Preview

Principal Tate Case Summary

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
79 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Principal Tate Case Summary
Principal Tate is considering cutting our schools budget for arts education in order to provide student's with more test-prep materials. These would be a big mistake. Everyone should have the best education they can. In order to live fully in the world, students' need to be exposed to culture in the form of music, art, theater, and dance. In Principal Tate cut the art budget, no one will leave School prepared to appreciate and understand the world around them.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Officer Benda was driving through a apartment complex when he saw a man with his car on.…

    • 448 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    I am Doug Wright, the attorney for Patricia R. Ellis. It has been brought to my attention that Hunter D. Ellis has been having some emotional complications that is precipitated by his father’s presence at his Basketball and Baseball games. Hunter has come from a dysfunctional home environment that was caused by his father’s behavior. His father’s paranoia never allowed Hunter to be himself, his father made Hunter feel resentful, inadequate, and powerless. Hunter has previously been picked on and taunted by is father in many occasions, which has involved the police.…

    • 276 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    17 May 2011. All schools are experiencing piercing budget cuts around the nation. Schools are being forced to “nip here, adjust there.” All though the article refers to the cuts as just a nip and adjust, a person would feel like the budget cuts of today’s economy is more like a slash here, burn there. Theses budget cost will force students and teachers to attend new reduced programs at their schools. The cuts themselves are believed to be a “symptom” of a much larger problem- having genuine higher education still exists in our colleges today. Higher education is becoming “streamlined to fit into the demands of the economy, either in terms of conducting basic research that can be exploited for financial gain or by producing competent employees and managers to fill what positions the economy can still provide.” Surprisingly, private school art programs are experiencing the worst of the budget cuts. The percentage of private schools dropping their fine arts program is nearly double the amount of private schools. This article focuses on thirty six connected Arts campuses in the United States that are struggling against keeping their fine arts program alive. It explains how one campus in particular is working tremendously hard to keep their academic programs, which is fine arts, alive at all costs. The campus is currently freezing all faculty staff member’s salary so that they will not have to result to laying-off any of their employees or start cutting any of their lesser taken classes or programs. With the hard and tremendous work that this art community’s campus is doing, with a little help of a microscopic amount of raised tuition of four percent, it is obvious that this school is going to make it through the harsh economy struggles that we are facing today. The school even worked…

    • 1845 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Life without art is boring and dull. But often at times, art is a subject that is underestimated in schools. The art courses in many schools are being cut back across the country. Many classrooms now have little supplies, and some courses are being taken away entirely. There are many reasons to which students need the aspect of art education in their curriculum, whether it is because it is an outlet for them to explore their creativity, or to work in a way that is soothing and in a stress- free environment. Art should be a mandatory subject to be taught in elementary and middle school as a child is growing up, but cutting back on art programs in schools seems to be a common solution to budget cuts since the 1970s when budget cuts began. Fewer public schools are offering art classes, whether it is in drama, dance, or visual art. This decline is due to budget cuts and an increased focus on math, science, and reading. Unfortunately, art classes are the first to be cut from schools, because the arts aren’t taken as seriously as subjects such as math and science because the arts programs are the first to be cut. This is a major problem in education.…

    • 1244 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Ken Robinson’s presentation “Do Schools Today Kill Creativity?” first discusses how the school system limits our children’s creativity. Some children that are believed to have great talents aren’t necessarily more talented than anyone else. Many kids have a talent(s) that the public school system fails to find or embrace. Those who are lucky enough to be talented in an area or subject of what is deemed as “important” in society are ranked above other kids and considered smarter, which in reality is just not true. Robinson believes that we as individuals all have the potential to excel in school, if only we were allowed to explore our talents to find out what it is that we are good at.…

    • 1271 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    I, myself am interested in the educational system and how it both positively and negatively affects students. I found that Ken and myself shared similar viewpoints, however he went into so much depth that it even further opened my mind. This talk impacted me much more than I thought it would; I realized that I have not really thought about it in as much detail as I anticipated. I have become more aware of not only how much the current educational system will affect the future of my generation but upcoming generations and their future. One thing about Ken’s talk that surprised me was the fact the all around the world, the curriculum is the same; all educational systems prioritize the same subjects - the subjects that allow you to prosper, rather, as opposed to the arts. It led me to thinking about how important it is to change the way the curriculum works before it is too late. My mind started to really ponder on all the times that the sciences were immensely stressed, much more than any art based subject. To actually participate in what I was passionate about, in secondary school I had to join a dance program because there were not many options for dance among the “regular” classes. One hundred years from now the world will be full of a completely different population, who may or may not get the chance to see how creative and intelligent young children truly are. The worst case scenario is that due to this ignorance, children will never be given the opportunity to explore their creative minds due to the current limiting educational system. This information has pushed me in a direction to keep a close eye on my younger cousins, who have just recently begun their educational journey. I will ask them questions about their experiences in school revolving around what they do in school, whether they are ever asked to stop doing something they enjoy,…

    • 1681 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    To illustrate, “...remove ‘ed’ endings from all of the state’s English classrooms, saving struggling schools an estimated three million dollars each year.” (258) and “Much like art and music, the past tense provides students with a unique and consistent outlet for self-expression.” (258) Both of these quotes pulled from the text hint at the idea that so many needed programs as regularly cut to save money, such as music and art. To wrap it up, the universal truth is that budget cuts are tearing apart our children’s education and will soon tear it down to…

