Adrienne Ann Mullen
School District: Pasadena USD – District 3
Position Seeking: Board Member
Question 1: Please share a meaningful experience you had with art (visual, dance, drama, music, media arts) while growing up and its impact on you.
Question 2: How can arts education support student outcomes such as English language development, reducing the achievement gap, and preparing youth for college and/or meaningful careers?
Question 3: What do you think the role of the School Board should be in ensuring that students have continued access to a broad range of study subjects, including the arts (broadly defined)?
Question 4: Do you see a role for arts education in the development of district Local Control Accountability Plans (LCAPs)? If so, how would you hope to use arts education to advance the eight priority areas identified in the LCAP template?
Patty Lopez
City: LAUSD – District 6
Position Seeking: Board Member
Question 1: Please share a meaningful experience you had with art (visual, dance, drama, music, media arts) while growing up and its impact on you.
Question 2: How can arts education support student outcomes such as English language development, reducing the achievement gap, and preparing youth for college and/or meaningful careers?
Question 3: What do you think the role of the School Board should be in ensuring that students have continued access to a broad range of study subjects, including the arts (broadly defined)?
Question 4: Do you see a role for arts education in the development of district Local Control Accountability Plans (LCAPs)? If so, how would you hope to use arts education to advance the eight priority areas identified in the LCAP template?
Kimberly Kenne
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City: Pasadena USD – District 1
Position Seeking: Board Member
Question 1: Please share a meaningful experience you had with art (visual, dance, drama, music, media arts) while growing up and its impact on you.
Question 2: How can arts education support student outcomes such as English language development, reducing the achievement gap, and preparing youth for college and/or meaningful careers?
Question 3: What do you think the role of the School Board should be in ensuring that students have continued access to a broad range of study subjects, including the arts (broadly defined)?
Question 4: Do you see a role for arts education in the development of district Local Control Accountability Plans (LCAPs)? If so, how would you hope to use arts education to advance the eight priority areas identified in the LCAP template?
Charlene "Char" Tabet
School District: Burbank USD
Position Seeking: Board Member
Question 1: Please share a meaningful experience you had with art (visual, dance, drama, music, media arts) while growing up and its impact on you.
I am a band geek, through and through! I started playing the violin in 4th grade and continued all the way through high school. In 7th grade I realized that all my friends heading to High School would be in marching band, except for me. So I began playing the Saxophone so that I too could be in marching band. As a result of that choice I had amazing experiences that included travel and performing in famous places in front of millions of people that I would not have had without having music in my life. I was able to perform in the Rose Parade, the 1984 Olympics Opening Ceremony and made many, many life long friends who we now are raising OUR children together, still as friends.
Question 2: How can arts education support student outcomes such as English language development, reducing the achievement gap, and preparing youth for college and/or meaningful careers?
Arts education can and should be used to develop ELL's language development by simply being able to utilize the reading, writing and speaking skills. ELL's need the opportunity to develop their language by interacting with different types of art forms, similar to that of English Only students. Everyone needs vocabulary development for Arts instruction as well as utilizing or developing critical thinking skills by analyzing art.
Not only academically but Arts education can level the playing field for students socially as well. All students can share their own experiences and cultural background with each other so that there is an understanding of each others cultures and perspectives.
Finally, Arts education with ELLs can also provide a chance for them to build their confidence with their second language and perhaps showcase a strength that is not necessarily academic.
Question 3: What do you think the role of the School Board should be in ensuring that students have continued access to a broad range of study subjects, including the arts (broadly defined)?
The School boards role always is to oversee the budget and to set policy for the district. In addition, the role of the board is to set a vision for the district. To me, my job as a school board member is to keep as many programs and opportunities for students available as long as it remains good for kids. For some of our students, their arts programs are what keeps them coming to school every day, involved in their school community and even from dropping out. Its my role to do whatever needs to be done to keep those programs afloat. Here in Burbank, we have made an great effort to not only keep our programs but wish to continually grow and enhance what we already have.
Question 4: Do you see a role for arts education in the development of district Local Control Accountability Plans (LCAPs)? If so, how would you hope to use arts education to advance the eight priority areas identified in the LCAP template?
