More from Dana Gioia

The real purpose of arts education is to create complete human beings capable of leading successful and productive lives in a free society.

DG

Dana Gioia

Stanford University Commencement 2007, 2007

19:37

Video starts at 19:37 — the moment this quote was spoken

The Story Behind This Quote

Gioia devoted a significant portion of his speech to the dismantling of arts programs in American public schools, calling it a 'colossal cultural and political decline.' He lamented that a child's access to arts education had become largely a function of parental income, and that the once-visionary democratic system of universal arts education had been gutted by well-meaning but short-sighted officials. But Gioia didn't just mourn the loss—he offered a new argument for why it matters. He urged the creation of a 'new national consensus' around arts education, reframing its purpose. The goal is not to produce more artists, he argued, though that is a welcome byproduct. The real purpose is to cultivate complete human beings—people with developed imaginations, refined emotions, and the creative capacity to lead meaningful lives. In a nation whose educational system seemed focused on producing 'minimally competent entry-level workers,' Gioia argued, this vision was both radical and essential.

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