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in Education's Planned Research Would Help Explain Why Instruction Time 
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Report to Congressional Requesters: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

February 2009: 

Access To Arts Education: 

Inclusion of Additional Questions in Education's Planned Research Would 
Help Explain Why Instruction Time Has Decreased for Some Students: 

GAO-09-286: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-09-286, a report to congressional requesters. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Under the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLBA), districts and schools must 
demonstrate adequate yearly progress (AYP) for all students. Because 
schools may spend more time improving students’ academic skills to meet 
NCLBA’s requirements, some are concerned that arts education might be 
cut back. To determine how, if at all, student access to arts education 
has changed since NCLBA, the Congress asked: (1) has the amount of 
instruction time for arts education changed and, if so, have certain 
groups been more affected than others, (2) to what extent have state 
education agencies’ requirements and funding for arts education changed 
since NCLBA, (3) what are school officials in selected districts doing 
to provide arts education since NCLBA and what challenges do they face 
in doing so, and (4) what is known about the effect of arts education 
in improving student outcomes? GAO analyzed data from the U.S. 
Department of Education (Education), surveyed 50 state arts officials, 
interviewed officials in 8 school districts and 19 schools, and 
reviewed existing research. 

What GAO Found: 

According to data from Education’s national survey, most elementary 
school teachers--about 90 percent--reported that instruction time for 
arts education stayed the same between school years 2004-2005 and 2006-
2007. The percentage of teachers that reported that instruction time 
had stayed the same was similarly high across a range of school 
characteristics, irrespective of the schools’ percentage of low-income 
or minority students or of students with limited English proficiency, 
or the schools’ improvement under NCLBA. Moreover, about 4 percent of 
teachers reported an increase. However, about 7 percent reported a 
decrease, and GAO identified statistically significant differences 
across school characteristics in the percentage of teachers reporting 
that the time spent on arts education had decreased. Teachers at 
schools identified as needing improvement and those with higher 
percentages of minority students were more likely to report a reduction 
in time spent on the arts. Because Education’s survey did not include 
questions about why instruction time changed, GAO was not able to 
determine the reasons for the disparities its analysis identified. A 
new study of NCLBA implementation that Education plans to undertake may 
collect information on the uses of instruction time, among other 
topics. However, Education has not yet determined if it will collect 
information on the reasons instruction time changed for certain groups. 

While basic state requirements for arts education in schools have 
remained unchanged in most states, state funding levels for arts 
education increased in some states and decreased in others, according 
to GAO’s survey of state arts officials. Arts education officials 
attributed the funding changes to state budget changes to a greater 
extent than they did to NCLBA or other factors. 

School principals have used several strategies to provide arts 
education; however, some struggled with decreased budgets and competing 
demands on instruction time, according to those GAO interviewed. 
Strategies for maintaining arts education include seeking funding and 
collaborative arrangements in the arts community. Competing demands on 
instruction time were due to state education agency or school district 
actions taken to meet NCLBA proficiency standards. 

Overall, research on the effect of arts education on student outcomes 
is inconclusive. Some studies that examined the effect of arts 
education on students’ reading and math achievement found a small 
positive effect, but others found none. 

Figure: Photograph of Elementary School Children Participating in Arts 
Education. 

[Refer to PDF for image] 

Source: Art Explosion (image). 

[End of figure] 

What GAO Recommends: 

To identify factors that may contribute to changes in access to arts 
education for certain groups, GAO recommends that the Secretary of 
Education require the department’s planned study of NCLBA 
implementation to ask survey respondents why any changes in instruction 
time they report occurred. Education generally agreed with our 
recommendation. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-286]. For more 
information, contact Cornelia Ashby at (202) 512-7215 or 
ashbyc@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

Overall Time Spent on Arts Education Changed Little between the 2004- 
2005 and 2006-2007 School Years, but Decreases Were More Likely at Some 
Schools and the Reasons for the Differences Are Uncertain: 

While Basic State Requirements for Arts Education in Schools Have 
Remained Constant in Most States, State Funding Levels for Arts 
Education Changed: 

Since NCLBA, District Officials and School Principals Have Used Several 
Strategies to Provide Arts Education; However, Some Struggled with 
Decreased Budgets and Competing Demands on Instruction Time: 

Overall Research on the Association between Arts Education and Student 
Outcomes Is Inconclusive: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendation for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Scope: 

Methodology: 

Appendix II: Average Amount of Instruction Time Elementary School 
Teachers Reported Spending: 

Appendix III: Arts Education Requirements and Funding, by State, School 
Years 2001-2002 and 2006-2007: 

Appendix IV: Studies Meeting GAO's Criteria for Methodological Quality: 

Appendix V: Comments from the Department of Education: 

Appendix VI: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Time Line for Implementing Interventions for Schools That Do 
Not Make Adequate Yearly Progress: 

Table 2: Percentage of Teachers across All Schools Reporting Whether 
Instruction Time Had Changed between the 2004-2005 and 2006-2007 School 
Years, by Subject: 

Table 3: Percentage of Elementary Schools Teachers Reporting Whether 
Arts Education Instruction Time Had Changed between the 2004-2005 and 
2006-2007 School Years, by School Characteristic: 

Table 4: Mean Decrease in the Amount of Instruction Time Spent on Arts 
Education among Teachers Reporting a Decrease from School Year 2004- 
2005 to 2006-2007: 

Table 5: Number of States with Arts Education Requirements in School 
Years 2001-2002 and 2006-2007: 

Table 6: Number of States with Funding for Arts Education in School 
Years 2001-2002 and 2006-2007: 

Table 7: Sources of Funding for State Arts Education between School 
Years 2001-2002 and 2006-2007: 

Table 8: Of States That Had Funding in Both School Years 2001-2002 and 
2006-2007, Number of States with Changes in Funding for Arts Education 
and Number Where Funding Stayed about the Same: 

Table 9: Number of States Identifying Factors That Contributed to 
Change in Funding of Arts Education between School Years 2001-2002 and 
2006-2007: 

Table 10: Criteria for Selecting School Districts and Schools: 

Abbreviations: 

AEP: Arts Education Partnership: 

AYP: adequate yearly progress: 

CEP: Center on Education Policy: 

CPS: Chicago Public Schools: 

ERIC: Education Resources Information Center: 

ESEA: Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965: 

IASA: Improving America's Schools Act of 1994: 

NAEP: National Assessment of Educational Progress: 

NCLBA: No Child Left Behind Act: 

NEA: National Endowment for the Arts: 

NLS-NCLB: National Longitudinal Study of No Child Left Behind: 

SEAS: Student Enrichment in the Arts program: 

SES: supplemental education services: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office:
Washington, DC 20548: 

February 27, 2009: 

The Honorable Christopher J. Dodd: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Lamar Alexander: 
Ranking Member: 
Subcommittee on Children and Families: 
Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions: 
United States Senate: 

The federal government has invested billions of dollars in federal 
grants to states and school districts to improve educational 
opportunities for low-income students because their academic 
performance is substantially lower than that of other students. The No 
Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLBA) sought to address this issue by 
building on the proficiency targets required by the Improving America's 
Schools Act of 1994 (IASA) and by establishing a deadline of 2014 for 
all students to reach proficiency in reading, math, and science. Under 
NCLBA, districts and schools must demonstrate adequate yearly progress 
(AYP) toward meeting state standards for all students and every key 
student subgroup, including low-income and minority students, students 
with disabilities, and students with limited English proficiency, 
toward annual state-established proficiency targets. When students in 
schools receiving funds under Title I of NCLBA do not make sufficient 
progress toward meeting state proficiency targets, their schools are 
identified as needing improvement, and both districts and schools are 
required to take certain actions. 

Schools' efforts to improve students' academic performance and the 
school's NCLBA status can lead to changes in the amount of instruction 
time devoted to reading, math, and other subjects, including arts 
education. With NCLBA's 2014 deadline approaching, increased attention 
has been focused on the amount of time teachers are able to devote to 
other subjects, including the arts, which for this study includes four 
art forms: visual arts, music, theater, and dance. To the extent that 
schools spend more time improving students' reading, math, and science 
skills to meet NCLBA's accountability requirements, some are concerned 
that arts education might be reduced or eliminated. 

To determine whether there have been any changes in student access to 
arts education since NCLBA, the Congress asked us to examine the 
following questions: (1) has the amount of instruction time for arts 
education changed and, if so, have certain groups been more affected 
than others, (2) to what extent have state education agencies' 
requirements and funding for arts education changed since NCLBA, (3) 
what are school officials in selected districts doing to provide arts 
education since NCLBA and what challenges do they face in doing so, and 
(4) what is known about the effect of arts education in improving 
student outcomes? 

To identify changes in students' access to arts education, if any, we 
analyzed data on changes in instruction time between school years 2004- 
2005 and 2006-2007 for all subjects, including the arts, from the 
Department of Education's (Education) National Longitudinal Study of No 
Child Left Behind (NLS-NCLB).[Footnote 1] Because this study collected 
data on changes in instruction time only from elementary school 
teachers, the nationally representative findings on students' access to 
arts education apply only to elementary schools. Although NLS-NCLB data 
did not allow us to answer the study question for middle and secondary 
schools, they were the only existing data on changes in instruction 
time available that met GAO's data quality standards. Our findings also 
apply only to the time between school years 2004-2005 and 2006-2007 and 
not to the full period of time since NCLBA's passage. As a further step 
in identifying changes in students' access to arts education by 
identifying any changes in state arts education requirements and 
funding, we surveyed arts officials in 49 states and the District of 
Columbia.[Footnote 2] For the survey, an arts official was an official 
in a state department of education or other designated state agency who 
was knowledgeable about the states' role in shaping the provision of 
arts education in public schools. Forty-five state arts officials 
completed the survey. The survey collected data on state arts education 
requirements and funding in school years 2001-2002, the year NCLBA was 
passed, and 2006-2007, changes made to state arts education 
requirements and funding between those school years, and factors 
contributing to any changes. To determine what district officials and 
school principals are doing to provide arts education since NCLBA and 
the challenges they face, we visited and interviewed officials in 
Illinois, Massachusetts, Florida, and New York. We selected states with 
large numbers of schools not meeting AYP and school districts and 
schools based on criteria that provide variation in the income level of 
the school district, schools' performance status under NCLBA, and 
schools' urban and rural location. Within each state, we visited 2 
school districts and 4 to 6 schools in each district for a total of 8 
school districts and 19 schools. In each state, we also interviewed 
officials representing at least one local arts organization that 
supported arts education in public schools. To determine what is known 
about the effect of arts instruction, we reviewed existing studies that 
examined the effect of arts instruction on student outcomes, such as 
academic achievement and graduation rates. Appendix I provides a 
detailed description of our methodology and its limitations, as well as 
our scope. We conducted this performance audit from September 2007 to 
February 2009, in accordance with generally accepted government 
auditing standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform 
the audit to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a 
reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on the audit 
objectives. We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable 
basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

Results in Brief: 

Most elementary school teachers--about 90 percent--reported that 
instruction time for arts education remained the same between school 
years 2004-2005 and 2006-2007. The percentage of teachers that reported 
that instruction time had stayed the same was similarly high across a 
range of school characteristics, irrespective of the schools' 
percentage of low-income or minority students or of students with 
limited English proficiency, or the schools' improvement under NCLBA. 
Moreover, about 4 percent of teachers reported an increase. However, 
about 7 percent reported a decrease, and we identified statistically 
significant differences across school characteristics in the percentage 
of teachers reporting that the time spent on arts education had 
decreased. Specifically, teachers at schools identified as needing 
improvement and those with higher percentages of minority students were 
more likely to report a reduction in time spent on the arts. In 
addition, when we examined the average amount of change in weekly 
instruction time among teachers that reported either an increase or a 
decrease, we found that teachers at elementary schools with high 
percentages of low-income or minority students reported larger average 
reductions than teachers at schools with low percentages of these 
students.[Footnote 3] For example, teachers reporting decreases in arts 
education time at schools with a high percentage of low-income students 
reported an average decrease of 49 minutes per week while teachers 
reporting decreases in arts education time at schools with lower 
percentages of these students reported an average decrease of 31 
minutes per week. Because Education's NLS-NCLB survey did not include 
questions for the teachers to identify why instruction time for arts 
education decreased at their school, we could not explore the reasons 
that might explain some of the disparities we identified in our 
analysis of the data. A new study of NCLBA implementation that 
Education plans to undertake may collect information on the uses of 
instruction time, among other topics. However, Education has not yet 
determined if it will collect information on the reasons instruction 
time changed for certain groups. 

