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This is a descriptive case study that examines the impact of an interdisciplinary, arts-centered curriculum on a group of middle school students at a rural school in Florida. In many areas of this country, the arts either face a threat of deletion from the school curriculum or have already been removed from school curricula altogether. The No Child Left Behind act has resulted in the arts being removed from the school, which has a large student population at-risk of educational failure. The Arts-In-Education grant program, through Florida State University's Center of Educational Research and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This is a descriptive case study that examines the impact of an interdisciplinary, arts-centered curriculum on a group of middle school students at a rural school in Florida. In many areas of this country, the arts either face a threat of deletion from the school curriculum or have already been removed from school curricula altogether. The No Child Left Behind act has resulted in the arts being removed from the school, which has a large student population at-risk of educational failure. The Arts-In-Education grant program, through Florida State University's Center of Educational Research and Development, was used to address the problem of poor literacy skills for a single grade-level of children at the middle school by using the arts. By the second year of the grant, Dr. Scriven was given the task of developing a curriculum for the students involved in the study, based on her dissertation idea. Together with co-workers, the Who Do You Think You Are? curriculum was developed and implemented with seventh-grade students. This manuscript entails the outcome of the case study in its entirety.
Autorenporträt
Talicia V. Scriven is currently an art teacher at an elementary school in the metro Atlanta area. She has a doctor of philosophy degree from Florida State University, a master of education degree from the University of Southern Mississippi and a bachelors of science degree from South Carolina State University, all concentrated in art education.