STEAMed Magazine October 2015 | Page 29

With its media highlights, celebrity artists and White House backing, the Turnaround Arts Initiative has been showered with praise for shining a light on the importance of arts in education. And for all the glitz and glam, there are now some true measures of its success: schools that are showing data that integrating the arts works. To get a more in-depth look at the successes and challenges of the effort, we interviewed** Sarah Dougherty from Des Moines Public Schools in Iowa. Des Moines - and its very own Findley Elementary School - was one of the pilot programs for the Turnaround Arts Initiative and Sarah is currently serving as both the district’s Visual Arts Coordinator and Turnaround Arts Program Director. Tell us a little bit about the Turnaround Arts program and why Findley Elementary was chosen to participate. Turnaround Arts is a partnership among the President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities (PCAH) and private foundations and organizations that uses the arts to help narrow the achievement gap, increase student engagement, and improve culture and climate in the country’s highest poverty schools. In 2011 PCAH published a landmark report, Reinvesting in Arts Education: Winning America’s Future through Creative Schools. It was the first federal report in more than a decade to survey the challenges and opportunities in providing arts education to our nation’s children. The findings of this report inspired the development and design of Turnaround Arts. 
 In 2011 Findley Elementary was designated a Tier I Persistently Lowest-Achieving School. As part of the “Transformation” improvement model building administration was replaced and Findley was awarded 29 Actor Forest Whitaker connecting with Findley students in the classroom. Photo Credit: Des Moines Public Schools