Skip to content
Cart
Teachers College Press
  • Blog
  • Permissions
  • About
  • Catalogs
  • Series
  • Contact
  • New Releases
  • Browse Books
  • Authors
  • ERS
  • Upcoming Events
  • Resources
  • New Releases
  • Browse Books
  • Authors
  • ERS
    • ERS Overview
    • ERS News
    • ITERS
    • ECERS
    • FCCERS
    • SACERS
    • PAS & BAS
    • ERS Resources
    • Training
    • Links
    • Purchase orders
  • Upcoming Events
  • Resources
    • For Customers
    • For Authors
    • For Booksellers
    • For Librarians
  • Blog
  • Permissions
  • About
    • Our Staff
  • Catalogs
  • Series
    • Culturally Sustaining Pedagogies Series
    • Disability, Culture, and Equity Series
    • Early Childhood Education Series
    • International Perspectives on Education Reform Series
    • Language and Literacy Series
    • Multicultural Education Series
    • Practitioner Inquiry Series
    • Research and Practice in Social Studies Series
    • School : Questions
    • Speculative Education Approaches Series
    • Spaces In-between Series
    • STEM for Our Youngest Learners Series
    • Teaching for Social Justice Series
    • Technology, Education—Connections
    • Visions of Practice Series
  • Contact
‹ Browse Books

How the Arts Can Save Education

Transforming Teaching, Learning, and Instruction

Erica Rosenfeld Halverson

Foreword by: Ellen Weinstein

Publication Date: October 22, 2021

Pages: 168

Series: Technology, Education--Connections (The TEC Series)

Available Formats
PAPERBACK
ISBN: 9780807765722
$36.95
HARDCOVER
ISBN: 9780807765739
$111.00
EBOOK
ISBN: 9780807779767
$36.95
How the Arts Can Save Education 9780807765722
Google Preview
  • Description
  • Author
  • Reviews
  • Contents

Description+

This book provides a blueprint for using the arts—performing, visual, and multimedia—to rethink what good learning, teaching, and curriculum can be. The author presents a bold plan for saving education with an arts-based approach to teaching that focuses on risk-taking as the most important aspect of a successful classroom. Halverson offers new models for learning that embrace the social, cultural, and historical assets that kids bring to the classroom, with guidance for designing engaging learning experiences for all grades and subject areas. Featuring many evocative examples from Whoopensocker, the author’s in-school artist-in-residence program, this resource illustrates how classroom practices and school structures can be reorganized for more inclusive success. Readers will learn how to reframe learning as acts of metacognitive representation, identity, and collaboration. And lots and lots of joy.

Book Features:

  • A guide for using theater, music, visual arts, dance, and digital media to transform the process of teaching and learning.
  • Guidance for building learning environments with art at the core, as opposed to adding art to curricula built around standardized tests.
  • Specific examples designed to inspire students’ creativity through writing, improvisation, and performance.
  • Exemplars culled from the author’s 25-year history of making art with young people.
  • Accessible language appropriate for nonacademics and nonexperts.

Author+

Erica Rosenfeld Halverson is a professor in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. In 2020, she received the Chancellor’s Distinguished Teaching Award. Visit Erica’s website at ericahalverson.com.

Reviews+

“Halverson blends insightful scholarship with humorous narrative to make a convincing case for the importance of the arts in education. This book speaks directly and inspiringly to teachers and teacher educators about creative, necessary classroom practices with today’s youth.”
—Johnny Saldaña, professor emeritus, Arizona State University

“A must-read for all educators…Erica shines a light on the impact and transformative power of high-quality arts experiences in the life of young learners and reflects on what happens in the moment when students are engaged at the highest level, when they are given real-world reasons for working hard. It is a focus on deep learning that transfers to everything that follows in the life of a student.”
—From the Foreword by Ellen Weinstein, artistic director, National Dance Institute

Contents+

Contents

Foreword  Ellen Weinstein ix

Acknowledgments xi

Introduction: Something Extraordinary of Its Kind 1
We Built This City … on Educational Research 3
Learning In and Through the Arts 4
Improv as the Model for Good Teaching 5
Reimagining Curriculum Through the Lens of Design 7
The Arts Take Center Stage 8
Taking the Arts to School 9

1. Whoop It Up! Sock It to Me! 11
Whoopensocker (n.): Something Extraordinary of Its Kind 12
Telling Stories, Adapting Stories, and Performing Stories 14
Telling Stories 17
Adapting Stories 24
Performing Stories 25
“The Joe” 26

2. We Built This City … On Educational Research 30
A Place for Cognitive Science (and Cognitive Science in Its Place) 30
The New Literacies 35
Culturally Relevant and Sustaining Pedagogies 40
Bringing Cognitive Science, the New Literacies, and Asset Pedagogies Together Through the Arts 43

3. Learning in and Through the Arts 46
An Argument in Favor of Transforming Learning 46
How Can the Arts Reshape Learning? 48
Representations + Identity + Collaboration = Learning! 66

4. Improvisation as the Model for Good Teaching 68
What Is Improv? 69
Improv Is Good Teaching 70
What Does Teaching-as-Improv Look Like? 77
What Do We Do Now? 83

5. Reimagining Curriculum Through the Lens of Design 84
Why Talk About Design? 85
Three Things! 88
From Curriculum to Design 99

6. The Arts Take Center Stage 100
Act I: The Accountability Machine 101
Act II: The Rise of STEM 104
Act III: Putting the Arts at the Center 110

7. Taking the Arts to School 113
Big Idea 1: Honor Risk-Taking as an Essential Feature of Teaching and Learning 113
Big Idea 2: Embrace Identity and Representation as Core Ideas, but Do Not Mistake One for the Other 119
Big Idea 3: Taking Collective Responsibility 125
Every Idea Is a Good Idea 129

Notes 130

References 133

Index 141

About the Author 151

$36.95

Professors: Request an Exam Copy

Print copies available for US orders only. For orders outside the US, see our international distributors.

Books In This Series
The Educator’s Guide to Designing Games and Creative Active-Learning Exercises
The Educator’s Guide to Designing Games and Creative Active-Learning Exercises
How the Arts Can Save Education
How the Arts Can Save Education
Rethinking Education in the Age of Technology
Rethinking Education in the Age of Technology
What's Worth Teaching?
What's Worth Teaching?
Data Literacy for Educators
Data Literacy for Educators
Assessing the Educational Data Movement
Assessing the Educational Data Movement
The New Science Education Leadership
The New Science Education Leadership
Leading Technology-Rich Schools
Leading Technology-Rich Schools
Digital Teaching Platforms
Digital Teaching Platforms
Sign Up & Save!

Join our e-newsletter to stay current with voices from the field and receive discounts on all new releases.


Sign Up ›
Teachers College Press

Administrative Office
1234 Amsterdam Ave.
New York, NY 10027
Phone: (212) 678-3929

Customer Service
phone 1-800-575-6566
tcporders@presswarehouse.com

Copyright 2025 Teachers College Press|
Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy | Sitemap | Return Policy | Contact
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • Youtube