WWW WWW.SUPPORTMUSIC.COM

Download the NEW SupportMusic Glossary

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?

December 3, 2007

FOCUS ON COALITION BUILDING: Advocate for Music Education

Consider this: as we race willy-nilly through adulthood, today’s five year old children are right behind us; they’ll reach retirement age in 2070. If you’re like me, you have little time to consider what our global human society will truly be like so long from now – yet our actions today will absolutely shape our children’s well-being, productivity and life experiences. So it is our responsibility and privilege to help young people prepare today for their future success in work and life.

Music education engages and inspires us at any age, builds critical thinking, and supports cognitive and emotional strength. As society moves ever-faster, we know that discipline and flexibility, self-expression and group process are just a few of the “warp and weft” skills gained through music and arts education – in fact they may actually be critical to our survival. How do we act now, today, to keep music education strong for our children’s sake?

Because education decisions that impact our children truly are made at the local and state levels, we all have the power to help determine the amount of arts instruction time offered in our districts. School officials respond to their constituents’ viewpoints, particularly if advocates are well informed and focused on the needs of children.

What Can Concerned Parents Do?

Arts supporters have learned valuable lessons along the way to restoring and sustaining quality music and arts programs, and their voices resound throughout the information provided in the SupportMusic Community Action Kit

If you’re not sure where to begin, try one of these ‘top ten tactics’ they’ve offered up from experience:

1. Keep conversations focused on the needs of the children.
2. Call a meeting and create a local coalition of concerned parents, business and civic leaders.
3. Get comfortable with the language of school budgets; learn how decisions are made.
4. Attend a school board meeting and verbalize your support for arts education in your community.
5. Align with other arts and civic organizations that support your mission – get new groups involved and let the leaders emerge.
6. Write letters to the editor of your local newspaper outlining the benefits of school music and arts education.
7. Publicly celebrate the success and popularity of your school music and arts programs. Invite the local media to a school art exhibit, dance, or music performance and use this time to educate reporters on local budget issues.
8. Identify state legislative initiatives that affect your programs. Visit your congressional representatives and raise their awareness.
9. Be proactive. Track the timing of school budget decisions in your community, but make your case for arts education all year. Stay positive and in consensus-building mode; do your homework together and become known as part of the solution to building a better community.
10. Roll up your sleeves, download the SupportMusic Community Action Kit  and get to work with the tools and techniques it provides. This free resource offers concrete ways to help you advocate for a complete education that includes music instruction for every child.

As an educator and a national advocate for music education, I have a professional imperative to defend every child’s right to a complete education that includes music, the arts and the other core academic subjects. As a public school parent whose own child received a strong music and arts education, my personal motivation to support student access to the arts grows stronger by the day. I know that you join me in wanting the best for all our students’ future: pick one bullet above and get started. And by the way – if you haven’t yet picked up a musical instrument but have always wanted to try, I promise it is never to late to learn. Think about it… and contact us at info@namm.org if you Wanna Play!

-- Sandra Kilpatrick Jordan is the parent of a public school graduate, Associate Director of Public Affairs and Government Relations, NAMM, and coordinator of the SupportMusic Coalition, which unites more than 155 organizations in support of music and arts education for all children. (Portions of this article were originally published in the August/September 2007 issue of the National PTA’s magazine, “Our Children”.)



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


Contact Us