While basic state requirements for arts education in schools have 
stayed about the same in most states, state funding levels for arts 
education increased in some states and decreased in others, according 
to our survey of state arts officials. Basic state education 
requirements for arts education in schools--such as the number of hours 
a week that the arts must be taught or the number of courses that must 
be taken--have remained constant in most states since NCLBA was 
implemented. Of the 45 states that responded to our survey, 34 states 
had established the basic requirement that arts education be taught, 
and 28 states had included arts education as a high school graduation 
requirement by school year 2001-2002. By school year 2006-2007, most of 
these states had retained these requirements. While basic requirements 
for arts education remained nearly unchanged, state funding for arts 
education changed, with some states reporting decreases, and others 
reporting increases or funding levels that stayed about the same. For 
example, of the 32 states that awarded arts education grants in both 
school years 2001-2002 and 2006-2007, funding decreased in 12 states 
and increased in 5 states. Arts education officials attributed the 
increases or decreases in funding to state budget changes to a greater 
extent than they did to NCLBA or other factors. 

District officials and school principals have used several strategies 
to provide arts education; however, some struggled with decreased 
budgets and competing demands on instruction time, according to 
officials we interviewed. School principals that have been able to 
maintain arts education have used several strategies, including varying 
when the arts are offered, seeking funding and collaborative 
arrangements in the arts community, and integrating the arts into other 
subjects. For example, at one Boston school, the principal had 
eliminated arts education classes during the school day and purchased 
an after school arts program in drama and music production from an 
outside organization. 

On the other hand, to ensure that students could attend arts education 
during the school day, one New York City school principal added an 
additional period to the end of the day to provide remedial instruction 
to students who required additional help. To expose his students to 
different international musical styles, one Broward County social 
studies teacher played music from other countries during geography 
lessons. Officials we met with told us that the main challenges to 
providing arts education have been decreased state or local funding and 
competing demands on instruction time due to requirements established 
by the state education agency or school district in order to meet NCLBA 
proficiency standards, such as doubling the amount of time low- 
performing students spend on reading and math. For example, at one 
school, the principal could not afford a full-time art teacher when the 
school's budget was reduced. In addition, some officials said that 
requirements established to meet NCLBA proficiency standards affected 
the time available for certain subjects. For example, at several 
schools, officials said that students not meeting state proficiency 
requirements could be pulled from art class to attend a remedial class 
in reading or math. Moreover, district officials and school principals 
told us that when trade-offs involving funding or instruction time had 
to be made, the school principal made the decision, and that 
principals' decisions differed. For example, some principals chose not 
to spend their limited discretionary funds on arts education, while 
other principals, even when their school had been identified as needing 
improvement several times, maintained their arts offerings. 

Overall, research on the association between arts education and student 
outcomes is inconclusive. Some studies that examined the association 
between arts education and students' reading and math achievement found 
a small positive relationship, but others found none. For example, one 
study that combined the findings of several studies found that music 
education in elementary or high school had a small positive 
relationship with standardized math test scores. However, another 
similarly constructed study found that arts education had no 
significant relationship with standardized reading and math test 
scores. While some of the research on arts education has focused on 
special populations, such as students from low-income families, these 
studies did not meet GAO's criteria for methodological quality, and 
their findings were questionable. 

To help identify factors that may contribute to changes in access to 
arts education for certain student subgroups, we are recommending that 
the Secretary of Education require that the department's planned study 
of NCLBA implementation include questions in its surveys asking survey 
respondents to describe the reasons for any changes in instruction time 
they report. 

Background: 

Since passage of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 
(ESEA), more than 40 years ago, the Congress has sought to improve 
student learning through several initiatives. Current legislation, 
NCLBA, builds upon previous legislation--the IASA--by adding provisions 
meant to strengthen accountability requirements for school districts 
and schools.[Footnote 4] For example, both IASA and NCLBA required 
states to measure the performance of students in reading and math. 
NCLBA built upon this requirement by requiring annual testing in these 
subjects in each of grades 3 to 8 and added requirements that 
children's performance in science also be assessed. 

Under NCLBA's accountability provisions, states are required to develop 
plans that include academic standards and establish performance goals 
for schools' meeting AYP that would lead to 100 percent of their 
students being proficient in reading, mathematics, and science by 2014. 
[Footnote 5] To measure their progress, states were required to 
establish academic proficiency goals for making AYP and to administer 
an annual assessment to students in most grade levels.[Footnote 6] In 
addition, each school's assessment data must be disaggregated in order 
to compare the achievement levels of students within certain designated 
groups, including low-income and minority students, students with 
disabilities, and those with limited English proficiency, with the 
state's proficiency targets. Each of these groups must make AYP in 
order for the school to make AYP. In addition to proficiency targets on 
state assessments, states must use another academic indicator to 
determine AYP. For high schools, the indicator must be graduation 
rates. States may choose what the other academic indicator will be for 
elementary and middle schools. 

Title I of the ESEA, as amended and reauthorized by NCLBA, authorizes 
federal funds to help elementary and secondary schools establish and 
maintain programs that will improve the educational opportunities of 
economically disadvantaged children[Footnote 7] For schools receiving 
Title I funds that do not achieve proficiency, a time line is required 
for implementing specific interventions based on the number of years 
the school missed AYP. If a school fails to meet AYP in reading, 
mathematics, or science for 2 consecutive years, districts must offer 
students in these schools the opportunity to transfer to a higher 
performing school in the district, and after the third year they must 
offer both school choice and supplemental education services (SES), 
such as tutoring. Prior legislation--IASA--required districts to take 
corrective action as a final intervention for schools that repeatedly 
missed AYP. While IASA allowed states to determine the appropriate 
corrective action for their districts and schools, NCLBA is more 
prescriptive in defining the corrective actions districts and schools 
must implement. In addition, a new intervention to change the 
governance of schools--school restructuring--was introduced for schools 
that miss AYP for 5 or more years. (See table 1.) Districts are 
responsible for selecting and implementing the corrective actions and 
restructuring options for these schools contained in the law. Schools 
exit improvement status if they make AYP for 2 consecutive years. 

Table 1: Time Line for Implementing Interventions for Schools That Do 
Not Make Adequate Yearly Progress: 

Adequate yearly progress: First year missed; 
School status in the next year: Not applicable; 
NCLBA interventions for Title I schools: None. 

Adequate yearly progress: Second year missed; 
School status in the next year: Needs improvement (first year of 
improvement); 
NCLBA interventions for Title I schools: Required to offer public 
school choice[A]. 

Adequate yearly progress: Third year missed; 
School status in the next year: Needs improvement (second year of 
improvement); 
NCLBA interventions for Title I schools: Required to offer public 
school choice and SES. 

Adequate yearly progress: Fourth year missed; 
School status in the next year: Corrective action (third year of 
improvement); 
NCLBA interventions for Title I schools: Implement certain corrective 
actions and offer public school choice and SES. 

Adequate yearly progress: Fifth year missed; 
School status in the next year: Planning for restructuring (fourth year 
of improvement); 
NCLBA interventions for Title I schools: Plan for a change in 
governance and offer public school choice and SES[B]. 

Adequate yearly progress: Sixth year missed; 
School status in the next year: Implementation of restructuring (fifth 
year of improvement); 
NCLBA interventions for Title I schools: Implement a change in 
governance and offer public school choice and SES. 

Sources: GAO analysis of NCLBA and Education's regulations. 

[A] At this stage, the school must also develop the school improvement 
plan. 

[B] While NCLBA does not require that corrective actions must be 
continued after a school enters restructuring, Education officials 
noted that, in practice, many schools continue corrective actions after 
entering restructuring status. 

[End of table] 

In prior work on implementation of NCLBA, GAO reported that the Title I 
schools in corrective action and restructuring status during school 
year 2005-2006 were more frequently located in urban school districts 
and a few states and served higher percentages of low-income, minority, 
and middle school students than other Title I schools.[Footnote 8] 

NCLBA Provisions and Funding Related to Arts Education in Public 
Schools: 

In its last two reauthorizations of the ESEA, the Congress has 
recognized the importance of arts education in public schools. Although 
the NCLBA does not include proficiency requirements for the arts, it 
does authorize Education to make grants for arts education. The purpose 
of these programs as set out in NCLBA includes helping students meet 
state academic achievement standards in the arts and supporting "the 
national effort to enable all students to demonstrate competence in the 
arts." In addition, arts education is identified by NCLBA as a core 
academic subject. Similarly, the Congress stated in IASA that the arts 
express "forms of understanding and ways of knowing that are 
fundamentally important to education." This finding incorporates the 
two prevailing perspectives on the role that arts education can play in 
public schools. One perspective sees arts education as having intrinsic 
value because of the insights into self and others that experiencing 
the arts can yield. A second perspective focuses on the association 
between arts education and development of cognitive, affective, and 
creative skills, including improved achievement in academic subjects 
such as reading and math. While NCLBA does not attempt to address these 
perspectives, it does affirm that arts education has a role in public 
schools. 

Education administers a number of specific programs related to arts 
education, but two arts education grant programs authorized by NCLBA-- 
the Model Development and Dissemination grants program and the 
Professional Development for Arts Educators program--are competitive 
grant programs that provide funding for arts education research 
projects that integrate arts disciplines into public school curricula, 
strengthen arts instruction, and improve students' academic performance 
and funding for art teachers' professional development, respectively. 
Total funding for these two programs in the last few years was $21.1 
million in fiscal year 2006, $21 million in fiscal year 2007 and $20.7 
million in fiscal year 2008.[Footnote 9] 

Research on Arts Education in Public Schools: 

Prior to passage of NCLBA, the National Endowment for the Arts twice 
collaborated with Education to determine the extent to which public 
schools offer arts education in the four major art forms: visual arts, 
music, theater, and dance. Through surveys of school principals and 
teachers that Education conducted in school years 1993-1994 and 1999- 
2000, Education found that visual arts and music were offered by 80 to 
90 percent of public elementary and secondary schools, while theater 
and dance were offered by a smaller fraction--fewer than half. 
Education plans to conduct another such survey in school year 2009- 
2010. Education sponsored the National Assessment of Educational 
Progress (NAEP) arts assessment of students in the eighth grade during 
school year 1996-1997, which reported the frequency of arts offerings 
by art form, and how well public school students could respond to, 
create, and perform works of visual art, music, and theatre. Known as 
the NAEP 1997 Arts Report Card, the study report was issued in November 
1998.[Footnote 10] The assessment found that a high percentage of 
eighth grade students were offered music and visual arts in the schools 
they attended, but that instruction in theater and dance was more 
limited. Students' performance ranged from 78 percent who sang the song 
"America" rhythmically to 1 percent who created expressive collages. 
Two other studies focused primarily on NCLBA implementation but also 
included analyses of changes in instruction time for all subjects, 
including arts education. One study, reported in Choices, Changes, and 
Challenges: Curriculum and Instruction in the NCLB Era, sponsored by 
the Center on Education Policy (CEP) and issued in July 2007, asked 
school district officials in school year 2006-2007 whether instruction 
time for individual subjects, including arts education, had changed 
since school year 2001-2002 when NCLB was enacted.[Footnote 11] The CEP 
study reported that 30 percent of school districts reported that 
instruction time for arts education in elementary schools had decreased 
since NCLBA was enacted. NLS-NCLB, also sponsored by Education, 
collected data in school years 2004-2005 and 2006-2007 to describe 
major patterns in state, district, and school implementation of NCLBA's 
central accountability provisions, including changes in instruction 
time. To address study question 1 in our report concerning changes in 
students' access to arts education, if any, we analyzed the data on 
changes in instruction time and other school characteristics collected 
from elementary school teachers and principals during school year 2006- 
2007 by the NLS-NCLB.[Footnote 12] 

Education plans to undertake a new study, which is expected to build on 
previous research, including the NLS-NCLB study, to continue to examine 
NCLBA implementation issues. Among a broad range of topics the planned 
study likely will explore are the uses of instruction time for all 
academic subjects. Education expects to award a contract for the study 
in September 2009 and begin data collection in the 2011-2012 school 
year. 

