Arts for Sustainable Futures

An Educator’s Guide to Sustainability in the Arts Classroom

Grades
7-12
A hand holds up a healthy leafy plant with the roots dangling.

Introduction

Welcome to the Arts for Sustainable Futures (AFSF) teacher resource! Prepared for an eclectic body of artists and educators, this resource first highlights the various ways that art intersects with the world around us — from environmental sciences to humanitarian crises to the global economy. Because the relationship between arts and non-arts disciplines can sometimes be difficult to conceptualize, the precise impact of art on people is rarely agreed upon — nor is such impact easy to measure! Moving from abstract ideas to tangible action within the arts classroom, this resource presents an educator’s guide to sustainability.

Responding to the innumerable crises and injustices facing people, ecosystems, and the natural world today, the main objective of this teacher resource is two-fold:

  • To highlight the transformative power of art;
  • To demystify social, economic, and environmental dimensions of arts education.

The Sustainability for the Arts Educator module breaks down key concepts and terms that relate to sustainable futures. What does a sustainable future actually look like? How can arts curricula advance sustainable development? Building a strong case for why sustainable development has a place within the arts classroom, this module additionally offers a snapshot of various crises that persist in the world today.

And lastly, the Art to Action Campaign and Biodiversity Collage modules offer lesson plan frameworks — each connecting students with different aspects of sustainability via arts education.

  • Credits and acknowledgements

    Created by Ryan Elliot Drew in partnership with the National Arts Centre, May 2022

    The Arts for Sustainable Futures Teacher Resource was created upon the traditional and unceded territory of the Mi’kmaq people.

  • About the author

    Ryan Elliot Drew is a musician and visual artist, creativity researcher, and sustainability consultant currently based out of Epekwitk / Prince Edward Island. Ryan’s work as a musical performer and recording artist blends his formal training in concert percussion with a passion for contemporary and popular styles of music. In addition to regularly performing with professional ensembles such as the PEI Symphony Orchestra and the Charlottetown Festival Orchestra, Ryan has appeared in venues and on stages across North America — including Red Rocks Amphitheatre in Denver, Colorado, and the Capitol Records Building in Los Angeles, California.

    As an educator, Ryan is a Teaching Artist with the National Arts Centre Arts Alive Program, the Educational Outreach Coordinator for the PEI Symphony Orchestra, and is a National Geographic funded educator. In addition to running his own private piano and percussion studio, Ryan has taught in both private and public schools in PEI.

    Ryan holds a Bachelor of Music from the University of Prince Edward Island, a Master in Global Affairs from the Universidad Rey Juan Carlos in Madrid, Spain, and is currently working towards his doctorate in Interdisciplinary Studies with the University of New Brunswick.