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Learning in the Arts for Children and Youth
NOTICE: The Learning in the Arts for Children and Youth application deadline has been extended to July 2, 2008. [Material that must be mailed directly to the Arts Endowment must be postmarked (or show other proof of mailing) no later than July 3, 2008.] The deadline has been extended due to technical problems with Grants.gov, the federal government's online application system.
All applications must be submitted through Grants.gov. The June 9 Learning in the Arts deadline has passed and the Grants.gov system will not accept an application package that was previously completed. Therefore, applicants will need to use a new Grants.gov application package to submit. Download the new application package following the link in the application guidelines, or go to: https://apply07.grants.gov/apply/forms_apps_idx.html and search by Funding Opportunity Number 2008NEA01LITA2. Enter information directly into the forms. Do not copy from your old application package or another document and paste into the new forms as this will prevent your successful submission.
If you have already successfully submitted an application, you do not need to submit it again. |
Introduction
The National Endowment for the Arts is committed to providing leadership
in arts education by inspiring all young Americans through rich arts
experiences. A high quality education in the arts opens a critical gateway
to a lifetime of appreciation and engagement. For two reasons, learning
in the arts is an indispensable part of American education: 1) children
celebrate and participate in their cultural inheritance, and 2) academic
and social maturity follow directly from arts education experiences.
The Learning in the Arts for Children and Youth category offers funding
for projects that help children and youth acquire knowledge and understanding
of and skills in the arts. Projects must provide participatory learning
and engage students with skilled artists, teachers, and excellent art.
Funded projects apply national or state arts education standards. All
projects submitted to the Learning in the Arts category must include:
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Experience:
Students and their teachers will have the chance to experience exemplary works
of art -- in live form where possible.
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Study: Through the guidance of teachers,
teaching artists, and cultural organizations, students will study
works of art in order to understand the cultural and social context
from which they come, and to appreciate the technical and/or aesthetic
qualities of each work. Where appropriate, study will include the
acquisition of skills relevant to practicing the art form.
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Performance:
Informed by their experience and study, students will create artwork. In the
case of literature, the primary creative activities will be writing and/or recitation.
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Assessment:
Students will be assessed according to national or state arts education standards.
Where appropriate, projects will employ multiple forms of assessment including
pre- and post-testing.
NOTE: The required Learning in the Arts components may be provided in partnership with other organizations.
The Arts Endowment strongly endorses the arts as a core academic subject
area. Organizations must provide curriculum frameworks and carefully
designed evaluations to assess every child's progress in achieving proficiency
in the arts. In this category, the Arts Endowment hopes to call attention
to projects that recognize and cultivate best practices in the field
of arts education for children and youth.
Learning in the Arts projects may take place in school-based or community-based
settings and should focus on children and youth in the general age range
of 5 through 18 years. (NOTE: Adult and intergenerational learning is
supported under Access to Artistic Excellence .)
These guidelines divide Learning in the Arts for Children and Youth into two areas:
School-Based
School-based projects are for children and youth between kindergarten
and grade 12, are directly connected to the school curriculum and instructional
program, and ensure the application of national or state arts education standards.
Such activities may take place in or outside of the school building at any
time of the day. This includes after-school and summer enrichment programs
that are formally connected to school curricula. Projects also may address
professional development for teachers, teaching artists, and school administrators.
NOTE: The Arts Endowment does not make awards directly to individual
elementary or secondary schools -- charter, private, or public. Schools
may participate as partners in projects for which another eligible organization
applies. Local education agencies (school districts) and state and regional
education agencies are eligible. If a single school also is the local
education agency, as is the case with some charter schools, the school
may apply with documentation that supports its status as the local education
agency. Community-Based
Community-based projects are for children and youth generally between
ages 5 and 18. This area supports important activities and training in
the arts that occur outside of the school system. Activities must occur
outside of the regular school day, and may take place in a variety of
settings. These activities may be offered by arts organizations or by
other community-based, non-arts organizations or agencies in partnership
with artists and arts groups. While not formally linked to schools or
their instructional programs, projects must be based on a curriculum
that ensures the application of national or state arts education standards.
Projects may include professional development for teachers, artists,
and program providers.
