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Pasadena
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SPOTLIGHT
ON OUR STUDENTS

2007-2008 |
Roy Neely, Pasadena Memorial Student, claims Grand
Prize in the Photography Division at Culture Shapers and wins $5,000.00.
Revelation
Roy Neely
SR: Pasadena Memorial HS
Pasadena ISD
Teacher: Victor Raygoza
2007-2008 All State Members
Dobie HS
Joe Underwood - Trumpet
Tam Duong -
Viola
Pasadena HS
David Hernandez
- Bass
Pasadena Memorial HS
Matthew Barker - Trumpet
Andy Ho - Clarinet
Jason Williams
- Viola
Matthew Mena - Bass
Pasadena Independent
School District Was Named
One of the "Best 100 Communities in America for Music Education"
The Pasadena Independent School District's
Fine Arts Department has many performances throughout the school year. You are
invited to attend these performances to witness the excellent work being done by
both the students and our teaching staff. Be sure to check the
Fine Arts Calendar throughout
the year for a current list of scheduled performances and activities across the
school district.
Read an
important letter from Dr. Rod Paige, Secretary, U.S. Department of
Education, pertaining to the importance of arts education in our schools.
The Fine Arts Department of the Pasadena
Independent School District includes the areas of elementary music, band, choir,
orchestra, visual arts, theatre arts, and dance. There are a total of 223
certified teachers employed by the PISD in the fine arts department.
The Pasadena Independent School District is
committed to the education of the whole child and as a component of that
education believes that every student should have a basic knowledge, skills, and
appreciation of the fine arts. The Texas Coalition for Quality Arts Education
sites the following information about the importance of fine arts education:
Why the Fine Arts Are Important
The arts make a contribution to education that
reaches beyond their intrinsic value as direct forms of
thinking. Because each arts discipline appeals to different
senses and expresses itself through different media, each adds a
special richness to the learning environment. As students
imagine, create, and reflect, they are developing both verbal
and nonverbal abilities necessary to school progress. At the
same time, they are developing problem-solving abilities and
higher-order thinking skills. Research points toward a
consistent and positive correlation between a substantive
education in the arts and student achievement in other subjects
and on standardized tests. A comprehensive, articulated arts
education program also engages students in a process that helps
them develop the self-discipline, cooperation, and
self-motivation necessary for self-esteem and success for life.
The arts teach students to:
 | Understand human experiences, both past
and present; |
 | Adapt to and respect others' ways of
thinking, working, and expressing themselves; |
 | Learn artistic modes of problem solving,
which bring an array of expressive, analytical, and
developmental tools to every human situation; |
 | Understand the influence of the arts, in
their power to create and reflect cultures, in the impact of
design on virtually all we use in daily life, and in the
interdependence of work in the arts with the broader worlds
of ideas and actions; |
 | Make decisions in situations where there
are no standard answers; |
 | Analyze nonverbal communication and make
informed judgments about cultural products and issues; and,
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 | Communicate thoughts and feelings in a
variety of modes, giving them a vastly more powerful
repertoire of self-expression. |
Source-National Standards for Education
in the Arts
What the President's Committee on the Arts and
Humanities Says About Arts Education
 | Research in multiple intelligences, the
brain, and how the emotions strongly effect learning,
supports hands-on, experiential learning through the fine
arts. |
 | A quality fine arts education program
provides students opportunities to acquire basic skills in
kinesthetic, musical, spatial, and visual intelligence,
applicable to learning in all other subject areas.
|
 | Almost all of the information we receive
in the learning process is acquired kinesthetically,
auditorally, and visually. |
 | The fine arts help children better
understand concepts measured on the TAAS tests. The fine
arts "essential knowledge & skills" correlate with, support,
and reinforce reading, language arts, science, and math.
They help teach shapes, color recognition, size
differentiation, letter and number recognition, phonic
recognition, sequencing, following directions, hand eye and
motor coordination, kinesthetic and spatial relationships,
and direction and location. |
 | The fine arts develop valued higher order
and creative thinking skills such as memory, various forms
of communication, and the ability to compare and contrast,
group and label, explain cause and effect, assess
significance, make predictions, and frame and test
hypotheses. |
 | The fine arts improve many students'
self-concepts and self-actualization, attitude towards
school and, as a result, the students' attendance improves,
and the special needs of the "at risk" student are met.
|
 | Research shows not only that the fine
arts are beneficial in themselves, but also that their
introduction into a school's curriculum causes marked
improvement in math, reading, science and other subjects.
|
 | The College Board reported that SAT
scores are considerably higher for students involved in the
arts, and that the fine arts are key to student success in
college. Test scores, attendance, and college entry are
higher, and drop-out rates are lower, in arts-centered
schools in Texas. |
 | The fine arts are vastly important to
technology and multimedia production, as evidenced in their
use in books, magazines, advertisement, television
commercials, music videos, video games, and blockbuster
films such as Jurassic Park, Twister, Toy Story, Mission
Impossible, Independence Day, Space Jam, Lost World, Men in
Black and Titanic. |
 | The arts generate over $300 billion
annually as an industry! The arts represent 6% of the Gross
National Product (GNP). |
Source-National Assembly of State Arts
Agencies
The Pasadena Independent School District believes that a
quality arts education program will enable students to develop self-esteem,
self-discipline, self motivation, and cooperation necessary for success in life.
Ten Lessons the Arts Teach
by Elliot Eisner
Professor of Education
Stanford University
- The arts teach children to make good
judgments about qualitative relationships. Unlike much of
the curriculum in which correct answers and rules prevail,
in the arts, it is judgment rather than rules that prevail.
- The arts teach children that problems can
have more than one solution and that questions can have more
than one answer.
- The arts celebrate multiple perspectives.
One of their large lessons is that there are many ways to
see and interpret the world.
- The arts teach children that in complex
forms of problem solving, purposes are seldom fixed, but
change with circumstance and opportunity. Learning in the
arts requires the ability and willingness to surrender to
the unanticipated possibilities of the work as it unfolds.
- The arts make vivid the fact that words
do not, in their literal form or number, exhaust what we can
know. The limits of our language do not define the limits of
our cognition.
- The arts teach students that small
differences can have large effects. The arts traffic in
subtleties.
- The arts teach students to think through
and within a material. All art forms employ some means
through which images become real.
- The arts help children learn to say what
cannot be said. When children are invited to disclose what a
work of art helps them feel, they must reach into their
poetic capacities to find the words that will do the job.
- The arts enable us to have experience we
can have from no other source and through such experience to
discover the range and variety of what we are capable of
feeling.
- The arts' position in the school
curriculum symbolizes to the young what adults believe is
important.
Source originally published at
www.giarts.org

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The Pasadena Independent
School District is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on
the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, religion, age, or disability in
employment matters, in its admissions policies, or by excluding from
participation in, denying access to, or denying the benefits of district
services, academic and/or vocational and technology programs, or activities as
required by Title VI and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended,
Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, the First Amendment of the United
States Constitution, the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, Section 504 of
the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended, and Title II of the Americans with
Disabilities Act.
For
information about Title IX rights, contact the Title IX
Coordinator, Vicki Thomas, Deputy Superintendent for Campus Development,
1515 Cherrybrook, Pasadena, Texas 77502; (713) 740-0246. For information
about Section 504/ADA rights, contact the Section 504/ADA
Coordinator, Jeanne Nelson, Instructional Specialist for Dyslexia,
Intervention, and 504, 1515 Cherrybrook, Pasadena, Texas 77502; (713)
740-0067.
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