Corporate Partners and Sponsorships
The evidence is clear- education in the arts is critical to developing minds. A 2006 publication called "Critical Evidence: How the Arts Benefit Student Achievement", describes, in nontechnical terms, what the research says about how study of the arts contributes to academic achievement and student success. The following is an excerpt from this publication:
A growing body of studies, including those in the research compendium
Critical Links, presents compelling evidence connecting student learning
in the arts to a wide spectrum of academic and social benefits. These studies
document the habits of mind, social competencies and personal dispositions
inherent to arts learning. Additionally, research has shown that what students
learn in the arts may help them to master other subjects, such as reading,
math or social studies.
Students who participate in arts learning experiences often improve their
achievement in other realms of learning and life. In a well-documented
national study using a federal database of over 25,000 middle and high
school students, researchers from the University of California at Los Angeles
found students with high arts involvement performed better on standardized
achievement tests than students with low arts involvement. Moreover, the high
arts-involved students also watched fewer hours of TV, participated in more
community service and reported less boredom in school.12
The concept of transfer, in which “learning in one context assists learning
in a different context,” has intrigued cognitive scientists and education
researchers for more than a century.13 A commonly held view is that all
learning experiences involve some degree of transfer both in life and learning
outside the school as well as learning within the school. However, the nature
and extent of these transfers remain a topic of great research interest. Recent
studies suggest the effects of transfer may in fact accrue over time and reveal
themselves in multiple ways.
Researchers continue to explore the complex processes involved in learning
and the acquisition of knowledge and skills. One promising line of inquiry
focuses on how to measure the full range of benefits associated with arts
learning. These include efforts to develop a reliable means to assess some
of the subtler effects of arts learning that standardized tests fail to capture,
such as the motivation to achieve or the ability to think critically.
The relationship between arts learning and the SAT is of considerable
interest to anyone concerned with college readiness and admissions
issues. The SAT Reasoning Test (formerly known as the SAT I) is the
most widely used test offered by the College Board as part of its SAT
Program. It assesses students’ verbal and math skills and knowledge
and is described as a “standardized measure of college readiness.”
Many public colleges and universities use SAT scores in admissions.
Nearly half of the nation’s three million high school graduates
in 2005 took the SAT.
Multiple independent studies have shown increased years of
enrollment in arts courses are positively correlated with higher
SAT verbal and math scores. High school students who take arts
classes have higher math and verbal SAT scores than students
who take no arts classes.
Arts participation and SAT scores co-vary—that is, they tend to increase linearly: the more arts classes, the higher the scores. This
relationship is illustrated in the 2005 results shown below. Notably,
students who took four years of arts coursework outperformed their
peers who had one half-year or less of arts coursework by 58 points
on the verbal portion and 38 points on the math portion of the SAT."
(© 2006 by the National Assembly of State Arts Agencies. All rights reserved. Read entire publication here.)
Yet, despite all this information, we continue to see cuts in local and federal funding for theater programs such as the one at South. We really struggle to survive.
If not for individual contributions, corporate sponsorships, advertisements in Paladin Playbills and ticket sales, there would be no theater program at South for these exceptional students.
Please consider how your company can help support the performing arts at South Plantation High School. Many corporations have foundations and offer grants. If you work for one of these, contact us and let us know what steps we need to take to apply. Or, if you are a small business, make a donation to the South Plantation Friends of the Theatre.
At this time the Friends of the Theatre would like to thank the corporate sponsors listed on this page for their ongoing support of the performing arts at South Plantation High School. The shows simply could not go on without their help. |