student-achievement-focused reform plans at scale in order … [Read more...]

And Then There Was NCLB

Secretary of Education Arne Duncan has been mainly occupied with education stimulus dollars, more than anything reflected in the frenzy around his Race to the Top Fund. It is, after all, a $4.3 billion fund available to state education departments through a competitive application process. Final guidelines are to appear sometime within the next three weeks. Stay tuned!A lot of people have been wondering about NCLB. Here comes Duncan today with a big speech about NCLB, essentially moving it from the back to one of the front burners. Secretary … [Read more...]

The Big Bang Theory of Arts Education

This is a repost of a blog that I wrote last December. After a few recent circuitous conversations about arts integration versus arts as a discrete discipline, I thought it a good idea to repost. As George Harrison once sang: "It seems like years since it was clear."Once upon a time, most public schools had substantial arts education, with music and art most often recognized as the formal, official art forms. Dance and theater more often appeared as extracurricular activities, i.e., drama club. For many, many years, classroom teachers were … [Read more...]

Advocacy Tools: Candidate Questionnaires on Arts Education

Okay, The Center for Arts Education asked the candidates for key campaigns in New York City to complete questionnaires about their positions on K-12 arts education in the New York City Public Schools.Click here to view the press release about the Public Advocate QuestionnairesClick here to view the completed questionnaires for:Bill DeBlasio, DemocratMark Green, DemocratAlex Zablocki, RepublicanDeBlasio and Green are facing off in a runoff election to determine the Democratic candidate on September 29th.Shortly, I will post the responses for the … [Read more...]

What does it take to get into a select arts high school?

In this case, the article is focusing on the LaGuardia High School of Music and Art and Performing Arts. It's great to read about students at the very top of high school arts education in New York City. At the same time, it makes me think back to when I graduated high school, when in addition to LaGuardia (then it was two separate schools: Music and Art High School and The Performing Arts High School), you didn't have to audition for and depend on a specialized schools because so many of the schools had superb programs. It was evident through … [Read more...]

How Arts Training Improves Attention and Cognition–From the Dana Foundation

Have I ever mentioned that I love the Dana Foundation. Full disclosure: the organization I work for receives funding from Dana. With that out of the way, I just want to say I think they're one terrific funder and partner, doing exemplary work that is both unique, helpful, and dynamic. Dana's current issue of Cerebrum features How Arts Training Improves Attention and Cognition.Does education in the arts transfer to seemingly unrelated cognitive abilities? Researchers are finding evidence that it does. Michael Posner argues that when children … [Read more...]

Is It Time to Throw in the Towel on Education Reform? A Speech by Checker Finn

This is a terrific bird's eye view of the kaleidoscope of education reform. Whether you agree  with his conclusion or not, it's more than worth the read.Click here to read Checker Finn's September 9th speech to Rice University's Educational Entrepreneurship Program.Hirsch wants a new K-8 curriculum, for instance. The NEA (National Education Association) wants more of what it's always wanted. Charter critics want tighter regulation. Some Republicans want greater freedom for states and parents. Some Democrats want less freedom. Arne Duncan … [Read more...]

Chicago Public Radio Looks at Music and the Brain

Last Friday, the Chicago Public Radio program Eight Forty-Eight took a look at music and the brain in a segment titled Researchers Probe How Music Rewires the Brain.Click here to read the transcript or listen to the segment online.So, listening to brainwaves is kind of weird and fun, but why care so much about the brainstem? Well, how good a job it does recording sound is a crucial step in the process of hearing. Understanding how exact the recording is, or where it might get fuzzy, can tell us about a person's reading problems, or why … [Read more...]

Should Arts Education Hitch its Wagon to 21st Century Skills?

In most respects this couldn't be more timely, as the upcoming forum of the Arts Education Partnership is focused heavily on 21st Century skills, and features none other than Ken Kay, President of the Partnership for 21st Century Skills. Mr. Kay is also the CEO and Founder of the E-Luminate Group, which is an "education consulting firm specializing in marketing communications and 21st century skills services." (I have enough on my hands with one job, you have to wonder how Mr. Kay can be the CEO of one company and the President of … [Read more...]

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