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Professors and workers in the Art Instructors Schools;
Young graduates with a Junior High School Degree in Humanities
and Art Instructor Diploma;
Guests;
Residents of Villa Clara;
All fellow Cubans:
Exactly four years, five months, and three days have gone by
since, in a meeting held on May 17, 2000, the Battle of Ideas Working Group
approved a project for training art instructors. The first thing that had to be
done was to find quickly 15 school buildings with available capacity located all
over the country and to create there the material base required to start the
first course in September of that year with no less than 4000 students and to
train about 30,000 art instructors in ten years.
The program created to that end in the early years of the
Revolution, although it had borne modest but promising fruit, had been reduced
to almost zero and it was absolutely necessary to re-establish it on a solid
base using all the strength, the knowledge and the revolutionary consciousness
that our people now possessed. The students had to be rigorously selected from
among young people who had recently completed grade nine. As for the intake
capacity of the schools, that would be adjusted as far as possible to the
population of each of the 14 provinces and the special municipality of the Isle
of Youth.
The 15 schools were ready in only three months and at the same
time the first 4000 students were selected in close coordination with the Young
Communist League, the José Martí Pioneers Organization and the ministries of
education and of culture. The curricula and time tables were designed, the
faculties were organized, uniforms were designed and produced, the books needed
to start were made available and a start was made on purchasing work tools and
materials.
Classes began in the 15 Art Instructors Schools on September
14, 2000.
In that first year, 12,000 students applied for the courses. In
subsequent years an average of 17,000 students have applied. Therefore, it was
possible to choose the best students from such a big group.
Some people did not believe this plan could be possible. They
wondered where the professors and study materials would come from. Other
wondered how were we going to create new schools if the conditions in existing
schools were not good.
On February 18, 2001, after it had been up and running for six
months, the Art Instructors Schools Program, which is working as a substantial
and integral part of the Battle of Ideas, was officially inaugurated at the
Manuel Ascunce Domenech school in Villa Clara.
Building projects have been completed over these first four
years, which have opened up space for 16,200 students.
The dollar expenditure for the basic investments made was the
following:
- $1,795,036 in the material base for general and specialized
studies.
- $1,958,796 in creating adequate living conditions.
- $9,891,975 in construction and technological investments.
As an interesting fact it could be said that at the current
world market prices for oil, the total expenditure in dollars, over these four
years, to develop the facilities for this extraordinary cultural, educational
program is approximately equivalent to the cost of the oil consumed in three
days in Cuba.
The first year started with 4,086 students and 1,111
professors.
Today, there are 16,168 students registered: 4,535 in Music,
4,202 in Visual Arts, 3,692 in Drama and 3,739 in Dance.
The faculty has 2,852 professors, 715 for general education and
2,137 for specialty subjects; 1,228 of these professor are permanent staff and
1,624 are collaborators.
It is only fair to point out that many professors, artists and
intellectuals have joined in the effort to staff the faculty at the Art
Instructors Schools; they have enriched the curricula and have caused something
that had at one time disappeared to rise up again with greater strength, as part
of the colossal battle waged to bring a general comprehensive education to our
people. We must also acknowledge the role of the 2,531 art instructors who for
many years over the course of the Revolution have continued with their work and
who have given decisive support to this initiative.
The total number of students enrolled in the Art Instructors
Schools over these five years, that is, including the present course, is 20,235.
Today, 3,237 students of the 4,086 who started in the first
year are graduating; 34 students are preparing to take their final exam soon,
which gives a total of 3,271 graduates. They are graduating with a High School
Diploma and an Art Instructors Degree in Music, Visual Arts, Drama or Dance
after having completed a 7,000-hour curriculum in the case of those who took up
music as a specialty, 7,320 hours for those in visual arts, 6,840 for those in
drama and 7,000 for those who took up dance. All of them received extensive
training in the other art disciplines, in addition to their own specialties.
The curriculum has been improved over these years. The program
includes reflection and discussion sessions, the audiovisual program,
pre-professional practice and independent study planned during school hours.
In order to be able to meet these objectives, the schools are
equipped with video rooms, libraries and computer laboratories where the ratio
of computers to students is 1 to 30, music cubicles, small stages for dance and
drama training and workshops for visual arts.
During their four years of study, those who graduate from these
schools must read or consult on average 167 books related to their special
subject and on Cuban and World history and literature.
Of those graduating today:
61.04 percent are white, 13.3 percent are black and 25.6
percent are of mixed race, which corresponds in a very satisfactory way with the
ethnic composition of our population. Likewise,
- 62.09 percent are women and 37.90 percent are men.
- Of these graduates, 1,822 are members of the Young Communist League that
is 56.3 percent.
Those who are graduating today did not dream when they were
children that they will be art instructors. A new option appeared overnight.
Many of them, perhaps, had dreamed of the possibility of becoming professional
musicians, artists, dancers or theatre people, but had not had the
opportunity.
We have been haunted by the dilemma of whether they would be
artists or not. Today it is more and more common to hear people say that they
are artists in the fine profession of teaching art to the people. In their work
with children, they have found an area of teaching that enriches them and there
is no reason why there should be a contradiction between one function and the
other. Nor is there any reason to cut off opportunities to develop their own art
if they fulfill their duties as instructors in a school.
Their individual responsibility to the commitment entered into
with the revolution and with their work will lead them to fulfill their duties
as instructors.
Four years ago, 93 percent of those who are graduating today
had not taken a class in any of the special subjects of which they have
knowledge today. And if they still have a lot to learn about their profession,
about art and about life as workers and about their dedication to the
Revolution, the truth is that they are not the same as they were when they
arrived to blaze this trail. They have matured, physically, politically and
socially.
As from September 6 of this year, they began to work in
primary, secondary and special education schools in every municipality in the
country. They are distributed in the following manner:
684 in primary day-schools.
704 in primary semi-boarding schools.
56 in primary boarding schools.
117 in junior high schools in the countryside.
50 in urban junior high schools.
50 in schools for adolescents with major behavioral
problems.
The work of these instructors in our schools has five basic
aims:
- To develop creative and appreciation workshops with all the students in
the schools.
- To work with amateur artists groups and clubs.
- To provide technical and methodological training to the teaching staff.
- To promote artistic education in the schools.
- To improve the school ambiance.
Now that the art instructors have arrived, the position of the
school as the most important cultural institution in the community is secured.
The results of their work will be seen in the family. The work of these
instructors will reach out beyond the schools and depend on this link with other
cultural and social institution in the community.
Their work will enrich the programs with children, adolescents
and young people that have been developing during the years of the Battle of
Ideas. The bonds between the general teacher, the computer teacher, the social
worker and the art instructor will be of paramount importance.
And we already have some idea of the results that can be
achieved. This was demonstrated through every stage of the pre-professional
practice when the students from the second year on established a connection with
schools and communities. Two examples will suffice:
The fourth-year-students’ pre-professional practice at La
Sierpe municipality in Sancti Spíritus included a week of work in communities or
schools where conditions were more difficult than usual.
In that province, it was decided that the 183-fourth-year
students at the provincial school who are graduating today would work in La
Sierpe municipality since it was a new municipality lacking a solid cultural
tradition and where there had not been any professionals working in the cultural
area for decades. In other words, a municipality where there were no instructors
who had graduated in previous times and where it was difficult even to recruit
students for the art instructors schools, to the extent that in the first year
only one student, who is graduating today, came from there. Students were placed
in all the schools and the result was that it was the first time in many years,
as far as students and teachers could remember, that such a strong cultural
movement began to develop there. The students were housed in the schools and
worked there and in the communities: some of them had to walk several
kilometers.
Children and their parents still talk of what happened there.
Three students from other municipalities asked to be given work placements in La
Sierpe municipality because of this experience. They managed to recruit 25
students for the course that just began in the art instructors’ school. The most
remarkable thing is that every time one of the students graduating today
referred to their training in a meeting held a few days ago with their
representatives, they spoke of the decisive impact of this week. The image that
remains with them of their experience in La Sierpe is like that of an
internationalist mission, of having been in a battle or in a long workday, that
is, they have been left with the feeling of something beyond the usual, of an
act of total dedication.
In the time they spent in the municipality, they combined what
an instructor in a Cultural Center does and what should be done in a school:
they worked in the school in the morning, worked with the community in the
afternoon and took part in cultural functions in the municipality in the
evenings. All this happened in just one week. The municipal government and the
Party feel that a cultural transformation has begun, which is significant if we
bear in mind that this is a municipality with cultural institutions whose
building are in good shape in a general sense but lacking a professional work
force.
The second example:
Ever since the 2002-2003 school year, the Eduardo García
Delgado Art Instructors School in Havana was instructed to select a group of
students to do their pre-professional practice in the University of Information
Sciences.
During the 2002-2003 school year they were there for 15 days.
Then in the 2003-2004 year, a permanent arrangement was made for a group of
instructors to work in that higher education center twice a week. The work they
have done has been evaluated by comrades at that University as being very
necessary and they have asked that the students continue to work with them to
bolster the amateur movement there.
The results speak for themselves. In just two years, the
University of Information Sciences has an amateur movement with 799 members,
that is, one in every five students. In the first year, they won five prizes and
three special mentions in the Provincial Festival of the University Students’
Federation (FEU). And in the second year they won 11 prizes. Of those 11, three
will go on to the National FEU Festival.
Graduates of the Art Instructors Schools will be able to study
any of the subjects or degree programs in Humanities taught in the Ministry of
Higher Education’s institutions and any of the special subjects or degree
programs offered by the Higher Pedagogical Institutes under the Making Higher
Education Available to All Program.
Given the special nature of the work done by an art instructor,
the need for them to constantly upgrade their skills as professionals committed
to their work as instructors, and the interest many of them have in continuing
their education for a career related to their training, it was decided to create
a bachelor’s degree in Education, Special Subject Art Instructor with the
ministries of education, culture and higher education cooperating closely.
Of the instructors graduating today, 1,476 have registered for
this program, or 45.5 percent.
The new degree program will be taught at the Higher Pedagogical
Institutes under the Making Higher Education Available to All Program, and will
last four years. It will focus heavily on the Audiovisual Program and on other
audiovisual materials and will equally emphasize on the importance of learning
through one’s own efforts and with tutors.
The degree program promises to expand humanist education, to
expand teacher training and to improve artistic skills in the special subject in
which students graduate from the Art Instructors Schools.
In the next few days, a work module tailored to the special
subject of the instructors working there will begin to be sent out to the
schools who have art instructors.
In order to give continuity to the overall care and attention
given to this program, it has been decided that the instructors who have
graduated will continue to be attended to and be directed from the Battle of
Ideas Working Group by the Young Communist League.
In order to achieve this, structures have been set up at the
provincial and municipal levels where professional YELL cadres will take on the
responsibility for coordinating the actions of the Culture, General Education
and Higher Education ministries and all those institutions and organizations
related with the art instructors’ work.
At the national level there is a headquarters in Old Havana,
which will become the National Center for Art Instructors’ Upgrading. This will
be integrated into the heart of one of the most important of the country’s
social and cultural projects; functions will be held there for the public and
these will become a standard of reference for all.
This young work force will be organized as the José Martí Art
Instructors Brigade. To some degree it will function as a youth movement and as
an army of culture whose principal theatre of operations, although not the only
one, will be the schools.
When this brigade comes into being, the identification of these
young people with their responsibilities as art instructors will be strengthened
and the essential connection, which they must maintain with the artistic
movement in the country and in each particular province, will be given a
channel.
The José Martí Art Instructors Brigade will make better care
and attention in all senses. We have done something similar with the social
workers, a powerful, growing force that the Revolution has at its disposal
today.
We cannot afford to allow this colossal revolutionary force to
be left stranded in no man’s land, with no political direction and no firm
support for its multifaceted task because of bureaucratic contradictions,
self-centered attitudes and institutional jealousies.
Similarly, every art instructor will respectfully submit to the
authority and powers of those who direct every center where they work,
regardless of which department they belong to.
This is the way the art instructors’ organization and
activities have been envisaged. As always, life will have the last word. The
doors to improvement will always be open for everything the revolution
creates.
The National Union of Cuban Writers and Artists and the Saíz
Brothers Association will keep in close contact with these young cultural
workers through the booming movement, which will come into being as thousands of
art instructors join every year.
Interesting news, impressions and anecdotes:
The YCL, the ministry of Culture, and the ministry of General
Education have been touring the country and through discussions with the Party,
the government and institutions in each province they have been learned of the
enthusiasm with which the new instructors have arrived in the schools and their
wishes to be useful they bring with them.
They have arrived full of dreams and have been welcomed with
special affection and enthusiasm by the children.
The schools and communities have many expectations.
Now they are in a learning phase. The head teachers and
teachers are not used to having an art instructor and in many instances are not
familiar with the responsibilities of these instructors.
In recent weeks, they have been working on diagnoses of the
children, the teaching staff and the school ambiance; they will begin to
organize some workshops, go to university, and to the upgrading process designed
by the ministries of Culture and Education for each one of them.
The close work between the YCL, and the ministries of Culture
and Education has made their reception in the schools easier, and has helped
with organizing their class sessions and helped them to fit into the work
collective.
A call was put out to grassroots cadres of the YCL and the José
Martí Pioneers Organization to look on the schools as the most important
Pioneers’ Palaces, because they are a new kind of school. Previously, computers,
VCRs, TV sets and many art workshops were to be found in the Pioneers’ Palaces
and camps. Today, they are in the schools themselves.
The TV sets and VCRs as well as computers which schools have
will be the instructors work tools, too. They will guide children and adults on
the visits they can make to the world’s museums through compact discs or
videos.
The instructors have been called on to recognize the privilege
of having a gallery, a theatre, a visual arts workshop whose programming they
are responsible for and which are precisely the very schools where they are
working today.
The Youth Video Clubs and the TV rooms located in isolated
areas of the country will also provide a setting for the instructors’ work.
First impressions have been heard on the tour made around the
country. Many are the same from one province to another:
"The children want to be with me all the time. When I walk
along the street, I feel proud that the children say hello to me and say to
their parents: ‘Look that’s my music teacher’. I would like to work in a team
with the instructor in the other school." An instructor from San Luis, a
municipality in Santiago de Cuba province.
"I have had a lot of support from my Cultural Center… I should
like them to authorize me to work with the children from the school where I did
my pre-professional practice as well, I don’t want them to relocate me because I
adore the children I have now but the others see me in the street and almost
cry. I could perfectly work with all of them. An instructor from San José de
las Lajas, a municipality in Havana province.
"Thank goodness for the classes I took in the fourth year,
because I have had to do everything, I have had to give dance classes and music
classes although my specialty is visual arts… the people from the Cultural
Center help me a lot and everyone in my school loves me." An instructor from
Holguín.
"I have two children with a health situation, one of them has
cystic fibrosis; they are my first two students, we are preparing a special
program for them… that has moved me very much… I feel useful." An instructor
from Las Tunas
"My specialty is drama but I have already arrange a choir… one
of the student’s father is a musician…I chose the best students I have,
organized them.. I asked the student’s father for help and we are working now.
The work is very stimulating and the children are really interested." An
instructor from Jobabo a municipality in Las Tunas province.
"I am in a rural school. The head teacher didn’t know much
about an instructor’s job, so I organized a meeting with all of the teachers and
explained about my work. The head teacher is my staunchest ally. I fell very
good… and I already have an adopted son… he is a student with learning problems,
I began to work with him through drama techniques… and found out that his dad
didn’t live with him and that he hasn’t given him the attention he should for a
long time. I went to look for his dad who lives in another municipality… I
introduced myself and explained what was going on… today my adopted son is
beginning to do better at school…these things make us discover that we all have
a heart." An instructor from Camagüey.
"I have taught dance and music classes. The children love the
classes. Sometimes they don’t want to go to classes in other subjects. I am a
fine arts instructor." An instructor from Camagüey.
