|
MUSIC IN OUR SCHOOLS MONTH
An advocacy effort more important
than ever before.
As this article is being written, messages of doom about
state budget deficits and its effect on local school budget
cuts and the elimination of school music programs are falling
like leaves in a dense autumn forest. The month of March has
traditionally been designated Music in Our Schools Month and
with these fiscal realities, our efforts this month and beyond
will be more important than ever before.
Whats a person to do when the fiscal sky is falling?
How can we make a case for music as part of schools when all
that seems to matter is student success on reading and math
standardized tests?
Through NAMMs efforts, and the outcomes of past and
present collaborations with partners such as VH1 Save the
Music and MENC, the National Association for Music Education,
many vital tools are at hand to advance efforts to assure
that music education is adequately funded locally. More than
ever before, we have the knowledge that the public understands
the value and importance of music in schools; this has been
clearly demonstrated by Gallup Poll statistics. We have broad
distribution of the Einstein Advocacy Kit produced by the
American Music Conference that provides an advocacy road map
to retailers and their customers. Through AMC, billions of
media impressions about the benefits of music are produced
annually. Music research supports the case for the benefits
of music education and this knowledge is broadly disseminated.
The newest tool in the advocacy arsenal will be launched on
March 12 at the SupportMusic.com website; a collaborative
initiative with MENC to support music education advocacy efforts
on the local level.
But is this enough to effect the management of local school
funding where decisions can and will be made to fund music
education in local communities? The blunt answer is NO! When
funding for music programs are threatened, parents of children
in the schools must demand music as part of quality education
for their children, and as taxpayers, school leadership and
management are ultimately accountable to them. The force and
will of parents is the primary reason music programs continue
to be funded in the face of threatened cuts. And in this regard,
local music retailers can provide, and without an enormous
amount effort, pivotal assistance in the process to help assure
that music education is adequately funded on the local level.
Here are a few tips for local retailers and concerned parents:
- Dont take no for an answer
Even in the face of demands for accountability in basic academic
subjects, music is a vital pathway for learning for children
and this is demonstrated over and over again. Dozens of supporting
facts are available at SupportMusic.com
in a new tool called build your case facts
can be used for school board presentations, letters to the
editor. The Einstein Advocacy kit, also available via the
AMC website, has templates for brochures, flyers and posters
that local advocates can use to drum up support.
A couple of calls to parents who are passionate about music
as a part of their childrens education can get them
inspired to lead the charge locally; provide them with the
Einstein kit, network to the AMC website, SupportMusic.com
website
- If you are a music retailer have an in-store advocacy
kiosk set up a computer with and internet connection
to SupportMusic.com and AMC; download and print out what
parents need. Host an in-store organizational meeting; dont
run the meeting, but support the organization of parents
who will carry the message to the school board.
- Believe in the impossible and dont give up; a handful
of impassioned citizens can lead the charge to assure music
education opportunities for hundreds of children
your optimism, support and determination in the face of
these challenges can make a big difference.
|