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May 01, 2008
FOCUS ON BUDGET: Reverse Economics – Developing a Fiscal Case for Your Music Program (Part 2 of 2)
April 02, 2008
FOCUS ON BUDGET: Reverse Economics - Developing a Fiscal Case for Your Music Program (Part 1 of 2)
March 01, 2008
Focus on Issues & Decision-making: Educational Reform Movements - Tax Vouchers and Their Impact on Music Education Programs
February 01, 2008
ARTS ADVOCACY LESSONS FROM THE 2008 IOWA PRESIDENTIAL CAUCUS: #1 Take-Away ñ Let the Candidates Hear From You!
January 03, 2008
FOCUS ON STUDENTS: NJ Arts Education Census Project Offers Model for Other States
December 01, 2007
FOCUS ON COALITION BUILDING: Advocate for Music Education
October 30, 2007
FOCUS ON ISSUES & DECISION MAKING: Music Education Research 101, Part II
September 17, 2007
FOCUS ON ISSUES & DECISION MAKING: Music Education Research 101, Part 1
August 07, 2007
FOCUS ON ISSUES AND DECISIONMAKING: Do Your Elected Officials View Music Education as a National Priority?
July 13, 2007
FOCUS ON COALITION BUILDING: American Symphony Orchestra League Launches Historic Statement of Common Cause to Support In-School Music Education
June 03, 2007
FOCUS ON STUDENTS: Music & Arts Education is Essential to Development of Creative Economy & 21st Century Skills
June 03, 2007
FOCUS ON STUDENTS: Music & Arts Education is Essential to Development of Creative Economy & 21st Century Skills
May 03, 2007
FOCUS ON COALITION BUILDING: Think Globally, Act Locally ñ and Why Reading This is NOT an Advocacy Action
March 21, 2007
FOFCUS ON BUDGET: FTE and the Staffing Ratio, Part 2 ñ The Music Teacher
February 21, 2007
FOCUS ON COALITION BUILDING: From Anytown, USA to Washington, DC . . . All Music Advocacy Is Local
January 17, 2007
FOCUS ON COALITION BUILDING: How to Create School Board Support for Music Programs
December 15, 2006
FOCUS ON STUDENTS: Why Music Technology Enhances Student Success
November 16, 2006
FOCUS ON COALITION BUILDING: These Parents Made A Difference ñ You Can Too!
October 18, 2006
FOCUS ON STUDENTS: The Study Hall Game
September 27, 2006
FOCUS ON ISSUES & DECISION MAKING: The Music Administrator, Part 2 of 2
September 20, 2006
FOCUS ON ISSUES & DECISION MAKING: The Music Administrator, Part 1 of 2
September 08, 2006
Back-To-School Primer: The Local Music Coalition
August 30, 2006
Focus on Budget: FTE ñ A Case Study on Teacher Seniority & The Fallacy of Average
August 24, 2006
Focus on Issues & Decision Making:Educational Reform Movements: Middle Schools, Part 3 of 3
August 15, 2006
Focus on Issues & Decision Making:Educational Reform Movements: Middle Schools, Part 2 of 3
August 08, 2006
Focus on Issues & Decision Making: Educational Reform Movements: Middle Schools, Part 1 of 3
August 08, 2006
Focus on Issues & Decision Making: Educational Reform Movements: Middle Schools, Part 1 of 3
August 01, 2006
Focus on Issues & Decision Making: Educational Reform Movements: Trimester System and Year-Round Schools
July 18, 2006
NEWS FLASH!! CA Advocates Secure Historic Funding for Arts Education
June 30, 2006
Focus on Issues & Decision Making: Educational Reform Movements: Part 10 of a series Decision Time!
June 22, 2006
Focus on Issues & Decision Making: Educational Reform Movements: Part 9 of a series Three Perspectives on Block Scheduling
June 13, 2006
Focus on Issues & Decision Making: Educational Reform Movements: Part 8 of a series Two Options for Four-Period Block Scheduling
June 06, 2006
Focus on Issues & Decision Making: Educational Reform Movements: Part 7 of a series Block Scheduling and the Music Student
May 30, 2006
Focus on Issues & Decision Making: Educational Reform Movements: Part 6 of a series Rotating Schedules
May 18, 2006
Focus on Issues & Decision Making: Educational Reform Movements: Part 5 of a series Two Options for 7-Period Scheduling
May 08, 2006
Focus on Issues & Decision Making: Educational Reform Movements: Part 4 of a series Scheduling Myths & the Grades 9-10 "Bottleneck"
April 27, 2006
Focus on Issues & Decision Making: Educational Reform movement: Part 3 of a series Scheduling & The Traditional Six-Day Period
April 19, 2006
Focus on Issues & Decision Making: Educational Reform: Part 2 of a series Scheduling
April 12, 2006
Focus on Issues & Decision Making: Educational Reform Movements: Part 1 of a series An Overview & Some Advice
April 04, 2006
FOCUS ON BUDGET: Actual FTE Value & Individual Student Load
March 27, 2006
PUBLIC OPINION SURVEYS: A Slippery Slope
March 15, 2006
Music Advocacy 101: Do YOU Have "The Right Stuff"?
March 01, 2006
Focus on Issues & Decision Making: Who Really Calls The Shots?
February 16, 2006
Focus on Budget: FTE and The Danger of Using Averages
February 07, 2006
Focus on Budget: Identifying Potential & "Hidden" Music Budget Cuts
January 24, 2006
Focus on Issues & Decision Making: Music - Curricular, Co-curricular or Extra-curricular?
January 10, 2006
Focus on Budget: FTE and the Staffing Ratio
January 04, 2006
Focus on Students: Advocacy and the Music Student
December 27, 2005
Focus on Budget: How to Develop & Use Impact Statements
December 20, 2005
FOCUS ON ISSUES & DECISION-MAKING: Central and Site-based Management
December 05, 2005
Focus on Budget: How "Average" FTE Value Creates Budget Problems
November 28, 2005
Focus on Coalition Building: The Public School Music Participation Survey
November 21, 2005
Focus on Coalition Building: 8 Strategic Errors in Music Advocacy & How to Correct Them
November 14, 2005
Focus on Issues & Decision Making: Is My Music Program Vulnerable to Cuts?
November 07, 2005
Focus on Budget: FTE & Staffing
October 31, 2005
FOCUS ON STUDENTS: Putting Students First
October 10, 2005
Decision Making: The Politics of Process
October 04, 2005
SCHOOL BUDGET PRIMER: UNDERSTANDING "FTE"
March 23, 2005
Decisions: Adult or Student-centered?
March 23, 2005
Decisions: Adult or Student-centered?