Overall Time Spent on Arts Education Changed Little between the 2004- 
2005 and 2006-2007 School Years, but Decreases Were More Likely at Some 
Schools and the Reasons for the Differences Are Uncertain: 

Most elementary school teachers--90 percent--reported that instruction 
time for arts education stayed the same between the 2004-2005 and 2006- 
2007 school years. The percentage of teachers that reported that 
instruction time had stayed the same was similarly high across a range 
of school characteristics, irrespective of the schools' percentage of 
low-income or minority students or of students with limited English 
proficiency, or the schools' improvement under NCLBA. However, 7 
percent of the teachers reported a reduction in the time spent on arts 
education. Moreover, when we looked at teacher responses across a range 
of school characteristics, we found some significant differences in the 
percentages of teachers reporting that the time spent on arts education 
had decreased and in the average amount of time that instruction had 
been reduced. In contrast, among teachers reporting increases in 
instruction time for the arts, we found no differences across different 
types of schools. Because Education's survey did not include questions 
for teachers to indicate why instruction time decreased at their 
school, in our analysis of Education's data, we were unable to identify 
factors that might help explain some of the apparent disparities in 
instruction time suggested by our findings. 

Teachers at Schools Identified as Needing Improvement and Those with a 
Higher Percentage of Minority Students Were More Likely to Report a 
Decrease in the Amount of Time Spent on Arts Education: 

According to Education's data, the vast majority of elementary school 
teachers surveyed reported that the amount of weekly instruction time 
spent across all subjects, including arts education, stayed the same in 
the 2006-2007 school year compared with the 2004-2005 school year. 
[Footnote 13] Table 2 shows that about 89.8 percent of elementary 
school teachers reported that instruction time spent on arts education 
did not change between these school years, while about 3.7 percent 
reported the time had increased compared with about 6.6 percent that 
reported it had decreased. The percentage of teachers that reported 
increases in instruction time was higher for reading/language arts and 
mathematics than for other subjects, which is understandable since 
these were the two subjects for which the NCLBA held schools 
accountable for demonstrating student proficiency at that time. In 
contrast, the percentage of teachers that reported decreases in 
instruction time was higher for social studies and science than for 
other subjects, including arts education, even though the NCLBA 
required schools to begin testing student proficiency in science in the 
2007-2008 school year. 

Table 2: Percentage of Teachers across All Schools Reporting Whether 
Instruction Time Had Changed between the 2004-2005 and 2006-2007 School 
Years, by Subject: 

Subject: Art/music; 
Increased: 3.7; 
Stayed the same: 89.8; 
Decreased: 6.6; 
Total: 100. 

Subject: Physical education/health; 
Increased: 5.5; 
Stayed the same: 88.1; 
Decreased: 6.4; 
Total: 100. 

Subject: Social studies/history; 
Increased: 4.0; 
Stayed the same: 82.8; 
Decreased: 13.1; 
Total: 100. 

Subject: Science; 
Increased: 5.6; 
Stayed the same: 82.0; 
Decreased: 12.4; 
Total: 100. 

Subject: Mathematics; 
Increased: 18.1; 
Stayed the same: 77.8; 
Decreased: 4.1; 
Total: 100. 

Subject: Reading/language arts; 
Increased: 21.9; 
Stayed the same: 75.4; 
Decreased: 2.7; 
Total: 100. 

Source: GAO analysis of Education data. 

Note: Percentages across columns may not add to 100 percent due to 
rounding. 

[End of table] 

When we looked at teacher responses across a range of school 
characteristics--including percentage of low-income and minority 
students and students with limited English proficiency, as well as 
improvement status, as indicated in table 3--we found no differences 
across characteristics in the percentages of teachers reporting that 
the time spent on arts education had increased. However, there were 
some significant differences across characteristics in the percentages 
of teachers reporting that the time spent on arts education had 
decreased, as shown in table 3. Elementary school teachers at schools 
identified as needing improvement, those at schools with higher 
percentages of minority students, and those at schools with higher 
percentages of students with limited English speaking skills, were 
significantly more likely to report a decrease in the amount of time 
spent on arts education compared with teachers at other schools. We 
might also point out that the vast majority of teachers reported that 
instruction time stayed the same, irrespective of their schools' 
percentage of low-income or minority students or students with limited 
English proficiency, or the schools' improvement status under NCLBA. 

Table 3: Percentage of Elementary Schools Teachers Reporting Whether 
Arts Education Instruction Time Had Changed between the 2004-2005 and 
2006-2007 School Years, by School Characteristic: 

School characteristic: Percentage of low-income students[A]: Schools 
with 75% or more; 
Increased: 3; 
Stayed the same: 88; 
Decreased: 9. 

School characteristic: Percentage of low-income students[A]: Schools 
with 35% or less; 
Increased: 4; 
Stayed the same: 89; 
Decreased: 7. 

School characteristic: Percentage of minority students[B]: Schools with 
75% or more; 
Increased: 6; 
Stayed the same: 84; 
Decreased: 10*. 

School characteristic: Percentage of minority students[B]: Schools with 
less than 25%; 
Increased: 3; 
Stayed the same: 91; 
Decreased: 6*. 

School characteristic: Percentage of students with limited English 
proficiency: Schools with greater than 5%; 
Increased: 4; 
Stayed the same: 88; 
Decreased: 8*. 

School characteristic: Percentage of students with limited English 
proficiency: Schools with 0%; 
Increased: 3; 
Stayed the same: 92; 
Decreased: 4*. 

School characteristic: Improvement status[C]: Schools identified for 
improvement; 
Increased: 3; 
Stayed the same: 86; 
Decreased: 11*. 

School characteristic: Improvement status[C]: Schools not identified 
for improvement; 
Increased: 4; 
Stayed the same: 90; 
Decreased: 6*. 

School characteristic: School location[D]: Urban; 
Increased: 4; 
Stayed the same: 88; 
Decreased: 7. 

School characteristic: School location[D]: Rural; 
Increased: 3; 
Stayed the same: 92; 
Decreased: 6. 

Legend: 

* = differences in percentage of teachers reporting a decrease were 
statistically significant (p<.05 level). 

Source: GAO analysis of Education data. 

Notes: Percentages across columns may not add to 100 percent due to 
rounding. 

We also found statistically significant differences between the 
percentages of teachers reporting a decrease in arts education 
instruction at schools with a higher percentage of low-income students 
(9% v. 5%) or minority students (10% v. 5%) and those with a moderate 
percentage of these students. 

[A] Schools were classified by Education as having "high--75 percent or 
more," "moderate--35 to less than 75," or "low--35 percent or less" 
percentages of low-income students using the number of students at the 
school that were eligible for the free and reduced-price lunch program. 

[B] Schools were classified as having "high--75 percent or more," 
"moderate--25 to less than 75," or "low--25 percent or less" 
percentages of minority students, based on the school population that 
principals reported to be American Indian/Alaskan Native, Asian, Black, 
or African-American, Hispanic or Latino, and Native Hawaiian or other 
Pacific Islander. To see if certain groups were more affected than 
others, we also looked separately at the responses of teachers based on 
the percentages of African-American or Hispanic students enrolled at 
the school. 

[C] Schools receiving funds under Title I of the NCLBA are identified 
as needing improvement when students do not make sufficient progress 
toward meeting state proficiency targets for 2 years or more. 

[D] Schools were classified as central city (urban), urban fringe/large 
town (suburban), or small/fringe town (rural). 

[End of table] 

Teachers at Schools with Higher Percentages of Low-Income or Minority 
Students Reported Significantly Larger Average Decreases Compared with 
Other Teachers: 

When we looked at the average amount of change in instruction time 
among teachers that reported either an increase or decrease, we found 
significant differences among teachers that reported a decrease. Among 
teachers that reported a decrease, teachers at schools with higher 
percentages of low-income or minority students reported significantly 
larger average decreases in time spent on arts education compared with 
teachers at other schools. (See table 4.) For example, among teachers 
reporting a decrease, teachers at schools with a higher percentage of 
low-income students reported an average decrease of 49 minutes per week 
in the time spent on arts education compared with an average decrease 
of 31 minutes reported by teachers at schools with a low percentage of 
these students.[Footnote 14] While this data might suggest that 
students at these types of schools are receiving less instruction time 
in arts education during the school day compared with students at other 
schools, we could not determine how this might affect their overall 
access to arts education without information on other opportunities, 
such as after-school programs in arts education. 

Table 4: Mean Decrease in the Amount of Instruction Time Spent on Arts 
Education among Teachers Reporting a Decrease from School Year 2004- 
2005 to 2006-2007: 

School characteristic: Percentage of low-income students; 
Schools with a low percentage of these students: 31.2* minutes per 
week; 
Schools with a high percentage of these students: 49.0* minutes per 
week. 

School characteristic: Percentage of minority students; 
Schools with a low percentage of these students: 33.3* minutes per 
week; 
Schools with a high percentage of these students: 48.5* minutes per 
week. 

School characteristic: Percentage of limited English proficient 
Students; 
Schools with a low percentage of these students: 53.4 minutes per week; 
Schools with a high percentage of these students: 40.2 minutes per 
week. 

School characteristic: Percentage of African-American students; 
Schools with a low percentage of these students: 41.7 minutes per week; 
Schools with a high percentage of these students: 52.3 minutes per 
week. 

School characteristic: Percentage of Hispanic students; 
Schools with a low percentage of these students: 42.5 minutes per week; 
Schools with a high percentage of these students: 52 minutes per week. 

School characteristic: Improvement status (Not IFI v. IFI); 
Schools not identified for improvement: 37.6 minutes per week; 
Schools identified for improvement: 41.5 minutes per week. 

School characteristic: Location (urban v. rural); 
Urban schools: 43.4 minutes per week; 
Rural schools: 59 minutes per week. 

Legend: 

* = difference between the "low" and "high" range was statistically 
significant (p<.05 level). 

Source: GAO analysis of Education data. 

Note: All findings in the table are those reported by the fraction of 
teachers who reported a decrease. Because none of the differences in 
the percentages involving schools with teachers that reported an 
increase were statistically significant, findings for those schools are 
not included in the table. 

[End of table] 

Interestingly, while teachers at elementary schools identified for 
improvement and those with high percentages of limited English- 
proficient students were more likely to report a decrease in arts 
education as shown in table 3, when looking at the amount of change, as 
shown in table 4, the data shows that, on average, they reported about 
the same amount of change in instruction time as teachers from 
nonidentified schools and those with lower percentages of limited 
English-proficient students, respectively--that is, the differences 
were not statistically significant. It was difficult to determine which 
school characteristic had a stronger effect on the changes in arts 
education instruction time without a more advanced analysis.[Footnote 
15] 

Education's NLS-NCLB Survey Does Not Currently Ask Questions That Might 
Explain the Disparities in Changes in Instruction Time across Different 
Types of Schools: 

Education's NLS-NCLB survey did not include questions for respondents 
to identify the reasons instruction time may have changed, which might 
help explain some of the apparent disparities in instruction time 
suggested by our analysis of Education's data. Although Education's 
survey asked questions regarding whether schools have implemented any 
of a variety of NCLBA-defined interventions,[Footnote 16] such as 
extending the school day or adopting a new curriculum program, it did 
not specifically ask respondents to identify the reasons for any change 
in the amount of instruction time they reported for the respective 
subjects. 

