Community Meeting Notes: Arts education

As part of its strategic planning process, WPF held twelve facilitated meetings, involving nearly 150 civic leaders, practitioners, public officials, and subject-matter experts in areas related to our grantmaking.

The following are notes taken at a meeting held on September 9, 2011 to discuss how WPF should approach future grantmaking in arts education.

Individuals participated with the understanding that they were speaking without attribution, so their names are intentionally omitted from these notes.


Meeting Purpose and Questions

WPF has been supporting Arts Education through collaboration between its Arts & Culture and Children, Youth, & Families program areas, with the major support being for the development and implementation of ArtsRising, a collaboration among three nonprofits to expand arts education for youth in the region in schools and in communities.  In addition, the Foundation has supported other work intended to augment the ArtsRising work, including state-wide advocacy, technical assistance to help arts organizations scale their education work, and exploring the capacity needs of the region’s community arts centers.

We invited representatives of arts organizations, education providers and advocates, and technical assistance providers to discuss the following questions:

Given where we are, and what has been accomplished to date, are we on the right track?  What areas of inquiry/investment should we explore?  What are others doing? Given our desire for “systems change” and sustainable programs/projects, what’s missing?  What should we focus on, given the challenges of the School District of Philadelphia?

Major Points from the Discussion

Insufficient resources are a major challenge for all aspects of arts education—nonprofits, schools, public sector.  There is need to better leverage the scarce resources, through, for example: collaboration among arts providers, higher education, schools; advocacy for support, including use of parents and community members as advocates; and using indicators of effectiveness to make the case for support. 

There is a great need to establish the case for arts education—including not only collecting appropriate data but communicating it well.  Areas of need include: getting adequate School District of Phila (SDP) data, understanding the impact of arts education on student performance, and designing data collection that does not put an undue burden on arts organizations.  It is also important to tie arts education to other education goals, such as reducing drop-outs.

While SDP has been supportive of arts education in the last few years, leadership transition and major budget problems are significant obstacles to expanding arts education.  Other issues with the school district include personnel turnover and insufficient professional development. 

The ArtsRising initiative has a solid start in 5 middle schools and their related zones, but the program is not well known or understood outside of those 5 schools nor beyond the arts organizations participating so far.  There is need for more communications about the initiative and for the documentation and dissemination of its effects.  In addition, the issue of whether to go broad or deep with the initiative needs to be resolved.  How many youth and schools can be served?  What infrastructure is needed within each organization to ensure quality service?

Guidance to WPF

Coalition Building – work to strengthen the network of community organizations that are dedicated to education and the arts.  Support the more diverse, smaller community arts programs as well as the large main stream organizations.  Look for opportunities for partnerships to bring them together. Provide incentives to foster collaboration and help organizations, especially smaller ones, band together to increase impact.

Capacity Building - support and train parents, community members and teachers as advocates.  Develop innovative ways to provide much needed materials to schools through resource banks. 

Resources - use Foundation’s leadership to leverage other funds.  Establish a collaborative among higher education institutions to better leverage resources in developing pipeline of arts teachers.  Incubation of local grassroots models. If they are going to accomplish big important things, then corporate and private foundations need to marshal resources.

Convener - pull together players from different sectors including peer funders (statewide and national) to raise awareness of issues and articulate them – it is an intellectual but important conversation.  Don’t be afraid to have intellectual discourse.

Communications/Media - creation of case statement that documents the connection between arts education and innovation, economic development, and the facilitation of learning of other subjects. Deeper discussion about implementation of policies.

Advocacy – look for opportunities to support advocacy through parents and community members.  Create the environment for parent/community inclusion.  Engage non-traditional partners.

Systems change – consider whether a systems change approach (for ArtsRising) is realistic in the face of not having sufficient resources (public or private) and leadership instability in SDP.  Is there a different way to shape our funding of arts education to achieve change?