Why Arts Integration Improves Long‐Term Retention of Content
Abstract
Advocates of the arts agree that the K‐12 curriculum should include dedicated time for arts instruction. Some have argued further that knowledge and skills acquired through the arts transfer to nonarts domains. Others claim that evidence of this kind of transfer is limited and instead argue that the arts cultivate valuable dispositions that help students succeed both in and outside of school. Another potential benefit of the arts has received little attention, however. Arts integration—the use of the arts as a teaching methodology throughout the curriculum—may improve long‐term retention of content. A variety of long‐term memory effects well known in cognitive psychology are reviewed, and it is argued that arts integration naturally takes advantage of these effects while promoting student motivation. This review of findings and applications provides an example of how existing research from neuroscience and cognitive science can inform the work of practicing educators.
Number of times cited: 16
- Amy Susman-Stillman, Michelle Englund, Chloe Webb and Amanda Grenell, Reliability and validity of a measure of preschool children’s theatre arts skills: The Preschool Theatre Arts Rubric, Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 10.1016/j.ecresq.2017.12.001, 45, (249-262), (2018).
- Mariale M. Hardiman, Education and the Arts, The Wiley International Handbook of Educational Foundations, (207-227), (2018).
- Sarah Asquith, Xu Wang and Anna Abraham, The Antecedents and Outcomes of Creative Cognition, Creativity Policy, Partnerships and Practice in Education, 10.1007/978-3-319-96725-7_10, (215-237), (2018).
- Laura Burney Nissen, Art and Social Work, Research on Social Work Practice, (104973151773380), (2017).
- Warren James DiBiase, Judith R. McDonald and Kellan Strong, Constructing a Marshmallow Catapult, Cases on STEAM Education in Practice, 10.4018/978-1-5225-2334-5.ch013, (260-276)
- Yannis Hadzigeorgiou, ‘Artistic’ Science Education, Imaginative Science Education, 10.1007/978-3-319-29526-8_7, (185-215), (2016).
- Mariale M. Hardiman, Education and the Arts: Educating Every Child in the Spirit of Inquiry and Joy, Creative Education, 07, 14, (1913), (2016).
- Lara Lackey and Dianna Huxhold, Arts integration as school reform: Exploring how teachers experience policy, Arts Education Policy Review, 117, 4, (211), (2016).
- J. Brooke Ernest and Ricardo Nemirovsky, Arguments for Integrating the Arts: Artistic Engagement in an Undergraduate Foundations of Geometry Course, PRIMUS, 26, 4, (356), (2016).
- Alida Anderson, Dance/Movement Therapy's Influence on Adolescents' Mathematics, Social-Emotional, and Dance Skills, The Educational Forum, 79, 3, (230), (2015).
- Aldona Vilkelienė, Arts Education of Pupils with Special Educational Needs: Objectives and Principles, Pedagogika, 118, 2, (239), (2015).
- Ryan Bazinet and Anne Marie Marshall, Ethnomusicology, Ethnomathematics, and Integrating Curriculum, General Music Today, 28, 3, (5), (2015).
- Mary E. Davis, Bringing imagination back to the classroom: A model for creative arts in economics, International Review of Economics Education, 10.1016/j.iree.2015.05.001, 19, (1-12), (2015).
- Mariale Hardiman, Luke Rinne and Julia Yarmolinskaya, The Effects of Arts Integration on Long‐Term Retention of Academic Content, "Mind, Brain, and Education", 8, 3, (144-148), (2014).
- Emma Gregory, Mariale Hardiman, Julia Yarmolinskaya, Luke Rinne and Charles Limb, Building creative thinking in the classroom: From research to practice, International Journal of Educational Research, 62, (43), (2013).
- Jatila van der Veen, Draw Your Physics Homework? Art as a Path to Understanding in Physics Teaching, American Educational Research Journal, 49, 2, (356), (2012).




