Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables and Figures
- Acknowledgements
- An Introduction to Cultural Policy in the Polder
- A Well-Balanced Cultural Policy: An Interview with Minister of Culture Ingrid van Engelshoven
- 1 Legal Aspects of Cultural Policy
- 2 An International Perspective on Dutch Cultural Policy
- ‘A Subsidy to Make a Significant Step Upwards’: An Interview with Arjo Klingens
- 3 The Framing Game: Towards Deprovincialising Dutch Cultural Policy
- 4 Values in Cultural Policymaking: Political Values and Policy Advice
- An Exercise in Undogmatic Thinking: An Interview with Gable Roelofsen
- 5 Towards a Cultural Policy of Trust: The Dutch Approach from the Perspective of a Transnational Civil Domain
- 6 Dutch Media Policy: Towards the End of Reflective Diversity?
- ‘A More Holistic Approach to Problems’: An Interview with Hans Poll and Jacqueline Roelofs
- 7 Cultural Education Policy: Its Justification and Organisation
- 8 Culture for Everyone: The Value and Feasibility of Stimulating Cultural Participation
- ‘A Strong Field Needs Variation and Experimentation’: An Interview with Saskia Bak
- 9 The People's Palaces: Public Libraries in the Information Society
- 10 Cultural Policy at a Crossroads?: How the Matthew Effect, New Sociocultural Oppositions and Digitalisation Challenge Dutch National Cultural Policy
- ‘Production is Preceded by Talent Development’: An Interview with Sandra den Hamer
- Epilogue: A Systemic View of Dutch Cultural Policy in the Next 25 Years
- Overview of Dutch Ministers of / Secretaries for Culture and their most important Cultural Policy Documents
- Appendix: Facts and Figures on Culture and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands
- Authors’ Biographies
- Index
7 - Cultural Education Policy: Its Justification and Organisation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 December 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables and Figures
- Acknowledgements
- An Introduction to Cultural Policy in the Polder
- A Well-Balanced Cultural Policy: An Interview with Minister of Culture Ingrid van Engelshoven
- 1 Legal Aspects of Cultural Policy
- 2 An International Perspective on Dutch Cultural Policy
- ‘A Subsidy to Make a Significant Step Upwards’: An Interview with Arjo Klingens
- 3 The Framing Game: Towards Deprovincialising Dutch Cultural Policy
- 4 Values in Cultural Policymaking: Political Values and Policy Advice
- An Exercise in Undogmatic Thinking: An Interview with Gable Roelofsen
- 5 Towards a Cultural Policy of Trust: The Dutch Approach from the Perspective of a Transnational Civil Domain
- 6 Dutch Media Policy: Towards the End of Reflective Diversity?
- ‘A More Holistic Approach to Problems’: An Interview with Hans Poll and Jacqueline Roelofs
- 7 Cultural Education Policy: Its Justification and Organisation
- 8 Culture for Everyone: The Value and Feasibility of Stimulating Cultural Participation
- ‘A Strong Field Needs Variation and Experimentation’: An Interview with Saskia Bak
- 9 The People's Palaces: Public Libraries in the Information Society
- 10 Cultural Policy at a Crossroads?: How the Matthew Effect, New Sociocultural Oppositions and Digitalisation Challenge Dutch National Cultural Policy
- ‘Production is Preceded by Talent Development’: An Interview with Sandra den Hamer
- Epilogue: A Systemic View of Dutch Cultural Policy in the Next 25 Years
- Overview of Dutch Ministers of / Secretaries for Culture and their most important Cultural Policy Documents
- Appendix: Facts and Figures on Culture and Cultural Policy in the Netherlands
- Authors’ Biographies
- Index
Summary
Introduction
The inclusion of cultural education as a separate policy area in this book on cultural policy in the Netherlands is not self-evident. Cultural education is a hybrid field. It includes learning and teaching arts and cultural subjects at primary and secondary school (formal education) but also acquiring and transmitting arts and aesthetic/cultural competencies in other, non-formal and informal settings: e.g., art and music classes as a leisure activity, the educational activities of museums and other cultural organisations, and ‘learning by doing’ as an amateur. A chapter regarding cultural education at school might therefore just as well have been part of a book on Dutch education policy, while out-of-school cultural education might be part of a book on leisure policy.
The fact that cultural education policy is often considered a branch of cultural policy reflects a key problem in Dutch cultural education policy itself: its justification from the perspective of arts and culture and its virtual absence in mainstream education policy. Schools, especially primary schools, are often criticised by arts and cultural professionals (and by parents who value the arts and culture highly) for doing too little and not doing it properly. While this is not a crucial issue in official education policy—to put it mildly—several initiatives to promote cultural education at school have been taken from the perspective of arts advocacy and cultural policy. One can imagine that this may well reproduce the often-cited gap between ‘school and culture’ instead of narrowing it. There is an obvious paradox or vicious circle here: the deplored marginal position of the arts in school (Raad voor Cultuur & Onderwijsraad 2012) is supposed to be improved by measures that are marginal to schools.
This chapter explores cultural education's hybrid character as a policy domain as well as continuities and discontinuities in Dutch cultural education policy since the 1990s. Section 2 addresses the justification of public policy based on values attributed to cultural education. The desired and expected benefits of cultural education for individual learners and for society vary from arts-centred learning effects to various non-arts outcomes, and from broad values to more or less specific goals.
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- Cultural Policy in the Polder25 Years Dutch Cultural Policy Act, pp. 169 - 194Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2018