    • 676 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Persuasive Essay

    • 1386 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Due to the financial crisis there have been many changes made to government programs to reduce costs and help with debt. Many of these cuts are happening statewide, in America’s public schools. The first programs that are being cut are the art programs, and the excuse is that the core classes are more important. The argument is that children need to be more focused on test scores in Math, Science, English and History. It is unfair to single out art classes, there should be a more even spread of budget cuts, not just the sole elimination of the arts. There are parents who are indifferent with the arts and they are unfazed by their removal from elementary public schools. What many of these parents do not recognize is that there are actually benefits of the arts that help with core subjects. Some benefits are strengthening problem solving skills, stimulating critical thinking and helping developmental growth. There is also a duel component that shows that there is a direct correlation between SAT test scores and art programs in schools, as well as higher participation and attendance. It has also been shown that the arts can help boost the economy.…

    • 1386 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Although fine arts programs are usually the first to be cut when budget cuts come to schools, fine arts can be considered the most important thing in a child’s education. A well- rounded education in the fine arts help students develop imagination, observation skills, critical thinking skills, deeper and more complex thinking skills, spatial reasoning and temporal skills, critical analysis, abstract thought, and pattern recognition (Hurley). Research shows that when students study the arts, it leads to higher achievement in other areas, especially when the arts are meaningfully integrated throughout different content areas. A Scientific American editorial which was headlined “Hearing the Music, Honing the Mind,” stated, “Music produces profound and lasting changes in the brain. Schools should add classes, not cut them,”(Russell). According to the “No Child Left Behind” act, the fine arts are counted as one of the ten core subjects. Also under “No Child Left Behind,” it violates federal law to cut arts…

    • 1789 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Houck, Olivia. “2009-10: Against Cutting Art and Music Programs in Schools” Morrison Institute. 19 Mar. 2013.…

    • 1916 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    I Just Wanna Be Average

    • 396 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Mike Rose’s “I Just Wanna Be Average” essay makes me mad, but, at the same time, it makes me realize how lucky I am. I had never been in a special program, so I never thought about the students who were in those programs. Actually, my school had the kind of vocational track that the essay introduced, but I didn’t care about them because I wasn’t part of the track. Therefore, I really didn’t know that the students who were in that kind of special programs could be lost their identity due to poor instruction and suffered from lacking of motivation. Reading this essay, I double-checked that education needs the harmony of students, teachers, and its system. Temporarily, I thought, if there were more teachers who thought like Mr.MacFarland in reality, students would embrace learning because Mr.MacFarland truly knows how to speak to a student.…

    • 396 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Gatto and Holt

    • 1163 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In the essays “Against School” by John Gatto, and “How Teachers Make Children Hate Reading” by John Holt, both authors discuss their views on education and schooling. In both essays the authors analyze education and state their opinions about what is wrong with our schooling system. The authors explain the issues surrounding teachers, teaching styles, and curriculum in our schools.…

    • 1163 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “According to a report, too many music lessons placed insufficient emphasis on actually making music, and too much focus on talking or written exercises.” Also, according to ED.gov, “The percentages of schools making these art forms available went from 20 percent 10 years ago to only 4 and 3 percent”. Schools which have music curriculum sometimes don’t even let the kids play their instruments, and they make them work on sheets instead. This affects a lot of kids in the US. Moneyless schools who do not have music are also affected. To help your music curriculum, support it and donate to it. Help out other schools who are poor if you can. Everyone should have music education because it is like an elixir for the brain, and it is something anyone can do.…

    • 544 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In today’s economic turmoil, schools have been receiving budget cuts across the board. A perfect example would be Lamar University of Texas whose budget was cut by 15 million dollars (Moore) just this year. Furthermore Lamar University lost 120 employees (Moore). Since schools are getting money taken away from them they have to seek elsewhere to recuperate what they have lost; as a result colleges and universities have increased their tuition. We see that the rise in tuition is keeping low and moderate income students from ever attending a higher education institute (Zaho). On the same note Kindergarden-12th grade schools now have more students per classroom, meaning more students less teachers. This effects how much a teacher can teach a student overall, and how much attention one teacher can focus on one student throughout the year. The desired teacher to student ratio is now encroached upon. “There are less supplies, less teachers, less field trips, less extracurricular activities” said Principal Marshall; he later went on to say “The money being taken from education is lowering the overall quality of education” (McCartney).…

    • 1143 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Common Core Curriculum

    • 1162 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Another concern is that in order to encourage the common core some schools have instituted certain measures when score goals are not met; this has led to teachers teaching the test. It has become a growing trend of classes become too focused on hitting each benchmark on time rather than nurturing and developing a student’s mind based upon their individual strengths. The concept of a uniform system is potentially one of the best decisions made in the education system; the down fall is the way this program has been implemented in rigorous form. There is no “cookie cutter” design when it comes to the development of our children. While uniformity leads to equality, foregoing creativity and individualism destroys not only the dreams of children but the foundation of our country as a…

    • 1162 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays