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WHEREAS, the Elementary & Secondary Education Act
(ESEA) recognizes the arts as a core academic subject, allowing federal K-12
funds to support arts education; and WHEREAS, such federal funds include Title I of the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act, as authorized through ESEA, as
well as funds for teacher training and professional development, technology,
after-school and summer programs, and much more; and WHEREAS, Congress affirmed the importance of arts
education by establishing a dedicated arts education program at the U.S.
Department of Education to complement existing programs of the National
Endowment for the Arts; and WHEREAS, a child’s education is not complete unless
it includes the arts; and WHEREAS, the U.S. Department of Education’s most
recent study on the status of arts education found that 1.3 million elementary
school students fail to get any music instruction, 4 million students fail to
get any visual art instruction and 23 million students fail to receive
instruction in theater and dance; and WHEREAS, the U.S. Secretary of Education called the
arts opportunity gap the widest for children in high-poverty schools and cited
it as an absolute equity and civil rights issue; and WHEREAS, the National Endowment for the Arts report
“The Arts and Achievement in At-Risk Youth” found that high-poverty students
who had an arts-rich education were found to have better grade point averages,
lower drop-out rates in high-school, more likely to enroll in college and get
better grades in college than high-poverty students with little arts education;
and WHEREAS, performance results from the federal Arts In
Education program demonstrate the ability of arts integration to boost
achievement results among low-income and minority students; WHEREAS, local arts agencies, artists, and arts
institutions and organizations stand ready and willing to work with school
districts and teachers to improve arts education. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that members of The United States Conference of Mayors urge local school districts and administrators to maximize the use of federal education funds available through the above-named programs, as well as state funds, to deliver high-quality arts instruction and to integrate the arts with other core subjects.
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