We have included Arts Education in our LCAPS in several areas because we know, as a Board and as a community that Arts education is important for our students. The LCAPs are designed to focus on areas of need, used to increase test scores and achievement. With that in mind, we have included arts funding to ensure that we are meeting the needs and the goals of the community.
We have used the LCAP to increase funding to our Instrumental music programs, purchasing new instruments and money to repair what we already have. We have added Music teachers for K-5 music instruction. We have used LCAP funds to add World Language classes as well at our middle schools. We will continue to development our LCAP as a catalyst for funding some of our arts programs, and as long as the local community desires.
Matthew Baron
School District: Pasadena USD – District 5
Position Seeking: Board Member
Question 1: Please share a meaningful experience you had with art (visual, dance, drama, music, media arts) while growing up and its impact on you.
Question 2: How can arts education support student outcomes such as English language development, reducing the achievement gap, and preparing youth for college and/or meaningful careers?
Question 3: What do you think the role of the School Board should be in ensuring that students have continued access to a broad range of study subjects, including the arts (broadly defined)?
Question 4: Do you see a role for arts education in the development of district Local Control Accountability Plans (LCAPs)? If so, how would you hope to use arts education to advance the eight priority areas identified in the LCAP template?
Lisa Alva
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City: LAUSD – District 2
Position Seeking: Board Member
Question 1: Please share a meaningful experience you had with art (visual, dance, drama, music, media arts) while growing up and its impact on you.
Question 2: How can arts education support student outcomes such as English language development, reducing the achievement gap, and preparing youth for college and/or meaningful careers?
Question 3: What do you think the role of the School Board should be in ensuring that students have continued access to a broad range of study subjects, including the arts (broadly defined)?
Question 4: Do you see a role for arts education in the development of district Local Control Accountability Plans (LCAPs)? If so, how would you hope to use arts education to advance the eight priority areas identified in the LCAP template?
Jose Sandoval
School District: LAUSD – District 6
Position Seeking: Board Member
Question 1: Please share a meaningful experience you had with art (visual, dance, drama, music, media arts) while growing up and its impact on you.
Question 2: How can arts education support student outcomes such as English language development, reducing the achievement gap, and preparing youth for college and/or meaningful careers?
Question 3: What do you think the role of the School Board should be in ensuring that students have continued access to a broad range of study subjects, including the arts (broadly defined)?
Question 4: Do you see a role for arts education in the development of district Local Control Accountability Plans (LCAPs)? If so, how would you hope to use arts education to advance the eight priority areas identified in the LCAP template?
Elizabeth Pomeroy
School District: Pasadena USD – District 5
Position Seeking: Board Member
Question 1: Please share a meaningful experience you had with art (visual, dance, drama, music, media arts) while growing up and its impact on you.
I took piano lessons all through my childhood in San Francisco, and also went to a series of concerts called Young Peoples Concerts at the San Francisco Opera House, by the S F Symphony. All this music gave me an understanding of music from an early age and I am still a regular orchestra subscriber (the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra).
Question 2: How can arts education support student outcomes such as English language development, reducing the achievement gap, and preparing youth for college and/or meaningful careers?
Research shows that arts education fits in beautifully with other academic subjects, enhancing students’ creativity and skills. This creativity is invaluable in the future college and working lives of these students. If all students have equal access to the arts, they can be another avenue to keep students engaged and thereby reduce the gaps that may exist.
Question 3: What do you think the role of the School Board should be in ensuring that students have continued access to a broad range of study subjects, including the arts (broadly defined)?
Since the School Board sets budget priorities, the Board can insist that the arts be considered an essential part of K-12 education. We must protect the arts from cuts and jeopardy when economic times get tough.
Question 4: Do you see a role for arts education in the development of district Local Control Accountability Plans (LCAPs)? If so, how would you hope to use arts education to advance the eight priority areas identified in the LCAP template?
Ideally arts education can be woven in snugly with so many goals of the LCAP: not just into the curriculum of other core subjects, but also toward the goals of the Four Cs — creativity especially, also critical thinking, collaboration, and definitely communication. All parts of the LCAP can be fields for the arts to flourish — if we think creatively !
Larry Applebaum
School District: Burbank USD
Position Seeking: Board Member
Question 1: Please share a meaningful experience you had with art (visual, dance, drama, music, media arts) while growing up and its impact on you.