While Basic State Requirements for Arts Education in Schools Have 
Remained Constant in Most States, State Funding Levels for Arts 
Education Changed: 

According to our survey of state arts officials, since passage of 
NCLBA, basic state requirements for arts education in schools, such as 
the number of hours a week that the arts must be taught, have remained 
virtually unchanged and more states have established funding for some 
type of arts education, such as providing grants to schools to promote 
arts education. However, while some states have increased funding, 
other states have reduced funding since NCLBA's passage. Arts officials 
attributed changes in funding to state budget changes to a greater 
extent than to NCLBA or other factors. 

The Basic Requirement for Arts Education Stayed about the Same in Most 
States and Additional States Have Established Funding for Some Type of 
Arts Education: 

By school year 2001-2002, the year NCLBA was enacted, most states had 
taken steps to establish arts education in their public school systems 
by developing basic arts education requirements, such as the number of 
hours a week that the arts must be taught or the number of courses that 
must be taken. As shown in table 5, of the 45 states that responded to 
our survey, 34 states had established the basic requirement that arts 
education be taught, and 28 states had included arts education as a 
high school graduation requirement by that school year. By school year 
2006-2007, as shown in the third column of table 5, most of these 
states had retained these requirements. In addition, 3 more states had 
established basic arts education requirements, and 5 more states had 
included arts education as a high school graduation requirement by that 
school year. As table 5 also shows, a number of states did not have any 
requirements for arts education in place by the time NCLBA was passed. 
Specifically, 7 states had no basic requirement that arts education be 
taught, and 11 states had not included arts education as a high school 
graduation requirement by school year 2001-2002. State by state 
breakouts are provided in appendix III. 

Table 5: Number of States with Arts Education Requirements in School 
Years 2001-2002 and 2006-2007: 

Arts education requirements: General arts requirements; 
2001-2002 only: 0; 
Both 2001-2002 and 2006-2007: 34; 
2006-2007 only: 3; 
No requirements in either year: 7; 
Did not know: 1; 
Total: 45. 

Arts education requirements: Arts requirements for high school 
graduation; 
2001-2002 only: 0; 
Both 2001-2002 and 2006-2007: 28; 
2006-2007 only: 5; 
No requirements in either year: 11; 
Did not know: 1; 
Total: 45. 

Source: GAO analysis of GAO survey data. 

[End of table] 

Many states had also provided funding to promote arts education in 
public schools and, as shown in the third column of table 6, most of 
the funding still was in place 5 years later, in school year 2006-2007. 
In addition, the number of states with arts education grants, training 
funding, and state established schools for the arts increased in school 
year 2006-2007. 

Table 6: Number of States with Funding for Arts Education in School 
Years 2001-2002 and 2006-2007: 

Arts education funding: Arts education grants; 
Funding in 2001-2002 only: 0; 
Funding in both 2001-2002 and 2006-2007: 32; 
Funding in 2006-2007 only: 5; 
No funding in either year: 3; 
Did not know: 5; 
Total: 45. 

Arts education funding: Artist-in-residence funding; 
Funding in 2001-2002 only: 2; 
Funding in both 2001-2002 and 2006-2007: 33; 
Funding in 2006-2007 only: 0; 
No funding in either year: 5; 
Did not know: 4; 
Total: 44. 

Arts education funding: Training funding; 
Funding in 2001-2002 only: 1; 
Funding in both 2001-2002 and 2006-2007: 27; 
Funding in 2006-2007 only: 4; 
No funding in either year: 8; 
Did not know: 4; 
Total: 44. 

Arts education funding: State-established arts school funding; 
Funding in 2001-2002 only: 0; 
Funding in both 2001-2002 and 2006-2007: 11; 
Funding in 2006-2007 only: 1; 
No funding in either year: 29; 
Did not know: 4; 
Total: 45. 

Source: GAO analysis of GAO survey data. 

[End of table] 

State arts officials identified multiple sources of funding for arts 
education, including the state education agency, the state cultural 
agency, private foundations, the federal government, and other 
organizations, as shown in table 7. Of the 45 arts officials who 
responded to the survey, more identified the state cultural agency as a 
funding source than any other organization, including the state 
education agency. 

Table 7: Sources of Funding for State Arts Education between School 
Years 2001-2002 and 2006-2007: 

Arts education funding: Arts education grants; 
State education agency: 18; 
State cultural agency: 30; 
Private foundations: 15; 
Federal government: 21; 
Other: 7; 
Number of states with funding[A]: 37. 

Arts education funding: Artist-in-residence funding; 
State education agency: 8; 
State cultural agency: 33; 
Private foundations: 12; 
Federal government: 16; 
Other: 9; 
Number of states with funding[A]: 35. 

Arts education funding: Training funding; 
State education agency: 26; 
State cultural agency: 27; 
Private foundations: 13; 
Federal government: 16; 
Other: 9; 
Number of states with funding[A]: 32. 

Arts education funding: State-established arts school funding; 
State education agency: 8; 
State cultural agency: 0; 
Private foundations: 1; 
Federal government: 2; 
Other: 2; 
Number of states with funding[A]: 12. 

Source: GAO analysis of GAO survey data. 

[A] Total represents the number of states that provided funding in at 
least one of the 2 school years. 

[End of table] 

Levels of State Financial Support for Arts Education Varied Among the 
States, and States Reported That State Budget Changes rather than NCLBA 
Were the Major Factor Prompting the Funding Changes: 

While the number of states that had basic requirements for arts 
education remained nearly unchanged and most states maintained their 
arts education funding, levels of funding changed, with some states 
reporting decreases, and others reporting increases. For example, of 
the 32 states that awarded arts education grants in both years, funding 
decreased in 12 states, increased in 5 states, and stayed the about 
same in 8 states, as shown in table 8. 

Table 8: Of States That Had Funding in Both School Years 2001-2002 and 
2006-2007, Number of States with Changes in Funding for Arts Education 
and Number Where Funding Stayed about the Same: 

Arts education funding: Arts in Education Grants; 
Extent of change in funding: Decreased greatly: 8; 
Extent of change in funding: Decreased somewhat: 4; 
Extent of change in funding: Stayed about the same: 8; 
Extent of change in funding: Increased somewhat: 4; 
Extent of change in funding: Increased greatly: 1; 
Extent of change in funding: Changes differed depending on school 
level[A]: 3; 
Extent of change in funding: 
Did not know: 4. 

Arts education funding: Artist-in-Residence Funding; 
Extent of change in funding: Decreased greatly: 6; 
Extent of change in funding: Decreased somewhat: 6; 
Extent of change in funding: Stayed about the same: 7; 
Extent of change in funding: Increased somewhat: 5; 
Extent of change in funding: Increased greatly: 0; 
Extent of change in funding: Changes differed depending on school 
level[A]: 5; 
Extent of change in funding: 
Did not know: 4. 

Arts education funding: Training Funding; 
Extent of change in funding: Decreased greatly: 4; 
Extent of change in funding: Decreased somewhat: 6; 
Extent of change in funding: Stayed about the same: 6; 
Extent of change in funding: Increased somewhat: 4; 
Extent of change in funding: Increased greatly: 3; 
Extent of change in funding: Changes differed depending on school 
level[A]: 4; 
Extent of change in funding: 
Did not know: 0. 

Arts education funding: State Arts Schools Funding; 
Extent of change in funding: Decreased greatly: 0; 
Extent of change in funding: Decreased somewhat: 1; 
Extent of change in funding: Stayed about the same: 2; 
Extent of change in funding: Increased somewhat: 6; 
Extent of change in funding: Increased greatly: 0; 
Extent of change in funding: Changes differed depending on school 
level[A]: n/a; 
Extent of change in funding: 
Did not know: 3. 

Source: GAO analysis of GAO survey data. 

Notes: Five states had arts education grants only in school year 2006- 
2007. 

Five states did not have artist-in-residence funding for either school 
year 2001-2002 or 2006-2007, and two states had artist-in-residence 
funding only in 2001-2002. 

Four states had training funding only in 2006-2007, and one state had 
training funding only in 2001-2002. 

Twenty-nine states did not have state-established arts schools in 
either school year 2001-2002 or 2006-2007. 

[A] Arts officials were asked to answer questions about changes in 
funding for each school level (elementary, middle, and high). The 
frequencies in columns 2-6 and 8 represent the states that answered the 
same for each school level. The frequencies in column 7 show the number 
of states that gave mixed responses by school level. 

[End of table] 

According to our survey, state arts officials attributed changes in 
funding for state arts education to state budget changes to a greater 
extent than to NCLBA or other factors. For example, of the states that 
provided arts education grants in both school years 2001-2002 and 2006- 
2007, 11 arts officials attributed changes in funding to state budget 
changes, and 18 reported that shifting funds to meet NCLBA needs had 
little or nothing to do with the funding changes. Table 9 shows the 
extent to which the arts officials attributed changes in funding to 
state budget changes, state policy changes, shifting funds to meet 
NCLBA needs, and other factors for each of the four types of state arts 
education funding. 

Table 9: Number of States Identifying Factors That Contributed to 
Change in Funding of Arts Education between School Years 2001-2002 and 
2006-2007: 

Factors that contributed to change: Arts education grants: State budget 
changes; 
Extent of change: Very great extent: 11; 
Extent of change: Great extent: 6; 
Extent of change: Moderate extent: 2; 
Extent of change: Some extent: 2; 
Extent of change: Little or no extent: 8; 
Extent of change: Cannot judge: 5; 
Total response: 34. 

Factors that contributed to change: Arts education grants: State policy 
changes; 
Extent of change: Very great extent: 4; 
Extent of change: Great extent: 1; 
Extent of change: Moderate extent: 4; 
Extent of change: Some extent: 2; 
Extent of change: Little or no extent: 18; 
Extent of change: Cannot judge: 4; 
Total response: 33. 

Factors that contributed to change: Arts education grants: Shifting 
funds to meet NCLB needs; 
Extent of change: Very great extent: 3; 
Extent of change: Great extent: 0; 
Extent of change: Moderate extent: 2; 
Extent of change: Some extent: 0; 
Extent of change: Little or no extent: 18; 
Extent of change: Cannot judge: 9; 
Total response: 32. 

Factors that contributed to change: Arts education grants: Other; 
Extent of change: Very great extent: 6; 
Extent of change: Great extent: 2; 
Extent of change: Moderate extent: 4; 
Extent of change: Some extent: 3; 
Extent of change: Little or no extent: 2; 
Extent of change: Cannot judge: 6; 
Total response: 23. 

Factors that contributed to change: Artist-in-residence funding: State 
budget changes; 
Extent of change: Very great extent: 11; 
Extent of change: Great extent: 2; 
Extent of change: Moderate extent: 2; 
Extent of change: Some extent: 4; 
Extent of change: Little or no extent: 10; 
Extent of change: Cannot judge: 6; 
Total response: 35. 

Factors that contributed to change: Artist-in-residence funding: State 
policy changes; 
Extent of change: Very great extent: 1; 
Extent of change: Great extent: 3; 
Extent of change: Moderate extent: 3; 
Extent of change: Some extent: 4; 
Extent of change: Little or no extent: 15; 
Extent of change: Cannot judge: 8; 
Total response: 34. 