Deadline
June 9, 2008, Application Deadline
June 1, 2009, Earliest Beginning Date for Arts Endowment Period
of Support
Contacts
Learning in the Arts Specialists:
Dance, Music, Opera: brandenburg@arts.gov or
202/682-5044
Literature, Media Arts, Musical Theater, Theater: daughern@arts.gov or
202/682-5521
Folk & Traditional Arts, Multidisciplinary, Presenting: liut@arts.gov or
202/682-5690
Design, Local Arts Agencies, Museums, Visual Arts: beattied@arts.gov or
202/682-5688
Choosing the Right Category for Children and Youth Projects
An organization should determine if its project offers each of the
four educational components of experience, study, performance, and assessment
as defined above. If one or more of these components is not germane to
the project, then the organization should consider submitting its application
to the Access to Artistic Excellence category and not Learning
in the Arts.
Learning in the Arts projects actively involve children and youth in
learning activities that require a substantial and sustained investment
of time, have significant curricular impact, and involve sequential and
comprehensive arts learning.
Access to Artistic Excellence is for projects for children and youth
where the focus is exposure to or appreciation of the arts, whether activities
take place in school, after school, during the summer, or in community
settings. Such projects may include performances by or exhibitions of
professional artists. These arts events may be accompanied by ancillary
learning activities (e.g., study guides for teachers and students, artists'
visits prior to or following the event, workshops, lecture-demonstrations,
or master classes).
The Challenge America Fast-Track Review Grants category does not fund
projects that involve curriculum-based instruction in the arts.
If you have questions about the appropriate category for your project,
please contact a Learning in the Arts specialist. Projects
Learning in the Arts grants encourage efforts that enhance the quality
of and access to arts learning for our nation's children and youth. Projects
must address experience, study, performance, and assessment. Projects
that are based at higher education institutions are eligible if they
have a direct impact on children and youth. Projects may include but
are not limited to:
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Projects that engage children and youth over an extended period
to increase their proficiency in and understanding of an arts discipline,
genre, or form.
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Projects that explore new ways to integrate arts learning
with learning in other subjects.
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Projects in which artists, whose training specifically
includes education, or arts organizations provide a series of lessons
or courses in the arts that have explicit learning objectives that
ensure the application of national or state arts education standards.
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Projects that provide rigorous, challenging summer
arts education that enables children and youth to acquire knowledge
and skills in the arts as well as gain lifelong interests in the
arts and culture.
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Artists' engagements that provide instruction in the
arts for children and youth for one week or longer during non-school
hours and that may complement the school curriculum of the intended
beneficiaries. Such projects may furnish space, project material,
equipment, job training, and guidance in locations such as arts organizations,
community centers, schools, faith-based organizations, public housing,
tribal communities, or juvenile facilities.
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Professional development programs that increase the
knowledge and skills of teachers, artists, youth program providers,
and others who work in arts learning with children and youth.
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Projects that involve NEA National Heritage Fellows
in the Folk & Traditional Arts and arts learning, with goals
and assessment based on the values and benchmarks appropriate to
the traditions studied.
Application Review
The Learning in the Arts for Children and Youth category uses the agency's
traditional method of application review. Applications submitted to the
Learning in the Arts staff are reviewed by a diverse group of arts experts
and individuals with broad knowledge related to arts learning.
Applications are reviewed on the basis of artistic excellence and artistic
merit. For more detailed information on how artistic excellence and artistic
merit will be evaluated, see the "Review
Criteria." You can find additional information in the "Application
Review" section of the "Frequently
Asked Questions."
We Do Not Fund In addition to the "We Do Not Fund" section for all Grants for Arts Projects applicants, funding under
the Learning in the Arts category is not available for:
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Research on the impact of the arts on the cognitive and
social development of children and youth.
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Projects with the primary focus of evaluation, documentation,
and dissemination of promising or proven arts learning programs and
practices.
Organizations with projects that are not eligible under this category
may want to review the opportunities that are offered by their state
arts agency. Find
your state arts agency here.
Outcomes
The Arts Endowment has identified two outcomes that it plans to achieve
through Learning in the Arts for Children and Youth. Each applicant must
select the one outcome listed below that is most relevant to its project
and indicate this in its application:
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Children and youth demonstrate increased skills, knowledge,
and/or understanding of the arts, consistent with national or state
arts education standards.
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Teachers, artists, and other educators demonstrate
increased knowledge and skills necessary to engage children and youth
in arts learning, consistent with national or state arts education
standards.
Each applicant should be as specific as possible in describing how its
project will achieve and demonstrate the outcome selected. Project goals,
activities, and outcomes should be clearly defined and carefully integrated.
For more information on arts education standards, please see Learning in the Arts: State and National Standards for Arts Education.
If you wish to apply:
CFDA No. 45.024
OMB No. 3135-0112 Expires 11/30/2010
January 2008
National Endowment for the Arts · an independent federal
agency
1100 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20506 |
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