"We were given a lovely welcome… in a school for adolescent
with special behavioral problems, the work is very difficult but it is going to
have results. There are four of us in this school… the school is having repairs
done and we are working on the repairs with other teachers… if the school
doesn’t have the proper conditions we have to create or invent them, that is why
the instructors are there…" An instructor from Granma.
"I am in Buenavista, a village in Remedios… There had never
been an instructor of anything there… I teach classes of all of the
specialties…the director of the Cultural Center asked me to go on weekends to
work with the old people in the Senior Citizens’ Group. "My specialty is drama
and what the old people wanted was dance. I had learned the Majagua dances
(peasants’ dances which are taught in the Art Instructors Schools) I taught them
the Majagua dances and the old people taught me the ones from Remedios and we
ended by all of us dancing El Gavilán". An instructor in Remedios, Villa
Clara.
The above is part of the work done in the Battle of Ideas in
the fields of culture and education.
Throughout these four school years we have not only started the
15 new Art Instructors Schools; the new national Ballet School has been built,
which can take 300 students for professional training, and where they also have
vocational ballet workshops in which more than 4,000 children have enrolled.
Seven new visual arts schools have been built, which brings to 17 the number of
such schools in the largest cities of the country; extensive repairs were done
on the visual arts school in Trinidad and fairly extensive repairs were done to
the one in San Alejandro; the Camagüey Ballet, Drama and Visual Arts School was
rebuilt; a new Art School which can take 500 students was built in Bayamo; a
school to train music bands came into being, and repairs are underway in 21
schools where various kinds of artistic activities are taught; and there is some
very important work underway, the extensive remodeling of the buildings already
in use and the continuation of building work until that jewel of Cuban artistic
culture, the Higher Institute of Art is finally completed.
I have been privileged to take part in the opening of five of
these schools. Others are awaiting their official opening, although they are in
full operation.
If in the 1992-1993 school year we had 5,978 students
registered in our art schools, we can say that in the middle of special period
that figure has almost doubled, and today there are 10,722 students registered;
if you add to these the 16,168 in the art instructors schools, that means there
are 26,890 young people who will be enriching the artistic and teaching forces
in the great battle for a general, comprehensive culture and for improving our
people’s quality of life.
This work has not been in vain. Success has rewarded our
efforts. I invite any other country in the world to show a similar harvest.
The capture of Bayamo by Mambi troops, led by Carlos Manuel de
Céspedes is commemorated on 0ctober 20.
That day, the Cuban national anthem, with words and music by
Perucho Figueredo, Major General of the Liberation Army, was sung for the first
time in the atrium of the main church in Bayamo.
The singing of the anthem on that October 20 came at the same
time as the feat of arms with which the Revolution achieved its first and most
important victory over Spanish colonial troops. Bayamo’s surrender and Céspedes’
victorious entry marked the culmination of the act of rebellion begun on October
10 in La Demajagua sugar plantation which marked an turning point in the
country’s history and gave birth, over the rubble of the first colonial
redoubts, to the Cuban nation.
October 20 is also the birth date of Abel Santamaría, the
heroic fighter and second in command of the troops, which attacked the Moncada
Barracks.
For all of the above reasons, a decree of the Council of
Ministers issued in 1979 established this day as Cuban Culture Day.
We wanted to celebrate it with the graduation of the first
contingent of art instructors and the creation of the José Martí Brigade as a
special present to the people of Villa Clara who are an example in the work to
preserve the cultural traditions which uphold our nation’s identity and the
winner for the site of the July 26 celebrations this year.
Let’s go forward, brave standard bearers of culture and
humanism! A life of glory awaits you!
When in the today uncertain future of humanity truly profound,
imperishable revolutions and social changes are discussed, no one can overlook
the achievements that bring us together here. Our people are proud of you.
Long live our homeland!
Long live the Revolution!
Long live socialism!
And as someone who came back to Cuba from Bolivia with his
reinforcement detachment, who is here with us, said: Ever onwards to
victory!
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