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Founded by Spaniards and settled by a host of other immigrants, Argentina, like the United States, is a country woven from outside influences. Little surprise, then, that a small group of Argentinean experts looked beyond their borders for fresh ideas when they decided it was time to invest in the nation's education reform efforts. Why not import educational ideas like any other essential commodity?
Three winters agoamid the long, slow buildup to Argentina's current financial and political crisisan international bank and several private foundations sent the education experts on an exploratory visit to the Boston Arts Academy (BAA), a pilot school 20 years in the making. Argentina's public schools share with BAA a deep, fundamental respect for the visual and performing arts. They also share a similar student body: largely low-income, minority students, sliding off the bottom end of achievement charts. "We're exporting the belief that every child needs positive learning experiences and high expectations, especially those growing up in poverty," says Linda Nathan, Ed.D.'95, the BAA's dynamic headmaster. "If we can set a new precedent by jump-starting just a few Argentinean schools, this will be among the most important projects I've contributed to." A photo showcase illustrates how the Boston Arts Academy opened its classrooms, performance spaces, and administrative meetings to reveal the collaborative effort behind one school's emerging success. Enthusiasm from the Argentinean contingency led to three more visits over the past two years, and a conversation that continues to this day across 5,400 miles. Nathan has also accepted two invitations to Buenos Aires, where she has shared strategies for enhanced classroom participation with more than 100 teachers, school administrators, and cultural leaders. Raising Voices: Raising Achievement At lunchtime, a young Latina student with the talent and passion of any pop star stands at the back of the cafeteria belting out a Top 40 tune about a genie in a bottle. Classmates join her on the synthesizer, bass, snare. The rest of the student body and their teachers rock out. Feet stomp. Bodies sway. Hunger makes an easy leap from body to spirit.
For decades, arts educators and researchers have praised the arts for fostering student participation and raising attendance rates. This morning, it's easy to see why. According to Nathan, engagement like this often translates into achievement. Students sometimes grasp the concept of fractions while reading a music score in 3:4 time or while enlarging a small-scale drawing into a mural. Modernizing a Greek tragedy can lead to deep exploration of history, geography, and reading comprehension. Last year, 88 percent of the school's first graduating class went on to one-, two-, and four-year colleges. That is nearly three times the number of new college students reported in 1999 by the Boston Public School system. In just three years, the school's failure rate on the MCAS (Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System) exam, the state's mandated student-assessment test, has dropped from 64 to 17 percent on the English language arts exam, and from 84 to 29 percent on the mathematics exam. Argentinean educators aim to cultivate precisely this kind of improvement in their schools. In 1994, the Ministry of Education launched a nationwide reform movement to upgrade curriculum and introduce important new skills to both teachers and students. But much more work lies ahead. A complex history and political structure cracked the foundation of Argentina's educational system long ago. To begin, most teachers in Argentina lack college degrees, so subject matter knowledge and pedagogy rest on rickety beams. Federal hiring procedures further weaken the structure of schools; teachers are hired for a series of single classes taught across a wide geographic region rather than for full-time jobs. Even after piecing together 35-40 hours of work each week, teacher salaries total around $200 a month. Many work another 10-15 hours, off the books, at night schools, just to make ends meet. Even so, the aspirations of teachers run high. "They're hungry for new information," says Florencia Mezzadra, Ed.M.'00, one of the educational experts working on the project. "They say to me, 'Please teach me, because I don't know what to do with these students!'" The teachers involved in importing some piece of the Boston Arts Academy's approach to Argentina hope to take their students further, faster. Mining the Mind's Resources Just one year into this new foray, signs of progress come into view in participating schools. Master artists, writers, and university professors provide training to teachers. Teachers, in turn, are forging a new connection with their students. Community involvement has soared. Murals replace graffiti. Recitals in nursing homes and other neighborhood locales extend the schools' presence and also the students' sense of importance. By importing educational strategies, Argentinaa longtime exporter of music, dance, and literary talentdefines a new kind of creative brilliance. And what better time and place for it? In the information age, no national resource could be more precious than the intellectual agility developed in schools. Following Argentina's recent financial collapse, the sturdiest building blocks for erecting a new future will not be found in local banks or the government but in people's minds. For More Information About the Article HGSE News, Harvard Graduate School of Education
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