Why Art Education?

http://www.naea-reston.org/whyart.html

"What does art education do for the individual and for society? Why do we 
teach art? How does art contribute to education at all levels? There are many 
good answers to these questions, but three stand out as crucial in today’s 
social and economic climate. We believe that art—and therefore art education—
means three things that everyone wants and needs.

ART MEANS WORK
Beyond the qualities of creativity, self-expression, and communication, art 
is a type of work. This is what art has been from the beginning. This is what 
art is from childhood to old age. Through art, our students learn the meaning 
of joy of work—work done to the best of one’s ability, for its own sake, for 
the satisfaction of a job well done. There is a desperate need in our society 
for a revival of the idea of good work: work for personal fulfillment; work 
for social recognition; work for economic development. Work is one of the 
noblest expressions of the human spirit, and art is the visible evidence of 
work carried to the highest possible level. Today we hear much about 
productivity and workmanship. Both of these ideals are strengthened each time 
we commit ourselves to the endeavor of art. We are dedicated to the idea that 
art is the best way for every young person to learn the value of work.

ART MEANS LANGUAGE
Art is a language of visual images that everyone must learn to read. In art 
classes, we make visual images, and we study images. Increasingly, these 
images affect our needs, our daily behavior, our hopes, our opinions, and our 
ultimate ideals. That is why the individual who cannot understand or read 
images is incompletely educated. Complete literacy includes the ability to 
understand, respond to, and talk about visual images. Therefore, to carry out 
its total mission, art education stimulates language—spoken and written—about 
visual images. As art teachers we work continuously on the development of 
critical skills. This is our way of encouraging linguistic skills. By 
teaching pupils to describe, analyze, and interpret visual images, we enhance 
their powers of verbal expression. That is no educational frill.

ART MEANS VALUES
You cannot touch art without touching values: values about home and family, 
work and play, the individual and society, nature and the environment, war 
and peace, beauty and ugliness, violence and love. The great art of the past 
and the present deals with these durable human concerns. As art teachers we 
do not indoctrinate. But when we study the art of many lands and peoples, we 
expose our students to the expression of a wide range of human values and 
concerns. We sensitize students to the fact that values shape all human 
efforts, and that visual images can affect their personal value choices. All 
of them should be given the opportunity to see how art can express the 
highest aspirations of the human spirit. From that foundation we believe they 
will be in a better position to choose what is right and good."

The National Art Education Association
1916 Association Drive
Reston, VA 20191-1590
(703) 860-8000
Fax (703)860-2960

http://www.naea-reston.org/whyart.html