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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 18,2006


FOCUS ON STUDENTS: The Study Hall Game

If you look at your school district’s approach to study hall scheduling, you may find an easy and very telling way to see if your administration has a student-focused or adult-focused approach to music education. What follows is a real-life example from one school district to alert you about some common issues that may arise in your school.

The Problem: School Budget Crisis

The school district was facing a budget crisis and needed to solve the problem of significant anticipated shortfalls. So, to solve the crisis, the administration made the following proposal to the parent committee. As you’ll see, these recommendations were not based purely on budgetary concerns, and they gave little or no attention to student needs.

The Administration’s “Solution”: Require Study Hall

With 1500 students in the high school and a six-period day, the administration decided to require each student to take one* study hall per day. This meant no student could take more than five courses.

The administrative proposal stated it this way in its presentation to the School Board:

- "Eliminate four vocal performing groups at the high school."
- "All high school students (1500) will be required to take a minimum of one study hall per day."

They proposed putting 250 students in a large study hall each period with non-certified personnel to supervise. This is a perfect example of leadership making adult-centered decisions that are not focused on student needs for learning.

Impact on Students in the Music Program

OK, now I want you to think back to what you’ve learned about Full Time Equivalency (FTE).

The (1.0 FTE) full-time high school choral director had 600 students in the program, an average of 100 students per period. By contrast, regular classroom teachers had average (daily) student loads of 125.

If you recall, music teachers offer a higher FTE value than other classroom teachers because their class sizes are usually much larger. In this case, the high school choral director actually had an FTE Value equivalent to 4.8 FTE classroom teachers. More than that, eliminating the four vocal groups would have prevented 354 students from participating in the choral program. And even after the proposed cuts, with 246 students still in the choral program, the high school choral teacher would still have had an FTE value of 2.0 FTE classroom teachers.

While no specifics were presented about impact on the instrumental music program, the administration did recommend that 50% of all music teachers be eliminated. This would have eliminated the entire elementary band and orchestra curriculum, and some instrumental positions at the secondary level. This meant that 276 high school instrumental students would have been prevented from participating in band and orchestra.

With 250 students typically in a study hall, this would be the expected breakdown:


Normal Study Hall Students100
Former Vocal Music Students 59
Former Instrumental Music Students 46
New Non-music Students 45
Total Study Hall Students (Proposed)250

The Response From The Music Coalition

Fortunately, this school district had a very active and involved Music Coalition. With consultant assistance, they did some research and presented a report with recommendations to the parent committee of the School Board.

During the process of researching, the Music Coalition learned there was another motivation for the administration’s new study hall requirement.

The administration perceived one music teacher as incompetent, had wanted to dismiss him for years, and the financial crisis seemed to provide the perfect opportunity to do it. However, the administration would have had to cut 50% of the music teachers in order to get deep enough into the seniority track to cut that teacher. As the Coalition’s research revealed, the administration was willing to eliminate music opportunities for 630 students to get that one teacher! (Tenure, as is commonly believed, doesn’t protect incompetent teachers from being dismissed; it does, however, require a competent administration to document the need to dismiss a teacher. But, since few districts are using a functional curriculum, let alone consistent national standards for music education, this is often difficult or perhaps impossible. If a school doesn’t have a written music curriculum that provides adequate student assessment, then there’s no way to evaluate the music faculty.)

But, back to the Coalition’s report to the School Board . . . here’s a segment from it:

“Since it is obvious that the administration did not philosophically support the validity of study hall as an appropriate academic function, it would appear that there are in fact only two real purposes to requiring study hall of all students:

  • To require an additional 270 students (45 per hour x 6 periods) to attend study hall, equating to a total savings of (2.1) FTE for the district.
  • To eliminate the opportunity for 630 students (6 hours x 105 students) to participate in the music program of the high school.”

The Community Demands Reinstatement of the Music Program

The community was so infuriated by the Music Coalition’s findings that over 4,000 people joined the local music coalition and threatened to join forces to bring a lawsuit against the district.

The music program was completely reinstated and the recommendation to require each student to take study hall was dropped.

Once again, a committed Music Coalition was able to save music programs – for the students!

Until next time,

John Benham

[*Note: Or, as is common in the block schedule format (particularly the A/B model), a district may restrict students to seven courses out of eight periods. With one, or even two periods, allocated to required study hall(s), block scheduling becomes an increasingly flawed scheduling option.]




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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