October 31, 2005

FOCUS ON STUDENTS: Putting Students First

Advocating for Music Education? Just having to think and worry about defending something so valuable to every child can make us feel indignant.

But, if you’re a parent of a young person who enjoys playing music, you may have already experienced, first-hand, the necessity of facing this issue. And if you’re a community member who loves music, you know how much music education has enriched your life.

The truth is, we have no choice but to defend school music programs. In a time of drastic reductions in school budgets, music can sometimes be misunderstood as not core to an academic curriculum. As an advocate of music education, you already know that participation in music is vital to a young person’s academic and social development: now it’s up to you to make sure that music education programs in your community continue and flourish.

Teaching vs. Learning – What Matters Most?

Since first becoming an active advocate for music education, I have asked over 30,000 teachers, parents, and school administrators to define the mission of education. In over 99% of the responses, adults define the mission as "teaching or educating children."

Asked the same question, the majority of students respond that the mission of education is "learning."

When you approach music education from a student’s perspective, everything shifts in a subtle, yet very significant, way, doesn’t it?

This is one area where advocates for music education have a really crucial role to play. If adults who are decision-makers aren’t able or willing to shift their perspective – from “teaching” to “learning” – it’s easy to see how school music programs end up as prime targets for cuts.

What’s a “Cut”?

Music "cuts" are any factors or actions that negatively impact a student’s potential to learn through participation in music programs. Threats to music programs normally come in one of two forms:

* Budgetary Issues: Enrollment decline, funding deficiencies, preference for funding other areas such as the perceived ”basics” (ie, math, English, science)

* Educational Reform: Middle schools or junior highs, block scheduling, school-to-work, tax vouchers, charter or magnet schools

As a music advocate, you have a choice, You can wait until you hear of decisions that “cut” into young people’s access to music making in your community, and then jump into the fray. OR you can become better at recognizing the threat before it happens, and keep your school’s music programs off the list of cuts! I hope you’ll do the latter.

Putting Students First is the Key

Fortunately for us, music advocacy has been with us since public school music education began. You can draw on the valuable experience of advocates who have been successful before you - and still make new strides on behalf of music education in our current educational climate.

Your message will only be well received if you are able to convey how crucial it is to “put students first.” Music advocacy is most effective when it is:

* proactive and collaborative - a music coalition must work together with music teachers and administrators to make sure official policy includes curricular music standards

* about learning – remember music education is not about what adults teach, it’s about what students learn

* focused on the students! - every decision should be prefaced with the question “what will the long-term effect be on students?“

A Note of Caution

On the flip side, music advocacy may be perceived as negative, and therefore be less effective, when it is:

* reactive or adversarial - acting to save a program that is proposed for reduction or elimination

* about money - raising taxes

* about conflict and power - the administration vs. the board vs. the teachers vs. community

* about teachers - job conditions, pay, benefits

* about saving jobs – losing individuals, not positions

* about adults! - or a focus on anything other than learning

Basically, a successful music advocacy campaign comes down to two primary components:

* a well-organized music coalition

* strategic use of the right information

A Little Advice

There are many ways you can work to head-off a potentially destructive situation. Just keep in mind: being an effective advocate for music education is about music for students - all students! Music advocacy is based on the belief that making music is essential to learning, the enjoyment of life, and the preservation of culture. Being effective as a music advocate, means focusing at least some of your energy on expansion of existing programs, and development of new ones, not only on defending music programs against cuts or threats of elimination. As an advocate for music education, you are part of a long and proud tradition of putting students first; together we can keep the focus on what’s most important – students participating in music!


Until next time,

John Benham

 

 



Organizations:

Artists:

Scott Brady

Nathan East

The Goo Goo Dolls

Lorin Hollander

Bob James

Carolyn Dawn Johnson

Harvey Mason

Bob McGrath

Chris Pierce

Nate Sallie

Take 6

Will Turpin of Collective Soul


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