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Schools extoll virtues of teaching the arts

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“When you are designing sets, you have to draw them out first,” she said. “The stage is a large-scale canvas for you to do whatever you want to do.”

Chapman said he has seen many instances of art helping to transform a student.

“Super shy kids become confident,” he said. “Art teaches them how to express themselves.”

Chapman would like to see the school hire another art teacher. The school now has four full-time art teachers and one part-time teacher, he said.

“We would be able to have more classes, and the teachers would be able to specialize in their areas,” Chapman said.

Patty O’Neil, Geneva School District’s assistant superintendent for curriculum and instruction, said the district knows the importance of arts in education.

“So much of what students learn in the arts translates to other areas,” she said.

Kaneland School District spotlights the arts through its annual Kaneland Community Fine Arts Festival, which will be held April 21 at the Kaneland High School campus. The festival, which has been held since 1998, has grown from a two-hour show that attracted 200 people to a seven-hour show that garners 3,000 people.

The festival showcases not only professional art but also student artwork.

“It’s a natural driving force of any human being, the arts and having the ability to think in a creative manner,” said Maria Dripps-Paulson, the festival’s executive director and Kaneland High School’s former band director.

She said the festival itself provides students with an arts education.

“They can walk right up to an artist at work,” she said. “That gives them a hands-on, interactive experience.”

Fine Line Creative Arts Center, located near St. Charles, offers a chance for school art teachers at all grade levels to explore new techniques and projects through the teacher institute days it offers. The center also sees 1,200 to 1,300 adults annually enroll in art classes at the center.

“I think everybody has the capacity of being an artist,” said Lynn Caldwell, Fine Line’s executive director. “You might not be a Van Gogh, but you can enjoy what you are doing.”

Jim Kirkhoff, director of development at Water Street Studios in Batavia, said people become inspired to enroll in Water Street’s art classes after walking through Water Street Studios’ gallery and seeing artists at work.


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