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What is Arts Integration?
Arts integration is a term applied to an approach to teaching and learning that uses the fine and performing arts as primary pathways to learning. Arts integration differs from traditional arts education by its inclusion of both an arts discipline and a traditional subject as part of learning (e.g. using improvisational drama skills to learn about conflict in writing.)
The goal of arts integration is to increase knowledge of a general subject area while concurrently fostering a greater understanding and appreciation of the fine and performing arts. The impetus for arts integration is a growing body of research that demonstrates how learners experience success when taught why and how to use music, visual art, drama/dance, theatre and the literary arts to both express and understand ideas, thoughts and feelings.
In the arts integration projects that follow, ArtsWork in Education (AWE), a statewide initiative founded in 2006 with a generous grant from the Rosaria Haugland Foundation, joined with E3 to bring teachers and teaching artists together. These partnerships created a learning environment for students where academic rigor is enhanced through students’ creative expression, and learning is bolstered by students’ growth as successful creative problem solvers. |
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Arts Integration Examples
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Partner Portraits
Language Arts |

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North Eugene Academy of Arts language arts instructor Aaron Thomas worked with local photographer, Jennifer Salzman, through ArtsWork in Education to help students better understand and internalize the concepts of narrative, character development and perspective while reading Ricochet River. In pairs, students conducted in-depth interviews with one another, and then wrote first- and third-person perspective stories using details from their interviews. Combining their writing, photographs and other images, each student created a representative collage portrait of their partner.
"While all of these students may not end up being writers, they have learned that stories are all around them and that it takes skill and attention to tell them."
--Aaron Sherman
The project goals were to:
- Understand the qualities of character, perspective and narrative in the novel Ricochet River
- Explore the qualities of character, perspective and narrative through personal interviews and first- and third-person written storytelling
- Represent ideas and tell a story using photographs and other visual images as symbols
- Foster habits of mind
- Explore the aesthetics of photography and collage
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Valuable Links
on Arts Integration
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