Factors that contributed to change: Artist-in-residence funding: 
Shifting funds to meet NCLB needs; 
Extent of change: Very great extent: 1; 
Extent of change: Great extent: 3; 
Extent of change: Moderate extent: 2; 
Extent of change: Some extent: 2; 
Extent of change: Little or no extent: 16; 
Extent of change: Cannot judge: 10; 
Total response: 34. 

Factors that contributed to change: Artist-in-residence funding: Other; 
Extent of change: Very great extent: 3; 
Extent of change: Great extent: 0; 
Extent of change: Moderate extent: 2; 
Extent of change: Some extent: 1; 
Extent of change: Little or no extent: 6; 
Extent of change: Cannot judge: 8; 
Total response: 20. 

Factors that contributed to change: Training funding: State budget 
changes; 
Extent of change: Very great extent: 11; 
Extent of change: Great extent: 4; 
Extent of change: Moderate extent: 4; 
Extent of change: Some extent: 0; 
Extent of change: Little or no extent: 7; 
Extent of change: Cannot judge: 5; 
Total response: 31. 

Factors that contributed to change: Training funding: State policy 
changes; 
Extent of change: Very great extent: 2; 
Extent of change: Great extent: 3; 
Extent of change: Moderate extent: 2; 
Extent of change: Some extent: 3; 
Extent of change: Little or no extent: 14; 
Extent of change: Cannot judge: 4; 
Total response: 28. 

Factors that contributed to change: Training funding: Shifting funds to 
meet NCLB needs; 
Extent of change: Very great extent: 4; 
Extent of change: Great extent: 0; 
Extent of change: Moderate extent: 5; 
Extent of change: Some extent: 1; 
Extent of change: Little or no extent: 14; 
Extent of change: Cannot judge: 6; 
Total response: 30. 

Factors that contributed to change: Training funding: Other; 
Extent of change: Very great extent: 4; 
Extent of change: Great extent: 1; 
Extent of change: Moderate extent: 3; 
Extent of change: Some extent: 0; 
Extent of change: Little or no extent: 5; 
Extent of change: Cannot judge: 6; 
Total response: 19. 

Factors that contributed to change: State-established arts school 
funding: State budget changes; 
Extent of change: Very great extent: 1; 
Extent of change: Great extent: 1; 
Extent of change: Moderate extent: 2; 
Extent of change: Some extent: 0; 
Extent of change: Little or no extent: 3; 
Extent of change: Cannot judge: 4; 
Total response: 11. 

Factors that contributed to change: State-established arts school 
funding: State policy changes; 
Extent of change: Very great extent: 0; 
Extent of change: Great extent: 1; 
Extent of change: Moderate extent: 0; 
Extent of change: Some extent: 0; 
Extent of change: Little or no extent: 6; 
Extent of change: Cannot judge: 4; 
Total response: 11. 

Factors that contributed to change: State-established arts school 
funding: Shifting funds to meet NCLB needs; 
Extent of change: Very great extent: 0; 
Extent of change: Great extent: 0; 
Extent of change: Moderate extent: 0; 
Extent of change: Some extent: 1; 
Extent of change: Little or no extent: 6; 
Extent of change: Cannot judge: 4; 
Total response: 11. 

Factors that contributed to change: State-established arts school 
funding: Other; 
Extent of change: Very great extent: 0; 
Extent of change: Great extent: 0; 
Extent of change: Moderate extent: 1; 
Extent of change: Some extent: 1; 
Extent of change: Little or no extent: 3; 
Extent of change: Cannot judge: 4; 
Total response: 9. 

Source: GAO analysis of GAO survey data. 

[End of table] 

Since NCLBA, District Officials and School Principals Have Used Several 
Strategies to Provide Arts Education; However, Some Struggled with 
Decreased Budgets and Competing Demands on Instruction Time: 

District officials and school principals have used several strategies 
to provide arts education, including varying when the arts are offered, 
seeking funding and collaborative arrangements in the arts community, 
and integrating the arts into other subjects; however, some struggled 
with decreased budgets and competing demands on instruction time, 
according to officials we interviewed. Faced with decreased funding or 
increased demands on instruction time, some principals told us that 
they had to make trade-offs. 

District Officials and School Principals Have Used Several Different 
Strategies to Provide Arts Instruction: 

School principals we met with had found several ways to maintain arts 
education, including varying when the arts are offered. More than half 
of the 19 schools we visited offered some form of arts education 
outside of the regular school day. In a few schools, after school 
classes were the only arts education opportunity available to students. 
At one middle school in Boston that had not met AYP in school year 2006-
2007, the principal had eliminated arts education classes during the 
school day and purchased an after-school arts program in drama and 
music production from an outside organization. The program is open to 
all students, but participation in the program is offered on a first- 
come-first-served basis. In contrast, one New York City middle school, 
which was not meeting AYP in English and language arts in school year 
2007-2008, changed when other classes were offered, rather than 
changing when arts education was offered. This school extended the 
school day for students who required additional help by adding a period 
to the school schedule four times a week. The principal told us that 
this allowed all students to attend art class held during the regular 
school day. While many schools experienced changes to their arts 
programs, several of the schools we visited reported no changes in 
their arts education offerings. For example, the principal of the high 
school we visited in the Waltham school district, near Boston, which 
met AYP, said that the school had experienced a stable budget for the 
past 10 years and had made no changes to its arts education policies. 
The principal of a large high school in Chicago, which has not met AYP 
for 4 years, also said that the school had not changed its arts 
education policies. He explained that because the school's budget is 
determined by the enrollment level, his school had the resources to 
offer students arts education opportunities that smaller Chicago 
schools could not. 

Several of the schools we visited also reported receiving grants and 
private funding and establishing collaborative relationships with 
organizations in the arts community that supplemented the arts 
education classes funded by general revenues. For example, one 
elementary school in Boston has developed partnerships with several 
companies, including a bank, that fund the school's instrumental music 
program. This elementary school also has obtained a grant from a 
television station to pay for instruments and participates in a city- 
funded program that sends seven selected students to the Boston Ballet 
once a week for lessons. A Chicago high school received a private grant 
that supported a student art project to do a mosaic on the walls 
outside the music rooms at the school.[Footnote 17] The principal of 
this high school also said that he has informal arrangements with local 
artists to bring special projects to the school, such as the group that 
visited the school to teach a belly dancing class. A high school in 
Miami set up internships for its students at local music stores and 
solicited a donation of used equipment from the local news station when 
it moved to a new facility. The drama teacher also solicits donations 
of costumes for school dramatic productions. In Broward County, 
Florida, the school district provides funds each year to pay for the 
cost of transporting the school district's students to performances at 
the Broward Center for the Performing Arts (Center).[Footnote 18] A New 
York City junior high school receives support for students to attend 
plays from a private program and sends the school's theater group to 
perform at Lincoln Center every year. A senior high school in the city 
has arranged music programs with Carnegie Hall, a local orchestra, and 
the Juilliard School of Music. The Museum of Modern Art and the 
Metropolitan Museum of Art also cover the students' cost of admission 
for exhibits and performances. 

Arts organization officials in Chicago, Miami, and Broward County, 
Florida, described the arts integration model of arts education as a 
strategy for maintaining the arts in school curricula and provided 
examples of arts integration programs in schools we did not visit. In 
Chicago, the Chicago Arts Partnerships in Education, a nonprofit arts 
education advocacy organization, is participating as a partner in a 
project that supports arts integration in the 55 fine and performing 
arts schools operated under Chicago Public Schools' (CPS) magnet school 
cluster program.[Footnote 19] The project, funded by Education's Model 
Development and Dissemination grant program, funds teaching artists who 
work with art teachers and regular classroom teachers to incorporate 
the arts into teaching academic subjects. In Miami, Arts for Learning, 
a nonprofit that promotes arts integration through in-school and after- 
school programs, operates "GET smART," a yearlong professional 
development program that provides interdisciplinary training to 
teachers on how to effectively create and implement arts integration 
projects in the core academic subjects. About 18 Miami-Dade schools 
participated in this program in school year 2007-2008. Arts for 
Learning also offers "Early GET smART" a program that works with 
preschoolers aged 2 to 6 to provide an arts-based learning approach to 
literacy and school readiness. The Broward County Cultural Division, a 
publicly funded agency established by the Board of County 
Commissioners, promotes arts integration in the local schools. One 
initiative provides a block grant to the school board to implement 
artist-in-residencies and arts integration workshops in individual 
schools. Officials representing the division said that schools are 
increasing use of the arts to teach lessons in academic subject areas. 
For example, as his class learned about a particular country, a social 
studies teacher would play music from that country to expose the 
students to different musical styles from around the world. The teacher 
was also working with an artist to develop a visual presentation that 
could be incorporated into the lesson. In addition, the Ft. Lauderdale 
Children's Theater goes into schools and performs dramatic readings of 
plays with the children acting out the roles as part of their classroom 
reading lessons. 

Officials Report That the Main Challenges to Providing Arts Instruction 
Have Been Decreased State or Local Funding and Competing Demands on 
Instruction Time: 

Officials we met with told us that the main challenges to providing 
arts education have been decreased state or local funding and competing 
demands on instruction time due to requirements established by the 
state education agency or school district to meet NCLBA proficiency 
standards, such as doubling the amount of time low-performing students 
spend on reading and math. 

District officials and school principals in the Boston, Chicago, Miami- 
Dade, and New York City school districts all reported that state or 
local budget cuts created a challenge for arts education in the 
schools. The Boston school district expects an $11 million budget 
shortfall for the upcoming school year, a result of a declining 
population base. School district officials expect this shortfall to 
lead to a loss of 10 arts teachers across the school district. District 
officials and school principals in Chicago attributed funding shortages 
for arts education to the school district's arts personnel funding 
policy. The Chicago school district funds personnel positions on the 
basis of student enrollment and supports one half-time position for an 
arts teacher in primary schools with fewer than 750 students. To employ 
a full-time arts teacher on the staff, a school principal must 
supplement the arts teacher's salary from discretionary funds. 
Officials in both Florida school districts we visited reported budget 
pressures due to a state budget shortfall, but the consequences for 
arts education differed. Miami-Dade school district officials reported 
cuts in the district's arts education budget of as much as 70 percent, 
resulting in staff cuts. In Broward County, while acknowledging budget 
pressures, school district officials reported that the arts have not 
been cut. They said that the district had taken steps several years ago 
to prepare for this possible economic downturn. However, if cuts in 
content area programs are necessary, the district makes an across-the- 
board percentage cut in the budget allocated to each school rather than 
targeting individual subjects for reduction. New York City school 
district officials reported that a line item in the school district 
budget that provided schools a per capita allotment solely to support 
arts education was eliminated in 2007, and funds were incorporated into 
the school's general fund.[Footnote 20] This change allowed school 
principals to allocate the funds to the arts or other subjects. 

