American educators and policymakers have often claimed that the arts can have powerful effects in education and that these effects may reverberate far beyond the arts. Arts education has been argued to have social, motivational, and academic repercussions. But are such claims rooted in empirical evidence, or are they unsupported advocacy? The studies in this issue review systematically what is known about the power of the arts to promote learning in non-arts domains. Thus, we focus here only on the claims that have been made about the effects of arts education on cognitive, academic outcomes. Our goal is to deconstruct the myths about arts education by taking a careful look a the empirical evidence.
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Ellen Winner
Author
Boston University
Lois Hetland
Author
Citation
ISSN
:
0021-8510
Publication Name:
Journal of Aesthetic Education
Volume:
34
Number:
3-4
Page Number:
3
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