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Introducing Your Child to the Arts: Folk Art (page 3)

National Endowment for the Arts

Education and Special Programs in Folk Arts

Young people absorb their own cultural traditions from family members, friends, neighbors, and spiritual leaders. Experiencing cultural traditions of others through local programs offered by museums and other cultural institutions helps young children learn about others.

Six- to eight-year-olds gain knowledge about folk arts in many settings: home, school, community centers, libraries,museums, festivals. Quality educational programs integrate folk arts into language arts, social studies, math, science, visual art,music, theater, and dance. This approach teaches literacy, civic responsibility, and cultural curiosity in an authentic, meaningful fashion. In today’s schools, folk artists share their talents with students by demonstrating cultural traditions and performing stories, songs, or dance.

For example, a local artist may visit the school to show students the art of Navajo basketweaving. Encourage your children’s teachers to strengthen school-community connections by incorporating folk arts into their ongoing lesson plans.

In elementary school, students work with educators to document folk arts just as professional folklorists do by interviewing, photographing, and recording family and community members. Six- to eight-yearolds interview family members and document their findings like junior ethnographers. As students mature, they test interesting venues to present their fieldwork findings: exhibits, performances,multimedia presentations,Web sites, publications, radio programs, and videos.

If we take the time to stop, look, question, and listen, we discover that art is all around us, often in the form of folk arts. The process of exploring folk arts with our children helps us rediscover that our families, neighbors, and communities provide rich, engaging learning environments.

Resources

Today we can find hundreds of books, Web sites, and recordings about local, regional, national, and global cultural groups and their folk traditions. Organizations such as the National Council for the Traditional Arts, National Network for Folk Arts in Education, Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, and American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress strive to introduce people to authentic resources that convey accurate portraits of people and places. Individual state arts agencies employ or collaborate with state folk arts coordinators who will be able to provide expertise and information concerning folk arts.

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