In addition to state and local budget cuts, district officials and 
school principals in the Boston, Chicago, Miami-Dade, and New York City 
school districts also agreed that competing demands on instruction time 
were a major challenge for providing arts education in their schools. 
These officials also identified NCLBA's proficiency standards--as well 
as requirements established by the state and school district to meet 
NCLBA proficiency standards--as a key source of the time pressure. 
Boston school district officials said that it is difficult to convince 
principals of the importance of continuing to provide arts education 
when it is not a tested subject. They said that the arts curriculum 
takes a back seat because school success is based on student 
performance on their state tests as required under NCLBA. Although they 
tried to avoid pulling students out of arts education classes for 
remedial work, one elementary and one high school principal interviewed 
in Boston, whose schools were not meeting AYP, agreed that NCLBA's 
testing requirements had increased the demands on instruction time for 
tested subjects and reduced time available for the arts, at least for 
students not meeting proficiency requirements. A Waltham school 
district official said that to meet the state and federal proficiency 
standards, the district added workshops in math, reading, and science, 
which led to cuts in arts staff and even eliminating arts field trips 
because they reduce the amount of available class time. She added that, 
2 years ago, the district added a two-block period twice a week to keep 
up with state proficiency standards. This resulted in the loss of one 
full-time equivalent (FTE) arts teacher. A Chicago school district 
official affirmed that the priorities principals set for meeting AYP in 
reading and math affect the time available for the arts. In Florida, 
where the state requires that students who perform at the lowest two of 
five levels on the state NCLBA proficiency tests be placed in intensive 
classes for language arts and math, district officials agreed that time 
for arts education might be affected. In Broward County, officials said 
that the district follows the state policy that requires mandatory pull-
out sessions for students performing at reading levels 1 and 2 on the 
state performance assessments. In some cases, the district will require 
some students to be pulled out for additional intensive instruction in 
math. These "pull-out" students receive double periods of reading or 
other intensive instruction that reduces the number of periods they 
have available to take elective classes, such as art or music. A New 
York City school district official acknowledged that schools not 
meeting AYP faced challenges in providing arts education but said that 
the responsibility for meeting instructional requirements was the 
school principal's. Principals in the elementary and middle schools we 
visited in New York, two of which were not meeting AYP, said they had 
taken steps to meet the time demands of NCLBA's testing requirements. 
The high school principal said that students not meeting proficiency 
requirements could attend their remedial classes and still meet the 
arts course requirement for graduation, but that they may not have an 
opportunity to take courses above the minimum credit requirement. This 
high school was not meeting AYP in school year 2007-2008. 

Officials Report That When Trade-Offs Involving Funding or Instruction 
Time for Arts Education Had to Be Made, the School Principal Made the 
Decision: 

District officials and school principals told us that when they faced 
decreased budgets or increased demands on instruction time, trade-offs 
had to be made, and school principals made the decision. Principals' 
decisions differed, however. Some principals chose not to spend their 
limited discretionary funds on arts education, while other principals, 
even when their school had been identified as needing improvement 
several times, maintained their arts offerings. For example, one school 
principal in a Chicago elementary school chose to spend discretionary 
budget funds on special reading and math programs needed to improve 
students' performance rather than supplement half the salary of a full- 
time arts teacher. On the other hand, one Miami-Dade high school 
principal had allocated Title I funds to help retain and rebuild the 
school's arts education program as part of its NCLBA restructuring 
plan. New York City officials said that a new accountability system the 
school district had developed in part because of NCLBA, but also to 
evaluate progress toward meeting city instructional requirements, 
increased the discretionary authority vested in school principals. The 
district also developed an accountability initiative called ArtsCount. 
For this initiative, district arts officials developed measures to be 
incorporated in the district's evaluation of school performance and the 
quality of arts offerings. This information will be used to influence 
the scores that are incorporated into each school principal's report 
card. For middle and high schools, the results are incorporated into 
the measure of graduation requirements. Under the accountability system 
and this initiative, school principals are given greater authority to 
make trade-offs, such as the discretion to allocate funds formerly 
restricted to expenditures for the arts to other subjects, but the 
school district monitors the results of their decisions. 

Overall Research on the Association between Arts Education and Student 
Outcomes Is Inconclusive: 

While some studies that have examined the association between arts 
education and students' academic achievement have found a small 
positive association with student outcomes, others have found none. One 
meta-analysis that combined the results of several studies found small 
positive relationships.[Footnote 21] This study included two separate 
analyses: one that looked at the association between music instruction 
and math scores, and another that looked at the association between 
listening to music and math scores. The first analysis of six studies 
found that learning to play music had a small positive relationship 
with both standardized and researcher-designed achievement test scores 
in mathematics, regardless of whether or not the child learned to read 
music.[Footnote 22] Music instruction in these studies included both 
instrumental and vocal performance for durations of at least 4 months 
and up to 2 years, and included children at the preschool through 
elementary level.[Footnote 23] The second analysis, which included 15 
studies, determined that there was a small positive relationship with 
math test scores when children listened to certain types of music while 
attempting to solve math problems. In contrast, another meta-analysis 
found no association with students' achievement. This analysis, which 
looked at 24 studies examining reading outcomes and 15 studies 
examining math outcomes, found no association between arts education 
and standardized reading or math test scores, regardless of the child's 
background or academic history. The students included in the studies 
had a wide range of academic abilities and came from a wide range of 
backgrounds. For example, some of the studies included academically at- 
risk students and students from lower-income families, while some of 
the studies included "academically gifted" students and students from 
higher-income families. The studies also included children of a variety 
of ages and several different types of arts instruction, including 
music, visual arts, drama, and dance. Moreover, some research has 
focused on special populations, such as students from low-income 
families; however, most of these studies did not meet GAO's criteria 
for methodological quality, and their findings are questionable. 

Similarly, studies that examined the association between arts education 
and abilities associated with academic performance also were mixed. For 
example, two of the three analyses from one meta-analysis looking at 
the association between music education and certain spatial abilities 
found a positive relationship. One analysis, which was made up of 15 
studies, and another that analyzed 8 studies, found that music 
education was associated with student performance on a wide range of 
spatial tasks. However, the third analysis, which included 5 studies, 
found no association between music education and one measure of spatial 
performance. In these studies, enhanced spatial performance referred to 
the ability to mentally recognize and manipulate patterns that fall 
into a certain logical order and are usually used in subjects such as 
music, geometry, and engineering. An example of spatial ability in a 
music course would be the ability to produce a piece of music based on 
memory alone, anticipating mentally the changes needed to play a 
certain piece of music. A complete list of the studies assessed is 
included in appendix IV. 

Conclusions: 

Amid concerns about possible elimination of arts education, the 
national picture indicates that the vast majority of schools have found 
a way to preserve their arts education programs. However, a somewhat 
different story emerges for some schools identified as needing 
improvement under NCLBA, which include higher percentages of low-income 
and minority students. Among teachers reporting a decrease in 
instruction time for arts education, our study identified a more likely 
reduction in time spent on arts education at schools identified as 
needing improvement and those with higher percentages of minority 
students. While school officials in our site visit states told us that 
requirements established by the state and school district to meet NCLBA 
proficiency standards placed competing demands on instruction time for 
arts education, the reasons for the differences in instruction time our 
statistical analysis identified are difficult to establish nationally, 
given current limitations in Education's NLS-NCLB longitudinal data. 
Having national-level information about the reasons for these 
differences could add to the current body of research on arts education 
and help guide school decisions with respect to arts education. 

Recommendation for Executive Action: 

To help identify factors that may contribute to changes in access to 
arts education for certain student subgroups, we recommend that the 
Secretary of Education require that the department's planned study of 
NCLBA implementation include questions in its surveys asking survey 
respondents to describe the reasons for any changes in instruction time 
they report. Once the information has been collected and analyzed, 
Education could disseminate it to school districts and schools to help 
them identify and develop strategies to address any disparities in 
access. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided a draft of the report to the Department of Education for 
review and comment. Education generally agreed with our findings and 
stated that, our finding that among the small percentage of teachers 
reporting a decrease in arts education instruction time, teachers in 
schools identified for improvement and those with high percentages of 
minority students were more likely to report reductions in time for 
arts education is cause for concern. Regarding our recommendation, 
Education agreed that further study would be useful to help explain why 
arts education instruction time decreased for some students. Education 
said that it will carefully consider our recommendation that the 
department's planned study of NCLBA implementation include questions in 
its surveys asking respondents to describe the reasons for any changes 
in instruction time they report. Education also provided technical 
comments, which have been incorporated in the report as appropriate. 
Education's comments appear in appendix V. 

We are sending copies of this report to the Secretary of Education, 
relevant congressional committees, and other interested parties. The 
report also is available at no charge on the GAO Web site at 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staff have any questions about this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-7215 or ashbyc@gao.gov. Contact points for our 
Office of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on 
the last page of this report. GAO staff who made major contributions to 
this report are listed in appendix VI. 

Signed by: 

Cornelia M. Ashby: 
Director, Education, Workforce, and Income Security Issues: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

This appendix discusses in more detail our methodology for examining 
any changes in students' access to arts education in public elementary 
and secondary schools that may have taken place since passage of the No 
Child Left Behind Act (NCLBA) and what is known about the effect of 
arts education on student academic performance. The study was framed 
around four questions: (1) has the amount of instruction time for arts 
education changed and, if so, have certain groups been more affected 
than others, (2) to what extent have state education agencies' 
requirements and funding for arts education changed since NCLBA, (3) 
what are school officials in selected districts doing to provide arts 
education since NCLBA and what challenges do they face in doing so, and 
(4) what is known about the effect of arts education in improving 
student outcomes? 

Scope: 

As the Department of Education (Education), working in collaboration 
with the National Endowment for the Arts, determined first in school 
year 1993-1994 and again in school year 1999-2000, arts education in 
some form is provided in the vast majority of public schools 
nationwide.[Footnote 24] Questions about changes in access thus need to 
be considered for the national population of public schools. However, 
because we recognized that states' and school districts' roles in 
school governance, funding, and implementation of NCLBA introduce 
variation in time devoted to individual subjects, including arts 
education, we determined that an in-depth look at state, district, and 
school policies and practices also was needed to help understand any 
systematic changes in instruction time for arts education that a 
national-level analysis might identify. Therefore, to examine any 
changes in students' access to arts education in public elementary and 
secondary schools that may have taken place since passage of NCLBA, we 
focused on time devoted to instruction in arts education and other 
subjects and any changes that occurred in a nationally representative 
sample of elementary schools. We also reviewed state arts education 
requirements and funding related to students' access to arts education 
and steps that school districts and schools in selected states had 
taken to provide arts education in the post-NCLBA environment. To 
determine what is known about the effect of arts education on student 
academic achievement and other outcomes, we reviewed and 
methodologically assessed existing research on arts education. 

Methodology: 

We used separate sources of data for each study question, including 
nationally representative survey data collected by the Department of 
Education's (Education) National Longitudinal Study of No Child Left 
Behind (NLS-NCLB), which collected data on changes in instruction time 
by subject; a GAO survey of state arts education officials; on-site 
interviews with school district, school, and arts organization 
officials in selected states; and existing studies of the effect of 
arts education on student outcomes that met GAO's methodological 
criteria. Before deciding to use the NLS-NCLB data, we conducted a data 
reliability assessment. We discuss our assessment procedures and steps 
we took to mitigate any data limitations below, as part of the 
methodology for analyzing changes in instruction time. We provided 
specifications to Education for descriptive analyses of the NLS-NCLB 
data, and we conducted a descriptive analysis of our state survey data, 
a synthesis of our site visit data, and a methodological assessment of 
existing research on arts education. 

Procedures for Analyzing Changes in Instruction Time: 

Because we were not able to obtain raw data files from Education to do 
a comprehensive analysis of the data ourselves, we asked Education to 
provide us with summary information from the Survey of Teachers 
component of the school year 2006-2007 NLS-NCLB. These data are from a 
nationally representative survey of teachers, as well as of schools and 
school districts. We requested tables that showed (1) the average 
(mean) amount of time that teachers reported devoting to arts education 
each week in 2006-2007; (2) the percentage of teachers that reported 
that the amount of time spent on arts education had increased, 
decreased, and remained the same over the past 2 years; and (3) for 
those teachers who reported a change, the average increase or decrease 
(in minutes per week) that was devoted to arts education. We obtained 
these estimates from Education for teachers in all schools, and 
separately for teachers in different categories of schools, defined by 
the percentages of students in the schools that were (1) minorities, 
(2) African-Americans, (3) Hispanics, (4) eligible for free/reduced 
lunches, and (5) in individualized education programs. We also compared 
the reports from teachers in schools that were (6) urban with those 
from rural teachers, and (7) that were and were not identified as being 
in need of improvement. We obtained from Education the standard errors 
associated with the estimates from the different types of schools and 
thus were able to test the statistical significance of the differences 
between what teachers from different types of schools reported. 
[Footnote 25] 

Before deciding to use the data, we reviewed guidance on the variable 
definitions and measures provided, documentation of the survey and 
sampling methodology used, and the data collection and analysis efforts 
conducted. We also interviewed Education officials about the measures 
they and their contractors took to ensure data reliability. We assessed 
the reliability of the NLS-NCLB data by (1) reviewing existing 
information and documentation about the data and the system that 
produced them and (2) interviewing agency officials knowledgeable about 
the data. On the basis of our efforts to determine the reliability of 
the estimates for which supporting information was provided, which 
included verifying calculations, we believe that they are sufficiently 
reliable for the purposes of this report. 

