When schools or teachers start out on their Arts Integration journey, so many become frustrated that other teachers or school leaders don’t want to jump on the bandwagon. Â I know, I know – you’re excited. Â You’re passionate. Â You’ve got research that says that Arts Integration works. Â None of that matters if you don’t have buy-in. Â And not just buy-in from your colleagues: buy-in from parents and most importantly, from students. Â How are you creating buy-in for integration?
Make the work happen. Â
That’s it. Â That’s the whole secret. Â I could probably close this post right now at 95 words and be done. Â Because the secret to creating buy-in for Arts Integration or STEAM integration always lies within the work that you do. Â The more diligently that you plug on with what you know works for YOUR students, the better your results will be. Â Your students will become more confident and excited about what they are doing. Â You’ll begin to see deeper connections and thought processes. Â Students will begin to persevere in problem-solving because it’s just too fun not to do the hard work. Â That’s when others will take notice.
Too often, we try and push our passion onto others. Â I am as guilty as the next person to be sure. Â I like to move fast – if there is something that I’m doing and it’s working, I want the rest of the world to do it too. Â It reminds me of when I first started this website over two years ago. Â I loved what Arts Integration was doing for my students, the staff at my school, and the parental involvement with our school community. Â I thought that my showcasing all of this “evidence” on a website, people would just naturally flock here and want to change their own classrooms and schools to include Arts Integration.
How wrong I was. Â How naive.
The whole first year that I wrote on this website, I averaged 50-75 visitors a day. Â That’s it. Â And much of that was just for images, so they weren’t even really reading my content. Â I was heartbroken. Â I had just shared a wealth of passion and knowledge with the world and the world wasn’t listening. Â But I plugged on. Â I kept writing. Â I put together new materials, a book, a class, two more books, a conference, an app and now another conference. Â Slowly, people started listening. Â We have a huge following now and reach more and more people every day. Â I hear from people all over the country who want to change their teaching practices and those of their school. Â I hear from parents who want to help bring Arts Integration to their children’s schools. Â And we’re still growing. Â But you know what I learned?
It’s all in the work.
Without all of the work, all of the thankless toiling, no one will buy-in to your passion. Â People don’t like change. Â They are afraid of what it might do TO them instead of what it will do FOR them. Â So you with all of your passion, running at them with a huge change and new idea – you’re scaring them. Â Instead, go back to your work. Â Make a difference for each child sitting in each chair ever single day. Â And just like a garden, you’re students are going to bloom. Â That will get their attention and then you’ll start to hear more and more people asking about that “arts integration thing” you’ve been doing all this time. Â Keep working and the buy-in will come.