My most memorable art experience as a child occurred when I was a 9th grader at John Muir Junior High. (1974) I was part of the Mixed Chorus that got invited to the MENC convention that was held at the Anaheim Convention Center near Disneyland. We were the first junior high school group to ever be selected to perform at MENC. It was a very special day, filled with excitement, joy and pride. The effort that the whole group put out to learn several difficult music pieces to perform at the event created bonds with classmates that exist to this day. My junior high choir experiences provided me with a love of music which propelled me into my second career after exiting Pharmacy, which I found unsatisfying. I investing in an electronic musical instrument repair business while I was still in Pharmacy, then bought out my partner when I left the profession and continued to run that business for over 26 years. I can easily trace my love of music back to those 3 years in junior high and that love has been instilled in my daughter, who is currently part of the renowned Burbank High School vocal music program.
Question 2: How can arts education support student outcomes such as English language development, reducing the achievement gap, and preparing youth for college and/or meaningful careers?
Arts are a core part of a child’s education for several reasons. First, art and music provide for the creation of alternative pathways with the brain, and assist children with critical thinking skill development. Art helps develop spatial relationship skills as well as providing a platform from which interdisciplinary learning can occur. Exposure to movies and theatre can be an important means to connect to English language learners and assist in acclimating them to verbal English. Arts programming many times helps to connect students to school when they other have no affinity towards other coursework. Those connections can then be exploited to encourage attention to other disciplines. In Burbank, with all the entertainment businesses in our town, our students have the opportunity to go from high school directly into many good paying jobs in digital media, animation, production and theatre crafts, just to name a few. Many internships are available to college students that dovetail into a job upon graduation. Finally, many of our graduates have been accepted into incredible programs nationwide, such as Julliard, Berklee, Cap24, as well as local arts programs at colleges and universities such as USC, UCLA, and Claremont
Question 3: What do you think the role of the School Board should be in ensuring that students have continued access to a broad range of study subjects, including the arts (broadly defined)?
In Burbank, as an Arts for All school district, we have a 10 year plan that drives the vision for a sequential arts education for all our students K-12 across for strands: Music, Theatre, Visual Arts and Dance. We have accomplished much of the goals of our original 10 year outline. We have a well developed visual arts program in all grade levels with many of our teachers completing training workshops at the Getty and MOCA, among others. Are music program includes dedicated teacher specialists in our elementary schools and nationally acclaimed programs at our secondary campuses. Dance is well articulated through the grades, although I am attempting to champion a separate Dance offering at the middle school level that is its own program, not something imbedded into the Physical Education classes. Theatre is also an art form with good elementary and high school exposure, but less at the middle school. I am working to have a drama program developed at all three of our middle schools. Currently, only one has a drama program with a full time teacher. The role of the Board is to develop and maintain the vision, adjust the vision as necessary, and continue to support the necessary budgetary financial commitments needed for the programs to exist and thrive. Most importantly, when times are tough, make sure to sustain the commitment at least partially, to ensure that a program never gets fully eliminated, which could take a generation or more to bring back.
Question 4: Do you see a role for arts education in the development of district Local Control Accountability Plans (LCAPs)? If so, how would you hope to use arts education to advance the eight priority areas identified in the LCAP template?
With a broad stakeholder involvement and a community that is very connected to arts and entertainment, it is hard to believe that arts wouldn’t be an important component of our District’s LCAP plan. Certainly arts education can have a profound impact on student achievement and student engagement as can be gleaned from some of my answers to the previous questions. School climate is very positively impacted by the presence of art programs, whether it is a display of student created art, a performance by a choir, band, theatre troupe or dance ensemble. When discussing parental involvement, all the performing arts programs to varying degrees involve parent support, whether it is sweat equity, monetary contributions, or something as simple as driving a student to a rehearsal. The LCAP process allows for directing funding to support key aspects of our Arts programs; providing specific targets for music teachers in our elementary grades, providing dedicated funding for professional development opportunities for our teaching staff, and providing a platform for adding programs, such as additional media and culinary arts to student course offerings in the future. The Board is then tasked with supporting the vision of the plan as adopted, which has lead to successful implementation of many new program offerings and supports in BUSD.