State Survey Data Collection and Analysis Procedures: 

We designed and implemented a Web-based survey to gather information on 
states' role in shaping the provision of arts education in public 
schools and changes that may have occurred since NCLBA. Our survey 
population consisted of state arts officials in 49 states and the 
District of Columbia.[Footnote 26] We identified these arts officials 
through searches of the Arts Education Partnership Web site, and 
verified the contact information provided through e-mails and phone 
contacts. 

To develop survey questions, we reviewed existing studies on arts 
education and the state arts education policy data bases on the Web 
sites of the Education Commission of the States and the Arts Education 
Partnership. We also conducted interviews with representatives of these 
organizations. In addition, we interviewed the Arts Education Director 
and Research Director of the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) to 
develop an understanding of federal and state roles in arts education 
in public schools and of the alternative funding sources for arts 
education that are available to schools. Finally, we conducted pretests 
of various drafts of our questionnaire with arts education officials in 
seven states to ensure that the questions were clear, the terms used 
were precise, the questions were unbiased, and that the questionnaire 
could be completed in a reasonable amount of time. We modified the 
questionnaire to incorporate findings from the pretests. 

The survey was conducted using self-administered electronic 
questionnaires posted on the World Wide Web. In the questionnaire, we 
asked the state arts official to be the lead survey respondent and, if 
necessary, to confer with other representatives of state departments of 
education, state arts commissions, and state cultural agencies to 
answer questions requiring more detailed knowledge. We sent e-mail 
notifications to these officials beginning on April 22, 2008. To 
encourage them to respond, we sent two follow-up e-mails over a period 
of about 3 weeks. For those who still did not respond, GAO staff made 
phone calls to encourage the state officials to complete our 
questionnaire. We closed the survey on July 2, 2008. Forty-five state 
officials completed the survey. 

Because this was not a sample survey, there are no sampling errors; 
however, the practical difficulties of conducting any survey may 
introduce errors. For example, difficulties in how a particular 
question is interpreted, in the sources of information that are 
available to respondents, or in how the data are entered into the 
database or were analyzed, can introduce unwanted variability into the 
survey results. We took steps in the development of this questionnaire, 
in the data collection, and in the data analysis to minimize such 
error. For example, a social science survey specialist designed the 
questionnaires in collaboration with GAO staff with subject matter 
expertise. Then, as noted earlier, the draft questionnaire was 
pretested in seven states to ensure that questions were relevant, 
clearly stated, and easy to comprehend. The questionnaire was also 
reviewed by an additional GAO survey specialist. Data analysis was 
conducted by a GAO data analyst working directly with the GAO staff 
with subject matter expertise. When the data were analyzed, a second 
independent data analyst checked all computer programs for accuracy. 
Since this was a Web-based survey, respondents entered their answers 
directly into the electronic questionnaires. This eliminated the need 
to have the data keyed into databases thus removing an additional 
source of error. 

Site Visit Selection, Data Collection, and Analysis: 

To obtain information about what school officials are doing to provide 
arts education since NCLBA and the challenges, if any, they face in 
doing so, we visited school districts and schools in four states-- 
Illinois, Massachusetts, Florida, and New York. Having learned from 
other studies of NCLBA implementation that schools not meeting AYP were 
difficult to recruit for site visits, to ensure that a sufficient 
number of schools would be selected, we identified states for our 
visits with large numbers of schools that were not meeting AYP in 
school year 2006-2007. Within each state, we selected school districts 
and schools that represented variation in income level of the school 
district, schools' performance under NCLBA, and schools' location as 
indicated in table 10. 

Table 10: Criteria for Selecting School Districts and Schools: 

State: Massachusetts; 
School districts' income level: 1 low-income; 1 moderate to upper 
income; 
Schools' NCLBA performance status: 3 not meeting AYP; 2 meeting AYP; 
Schools' location: 4 urban; 1 suburban. 

State: Illinois; 
School districts' income level: 1 low-income; 1 moderate income; 
Schools' NCLBA performance status: 2 not meeting AYP; 2 meeting AYP; 
Schools' location: 2 urban; 2 rural. 

State: Florida; 
School districts' income level: 1 low-income; 1 moderate income; 
Schools' NCLBA performance status: 2 not meeting AYP; 2 meeting AYP; 
Schools' location: 2 urban; 2 suburban. 

State: New York; 
School districts' income level: 1 low-income; 1 moderate to upper 
income; 
Schools' NCLBA performance status: 3 not meeting AYP; 3 meeting AYP; 
Schools' location: 4 urban; 2 rural. 

Source: GAO. 

[End of table] 

Within each state, we visited two school districts and 4 to 6 schools 
in each district for a total of eight school districts and 19 schools. 
We interviewed officials responsible for the arts education curriculum 
in each school district and school principals and, at the principal's 
discretion, art teachers in elementary, middle, and high schools. We 
also visited and interviewed officials representing local arts 
organizations that had undertaken arts education initiatives in the 
public schools. 

Recruiting low-income school districts and schools for this study was 
especially challenging. For example, one district we initially selected 
to include in our study was in California, the state with the largest 
number of schools identified as needing improvement in school year 2006-
2007. Officials representing that school district said that the 
district had placed a moratorium on all research in the district's 
schools. In other California school districts, we experienced long 
delays in receiving a response from both district and school officials 
to requests for initial or follow-up interviews. We ultimately decided 
to recruit school districts and schools in other states. 

For the site visits, we developed structured interviews with a standard 
set of questions for school district and school officials including the 
following topics: 

* art forms included in the schools' arts education classes; 

* daily or weekly schedule for all subjects, including arts education; 

* changes in instruction time for all subjects, including arts 
education, occurring in the past school year and recent years; 

* changes in students' access to arts education in the schools; 

* challenges faced in providing arts education in the schools; and: 

* funding sources for arts education and how budget cuts are 
implemented when resource reductions occur. 

Our questions for arts organization officials asked them to describe 
their arts education initiatives in the local schools, what resources 
they contributed, if any, to arts education in the schools, and their 
perception of public school students' access to arts education and the 
challenges school districts and schools face in providing arts 
education. 

To analyze the site visit data, we created matrices to summarize key 
findings from interviews with school district, school, and arts 
organization officials on changes in instruction time, changes in 
students' access to arts education, challenges faced, and experience 
with changes in funding. 

Review of Existing Studies on the Effect of Arts Education on Student 
Outcomes: 

To determine what existing research says about the effects of arts 
education on student outcomes, we used several search strategies. To 
identify existing studies, we conducted searches of several automated 
databases, including the Education Resources Information Center (ERIC), 
Proquest, and Nexis. We also interviewed individuals familiar with 
available research, including the Research Director of the NEA and the 
former Director of the Arts Education Partnership (AEP). From these 
sources, we identified over 1,000 studies that were screened for 
relevance for our study. Using information about these studies that was 
readily available, we screened them using the following criteria: 

* published during or after 1998, 

* research based on subjects within the United States, 

* published in a peer reviewed journal, and: 

* employed an experimental or quasi-experimental design.[Footnote 27] 

We selected the studies for our review based on their methodological 
strength and not on the generalizability of the results. Although the 
findings of the studies we identified are not representative of the 
findings of all studies of arts education programs, the studies consist 
of those published studies we could identify that used the strongest 
designs--experimental or quasi-experimental--to assess the effects of 
arts education. At the end of this screening process, 32 studies on the 
effects of arts education on student outcomes remained. We performed 
our searches for research and research evaluations between August 2007 
and April 2008. 

To assess the methodological quality of the 32 selected studies, we 
developed a data collection instrument to obtain information 
systematically about each study being evaluated and about the features 
of the evaluation methodology. We based our data collection and 
assessments on generally accepted social science standards. We examined 
such factors as whether evaluation data were collected before and after 
arts education implementation; how arts education effects were 
isolated, including the use of nonarts participant comparison groups or 
statistical controls; and the appropriateness of sampling, outcome 
measures, statistical analyses, and any reported results. A senior 
social scientist with training and experience in evaluation research 
and methodology read and coded the documentation for each evaluation. A 
second senior social scientist reviewed each completed data collection 
instrument and the relevant documentation for the outcome evaluation to 
verify the accuracy of every coded item. This review identified 7 of 
the 32 selected studies that met GAO's criteria for methodological 
quality. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Average Amount of Instruction Time Elementary School 
Teachers Reported Spending: 

Subject: Reading/language arts/English; 
Mean time spent per week (in hours): 10.0; 
Percentage of weekly instruction time: 39. 

Subject: Mathematics; 
Mean time spent per week (in hours): 5.8; 
Percentage of weekly instruction time: 22. 

Subject: Science; 
Mean time spent per week (in hours): 2.5; 
Percentage of weekly instruction time: 10. 

Subject: Social studies/history; 
Mean time spent per week (in hours): 2.5; 
Percentage of weekly instruction time: 10. 

Subject: Art/music; 
Mean time spent per week (in hours): 1.6; 
Percentage of weekly instruction time: 6. 

Subject: Physical education/health; 
Mean time spent per week (in hours): 1.6; 
Percentage of weekly instruction time: 6. 

Source: GAO analysis of Education data. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Arts Education Requirements and Funding, by State, School 
Years 2001-2002 and 2006-2007: 

State: Alabama; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Alaska; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: No; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: No. 

State: Arizona; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Arkansas; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: California; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: No; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: No; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Colorado; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: No; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: No; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: No. 

State: Connecticut; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Delaware; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: [Empty]; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Florida; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: No; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Georgia; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: No; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: No. 

State: Hawaii; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: No. 

State: Idaho; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: No; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Illinois; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: No; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: No; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: No; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: No; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Indiana; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: [Empty]; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: No; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: No. 

State: Iowa; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: [Empty]; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: No; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: No. 

State: Kansas; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: No; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: No; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Kentucky; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Louisiana; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: [Empty]; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Maine; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Maryland; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Massachusetts; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: No. 

State: Michigan; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: No; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: [Empty]; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Minnesota; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Mississippi; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: [Empty]; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: [Empty]; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: [Empty]; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Montana; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Nevada; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: [Empty]; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: [Empty]; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: [Empty]; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: [Empty]; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: No. 

State: New Hampshire; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: New Mexico; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: No; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: No; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: 
[Empty]; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: 
[Empty]. 

State: New York; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: [Empty]; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: [Empty]; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: North Carolina; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: [Empty]; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: North Dakota; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Ohio; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Oklahoma; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Oregon; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: [Empty]; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: [Empty]; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Pennsylvania; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Rhode Island; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: [Empty]; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: [Empty]; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: [Empty]; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: [Empty]; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: South Dakota; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: No; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Tennessee; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: No; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Texas; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Utah; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: No; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: No; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Vermont; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: No; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: No; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: No; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Virginia; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: No; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: No; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: No; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: No; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Washington; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Wisconsin; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: No; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: No; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: No; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: No; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: No; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: Yes; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

State: Wyoming; 
Arts education, 2001-2007: Yes; 
Arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Artist-in-residence, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2001-2002: Yes; 
Training for arts education, 2006-2007: Yes; 
State-established arts schools, 2001-2002: No; 
State-established arts schools, 2006-2007: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2001-2002: No; 
General state requirements for the arts, 2006-2007: Yes; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2001-2002: No; 
Minimum arts requirement for high school graduation, 2006-2007: Yes. 

