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Art In Public Schools: Could A More Creative Curriculum Lower Dropout Rates?

Brianna Sacks |
September 30, 2012 | 6:04 p.m. PDT

Staff Reporter

(Creative Commons/Parker Michael Knight
(Creative Commons/Parker Michael Knight
Where do Los Angeles Unified students go when they have fallen so far behind in high school that they are at risk of not graduating on time, or considering dropping out entirely? 

Continuation schools provide a smaller campus, lower student-to-teacher ratio and more flexibility to allow students to graduate on time. However, a former continuation high school principal says that these schools are still "more of the same" and are not helping L.A. Unified's 62 percent graduation rate, one of the lowest in the state. 

Ran Klarin, a former principal at Westchester Continuation High School, explained that although continuation schools give at-risk students another chance to finish high school at their own pace, the reality is only a small percent of these students actually graduate.

Klarin-who spent 27 years at various positions throughout Los Angeles Unified-is working to change this reality by developing a creative curriculum that better integrates artistic self-expression in students. Klarin believes that when high school students who are so used to failing are presented with an artistic outlet, they have a better chance at excelling academically and graduating.

Klarin was also the Dean of Discipline at Los Angeles High School and the Coordinator of Dropout Prevention for LA Unified from 2006-2007, where he supervised student counselors in over 80 schools.

Klarin says there is a reason that these students are failing academically: "The curriculum doesn't address what many of these at-risk students need. It is hard for them to focus on their English homework when they have a bad home life, or their parents are not involved."

 As a writer and spoken word artist, Klarin decided to introduce a variety of these creative classes to his Westchester students in hopes to evoke interest in an academic environment. Klarin noticed positive changes in at-risk students and realized that public schools should better support the arts, as not every student is able to learn and perform in a strict academic setting. However, Klarin encountered some hesitancy from some district members when he suggested more creative electives.

"The money situation is much worse, and it makes it more difficult for the kids," said Klarin.

Yet Klarin believes that by thinking outside the box and giving these resistant students more opportunities for positive feedback, we may see a change in how students treat school, and in turn, may keep them in school.

Students enter continuation schools because they are behind in credits, far below grade level in reading and math, and many deal with difficult issues outside the classroom that affect their academic performance.

Traditional high schools refer a "very select population of disaffected kids to continuation schools," said Klarin.

Many students have a difficult family life and some come from probation camps to finish their high school education, and a majority are boys, explained Klarin.  

"The mission is to get them ready to graduate, but they generally don't make it," he said. "They just fill space for a couple years."

There are currently 11,000 students in L.A. Unified continuation schools, and the Los Angeles Board of Education recently directed Superintendent John Deasy to create a plan that better assists high school students who "are often absent or struggle academically at traditional high schools, as candidates for campuses with smaller classes that offer more individual assistance from teachers."

A continuation school program is more intense than a traditional high school, and Klarin said that is part of the problem. Although they have access to more resources and are in a classroom setting with 15 students instead of 40, school no longer interests these types of students. 

"A lot [of students] just sign up because they have to go to school, and their probation officers check in on them," he added.

The dropout crisis and students' disinterest in traditional curriculum "demands a new solution and a systemic campaign to provide artistic outlets for students who are academically challenged. Classes in music, drama, art, and dance should not be relegated to electives at the end of high school, but integrated into the core curriculum," Klarin wrote in a blog for the Huffington Post, titled "Fanning the Flame of Creativity."

But Klarin found that the L.A. Unified education system was not developed for the arts. Students were on a very structured academic path, even at continuation schools.

"When I was in the school system I was adamantly opposed to 'hard teaching,'" Klarin said. "Hard teaching," he explained, is spending more time and energy trying to teach struggling students the same material that they did not respond to in traditional high schools.

"Educators are trying to make everyone fit into the same role, and many students don't want to. It's one of the reasons I left LAUSD," said Klarin.

Klarin teamed up with Adwin Brown, another writer and spoken word artist who works with at-risk continuation high school students, to develop a curriculum that enhances creative interests in high school students. 

"I noticed a lot of these students needed a chance to express themselves," said Klarin. "All these kids have stories, a lot have drama in their lives."

Klarin and Brown's lessons present a more creative approach to help struggling students succeed in a high school setting. The program will include lesson plans and text materials, and the two spoken word artists and writers plan to present this curriculum to public schools and market it as a "dropout prevention" program.

The program is still in the works.

"You need to know what is really going on on the ground in these schools," said Klarin. "There is not enough reality based attitude about Los Angeles schools, and a majority of educators are really trying to do a good job, they just face a lot of limitations."

Klarin hopes that continuation schools--and traditional high schools--understand the importance of creative expression for students and start to integrate these types of classes into the current system.

"Creativity is valued by American industry but not the education establishment," he wrote.  "And providing a mode of creative self expression might help this dropout epidemic."

Klarin calls for more part-time arts instructors in every grade, especially high school, to develop and encourage artistic talent, and be looked at as a legitimate scholastic path in high school. 

"My superiors would say things like, 'that's a good idea, but it's rather innovative.' I gained a bad reputation about being 'innovative,'" he said. 

But with about 20 percent of Los Angeles high school students dropping out, Klarin believes that something "innovative" might be the only way to help these at-risk students succeed.

Reach Staff Reporter Brianna Sacks here.



 

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