Art Therapy in the Schools--Does it
Work?
Art therapy in the schools involves professional art therapists
along with preschoolers, children, adolescents, teachers, and
families. The art therapist is specifically trained to recognize a
struggling student's emotional issues that are preventing them from
learning. Other things, such as learning disabilities or
language/speech disorders, can also be evaluated along with
behavioral disorders and mental illness.
The reason art therapy in the schools works so well is because
very few children of any age can resist the art-making processes--a
blank piece of paper, the smell of new crayons, the feel of clay,
and the visual impact of the moving watercolors. The art
therapist can take this artwork and diagnose problems from it,
providing certain appropriate interventions that may be needed
along with specific services to assist the child in his or her
developmental learning.
Some of the advantages of art therapy in the schools are the
provisions of visual and verbal approaches in order to address
certain child needs. An assessment by the art therapist involves
giving the child or adolescent five or six art assignments, using
different media. The ideas behind this is to have the child or
adolescent perceive their family, themselves, their school, their
friends, or anything in their environment and then apply this
perception to their artwork.
Once finished, the artwork is evaluated through the art
therapist, head of the art therapy in the schools program. Also
evaluated is the individual's academic history in connection with
their development and family. Art therapists are trained to
recognize cultural spectrums, using the artwork as an assessment
evaluation in relation to the culture they are from.
Art therapy in the schools recognizes that all children's
drawings are divided up into certain stages. An advantage, it
is pretty easy to distinguish when a child is behind their age
level. Autism is the only separate condition when the child will be
ahead of their age level, which would be easily recognized by their
artwork. Children with learning disabilities have advanced creative
and visual intelligence for art, yet demonstrate lower scores on
the standardized tests.
It is during this level of artworks and their diagnosis that the
artwork of the child or adolescent will begin to show a certain
amount of deviation, depending on the amount and type of internal
conflict that is present. This will be represented through the
drawing style and the individual's developmental level. One
connecting example would be ADHD, where heavy coloring would
represent the over-activity, yet appear small in some form of
classroom setting.
The reason art therapy in the schools is important, is due to
the safety levels held within the school systems for the child.
Many do not have safe environments, or feel secure about
themselves--school is their "other family" and the artwork is able
to represent what that person is feeling inside.
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