Legend: 

[Empty] = either "don't know" or "no response". 

Source: GAO analysis of GAO survey data. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: Studies Meeting GAO's Criteria for Methodological Quality: 

Study title: Does Studying the Arts Engender Creative Thinking? 
Evidence for Near but Not Far Transfer; 
Author: Erik Moga, Kristin Burger, Lois Hetland, and Ellen Winner; 
Source: Journal of Aesthetic Education, vol. 34, no. 3/4. Special 
Issue: The Arts and Academic Achievement: What the Evidence Shows, 
Autumn-Winter 2000, 149-166; 
Summary of findings: Two meta-analyses: analysis 1 found no support for 
a causal relationship between arts study and verbal creativity; The 
second analysis found some equivocal support for a causal relationship 
between arts study and figural creativity. 

Study title: Can Music Be Used to Teach Reading?; 
Author: Ron Butzlaff; 
Source: Journal of Aesthetic Education, vol. 34, no. 3/4. Special 
Issue: The Arts and Academic Achievement: What the Evidence Shows, 
Autumn-Winter 2000,167-178; 
Summary of findings: Results varied and showed an extremely small 
positive overall association between the study of music and 
reading/verbal scores. 

Study title: Learning to Make Music Enhances Spatial Reasoning; 
Author: Lois Hetland; 
Source: Journal of Aesthetic Education, vol. 34, no. 3/4. Special 
Issue: The Arts and Academic Achievement: What the Evidence Shows, 
Autumn-Winter 2000,179-238; 
Summary of findings: Three meta-analyses: two of the analyses showed a 
positive relationship between music instruction and spatial-temporal 
tasks; The third analysis showed no relationship between music and a 
non spatial task. 

Study title: Listening to Music Enhances Spatial-Temporal Reasoning: 
Evidence for the "Mozart Effect"; 
Author: Lois Hetland; 
Source: Journal of Aesthetic Education, vol. 34, no. 3/4. Special 
Issue: The Arts and Academic Achievement: What the Evidence Shows, 
Autumn-Winter 2000,105-148; 
Summary of findings: Two meta-analyses: analysis 1 found a significant 
and robust relationship between listening to music and performance on 
all types of spatial tasks; Analysis 2 also found a significant, robust 
effect of music listening on spatial-temporal tasks. 

Study title: Music and Mathematics: Modest Support for the Oft-Claimed 
Relationship; 
Author: Kathryn Vaughn; 
Source: Journal of Aesthetic Education, vol. 34, no. 3/4. Special 
Issue: The Arts and Academic Achievement: What the Evidence Shows, 
Autumn-Winter, 149-166; 
Summary of findings: Quasi-experimental studies showed that background 
music has a very minimal effect on math scores; Experimental 
instruction showed a small association between music instruction and 
math skills. 

Study title: Instruction in Visual Art: Can It Help Children Learn to 
Read?; 
Author: Kristin Burger, Ellen Winner; 
Source: Journal of Aesthetic Education, vol. 34, no. 3/4, Special 
Issue: The Arts and Academic Achievement: What the Evidence Shows. 
Autumn-Winter, 2000, 277-293; 
Summary of findings: Analysis 1 did not demonstrate a reliable 
relationship between arts instruction and reading improvement; Analysis 
2 found a positive, moderately-sized relationship between reading 
improvement and an integrated arts-reading form of instruction. 

Study title: Mute Those Claims: No Evidence (Yet) for a Causal Link 
between Arts Study and Academic Achievement; 
Author: Ellen Winner, Monica Cooper; 
Source: Journal of Aesthetic Education, vol. 34, no. 3/4. Special 
Issue: The Arts and Academic Achievement: What the Evidence Shows, Fall-
Winter 2000, 11-75; 
Summary of findings: Showed no evidence for any educationally 
significant impact of arts on achievement (both verbal and math 
outcomes). 

Source: GAO review of existing research. 

Note: The autumn-winter 2000 issue of the Journal of Aesthetic 
Education was a special issue devoted to examining research evidence 
about the relationship between the arts and academic achievement. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix V: Comments from the Department of Education: 

United States Department Of Education: 
Office Of Planning, Evaluation And Policy Development: 
400 Maryland Ave., SW: 
Washington, DC 20202: 
[hyperlink, http://www.ed.gov] 

"Our mission Is to ensure equal access to education and to promote 
educational excellence throughout the nation." 

February 23, 2009: 

Ms. Cornelia Ashby: 
Director, Education, Workforce, and Income Security Issues: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, D.C. 20548: 

Dear Ms. Ashby: 

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on the draft GAO report, 
Access to Arts Education: Inclusion of Additional Questions in 
Education's Planned Research Would Help Explain Why Instruction Time 
Has Decreased for Some Students. We were pleased to be able to share 
with your research team the teacher survey data from our study, the 
National Longitudinal Study of No Child Left Behind, which provided the 
basis for much of this report, and we reviewed your reanalysis of these 
data with great interest. 

We agree that arts education is an important part of a well-rounded 
education for all students, and we were encouraged to see the survey 
findings that very few elementary teachers reported decreases in the 
amount of time spent on arts education. The findings that teachers in 
schools identified for improvement and high-minority schools are more 
likely to report reductions in time for arts education is cause for 
concern, but it is important to note that reductions in arts education 
time were reported by a small minority of teachers in these schools. We 
agree that further study would be useful to better understand the 
reasons behind changes in instruction time in certain types of schools. 

As your report noted, the Department is currently planning to launch a 
new comprehensive evaluation of Title I implementation, and we will 
carefully consider your recommendations for collecting more detailed 
information on changes in instruction time when we develop the study 
design and survey instruments for that study. 

We are attaching technical comments provided by Department staff on the 
text of the report. If you have any questions, we would be glad to 
discuss our comments with your research team. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Thomas P. Skelly: 
Delegated to Perform Functions of Assistant Secretary for OPEPD: 

[End of section] 

Appendix VI: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Cornelia M. Ashby, (202) 512-7215, ashbyc@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

Sherri Doughty, Assistant Director; 

Sara Edmondson, Analyst-in-charge: 

Michael Meleady; Michael Morris; Douglas Sloane; Luann Moy; Stuart 
Kaufman; Justin Fisher; Rebecca Rose; Michele Fejfar; Amanda Miller; 
Susannah Compton; and James Rebbe made significant contributions to 
this report. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] The NLS-NCLB's surveys collected data only in school years 2004- 
2005 and 2006-2007. Because the NLS-NCLB was a congressional mandate 
and conducted under contract, the time required to negotiate the 
mandate, solicit and award a contract, and design the study precluded 
collecting data before school year 2004-2005. 

[2] One state has not designated an official to oversee arts education 
in the state's public schools, and the state education agency's 
director of curriculum and instruction did not respond to our contacts. 

[3] The differences were statistically significant (p<.05 level). 

[4] IASA and NCLBA reauthorized and amended ESEA. 

[5] This requirement applies to students in all public schools in a 
state regardless of whether the school receives Title I funding. 

[6] Students in grades 3 to 8 must be annually assessed in reading and 
mathematics, while high school students are only required to be 
assessed once in these subjects. Assessments in science, which were 
first required under NCLBA in school year 2007-2008, are required at 
least once in grades 3 to 5, grades 6 to 9, and grades 10 to 12. 20 
U.S.C. § 6311(b)(3)(C)(v) - (vii). 

[7] In this report, we refer to Title I, Part A of the ESEA, as 
amended, as "Title I." Other parts of Title I (Parts B through I) are 
targeted at specific populations or purposes and are commonly referred 
to by their program names, such as Even Start. 

[8] See GAO, No Child Left Behind Act: Education Should Clarify 
Guidance and Address Potential Compliance Issues for Schools in 
Corrective Action and Restructuring Status, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-1035] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 5, 
2007). 

[9] Education also awards arts education grants to VSA arts--formerly 
known as Very Special Arts--and the John F. Kennedy Center for 
Performing Arts. These grants provide arts education activities for 
adults as well as school children. VSA arts supports the involvement of 
persons with disabilities in arts programs and promotes awareness of 
the need for such programs. 

[10] The NAEP 1997 Arts Report Card cautions readers that, because of 
changes in the nature of the assessment, results are not comparable to 
assessments in music and visual arts that NAEP administered in 1974 and 
1978. 

[11] CEP is a national, independent advocate for public education and 
for more effective public schools. 

[12] While findings of the CEP study were based on a survey of school 
district officials, the NLS-NCLB school year 2006-2007 survey collected 
detailed data on changes in instruction time from teachers, who are 
much closer than district officials to the point where instruction 
takes place. 

[13] See appendix II for average amount of instruction time spent on 
individual subjects in school year 2006-2007. 

[14] The average decrease in time spent on arts education among 
teachers reporting a decrease across all schools was 41 minutes per 
week. 

[15] Because we were not able to obtain raw data files from Education 
to do a comprehensive analysis of the data ourselves, Education's 
research team generated a limited set of analyses from their survey 
data file for us, based on our specifications. Time and resources 
precluded a more advanced analysis to assess and control for the 
correlations between the variables and to estimate their effects net of 
one another. Moreover, the aggregated data we received from Education 
did not allow us to determine whether the larger declines in arts 
education instruction in selected schools resulted from their spending 
more time on those subjects than other schools to begin with or not. 

[16] As part of Education's NLS-NCLB study, they administered separate 
surveys to school principals and elementary school teachers. 

[17] The high school principal said that teachers are responsible for 
seeking and preparing grant proposals. 

[18] In 1991, the Broward County school district established the 
Student Enrichment in the Arts (SEAS) program which provides $466,000 
per year in funding for SEAS, with each school receiving about $2,400/ 
year to pay for the costs of transporting students to attend, at no 
charge, educational performances held at the Center. 

[19] The CPS Office of Academic Enhancement administers a magnet school 
cluster program, which involves about 300 schools. Each school focuses 
on one academic area or approach, including fine and performing arts, 
world language, literature and writing, math and science, International 
Baccalaureate, and Montessori. The International Baccalaureate program 
focuses on developing the intellectual, personal, emotional, and social 
skills to live, learn, and work in a rapidly globalizing world. The 
Montessori method is a child-centered alternative educational approach 
involving adapting the learning environment to a child's developmental 
level, and it emphasizes physical activity in absorbing both abstract 
concepts and practical skills. Magnet schools are located throughout 
Chicago, and they function as neighborhood schools. The magnet cluster 
program money is part of a desegregation decree between the federal 
government and CPS. Since CPS cannot bus, it uses the magnet cluster 
program as a tool to integrate schools and to bring quality programming 
to a large number of neighborhood schools. 

[20] The line item for arts education provided all schools with 
approximately $63 per student annually. 

[21] A meta-analysis is a statistical analysis of a collection of 
studies for the purpose of integrating the results. 

[22] The author had predicted that learning music notation might be 
associated with higher test scores because practice in learning symbols 
in notation might generalize to practice in reading math symbols. 

[23] Two studies included keyboard training, two included vocal 
training, one included violin training, and one included a variety of 
"school band instruments." 

[24] Education plans to survey schools again in school year 2009-2010 
to examine arts education. 

[25] We obtained similar estimates from Education on the time devoted 
to other subjects, such as math, science, and reading, and whether and 
how much it had changed over the past 2 years. 

[26] One state has not designated an official to oversee arts education 
in the state's public schools, and the state education agency's 
director of curriculum and instruction did not respond to our contacts. 

[27] Meta-analyses were included as long as they met the stated 
criteria. For meta-analyses that included correlational research in 
addition to experimental and quasi-experimental studies, only the 
experimental and quasi-experimental research was reviewed for purposes 
of this report. 

[End of section] 

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