Welcome to From the Trenches, the blog of Quadrant Arts Education Research Founder Bob Morrison. Please pardon our appearance as we transition platforms. Be sure to sign up for our daily Quadrant Arts Education News Feed!
Welcome to From the Trenches, the blog of Quadrant Arts Education Research Founder Bob Morrison. Please pardon our appearance as we transition platforms. Be sure to sign up for our daily Quadrant Arts Education News Feed!
Posted at 01:55 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
It has been a REALLY busy, harried, controversial, challenging year for everyone. And if you are like me I am sure all of you are ready for a well-deserved break.
But before mine starts I have one last task to complete…
My Annual Christmas Wish List for Santa!
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Continue reading "My Annual Christmas Wish List for Santa!" »
Posted at 08:50 AM | Permalink | Comments (1)
Testimony of
Robert B. Morrison
New Jersey Arts Education Partnership
for the New Jersey State Board of Education
October 5, 2011
Good afternoon. My name is Bob Morrison. I serve as the chair of the New Jersey Arts Education Partnership – the statewide umbrella organization for the visual and performing arts. Our members represent all aspects of arts education in our state. Our members include the professional arts education associations in dance, music, theatre and visual arts, arts educators and the many cultural organizations whose programs provide both educational experiences for students and professional development opportunities for teachers.
I am here today to comment on the proposed changes to the NJQSAC District Performance Review (DPR) and the Statement of Assurance (SOA).
Continue reading "My Testimony before the New Jersey State Board of Education" »
Posted at 08:31 AM | Permalink | Comments (2)
I often find myself in front of policy and decision makers discussing the status and condition of arts education in our schools. I have been in front of state boards of education, state legislatures, the Oval Office, the corner office, the principals office, school boards, congressional caucuses, senators and superintendents, principals and four Presidents of the United States.
Some times they are supporters of arts education. Sometimes they are not. Often times they would ask me “why” we teach arts education in our schools. The story I share with them ALWAYS provides a new awareness of the power of the arts to transform our students and our world. I am certain their view of arts education is dramatically changed.
The story I share uses the words of Steve Jobs and Jef Raskin. And on the day of the passing of Steve Jobs... it is only fitting I share this story with you.
Continue reading "Steve Jobs, Jef Raskin, Apple and Why We Teach the Arts in Our Schools." »
Posted at 09:09 AM | Permalink | Comments (3)
Wow… where did the summer go? It feels like just yesterday school was wrapping up. Yet here we are facing the start of the new school year. New hopes. New dreams. New goals for you and your students. It means planning your programs, selecting your music, getting your lesson plans arranged, reviewing your student roster, instrumentation or vocal range and…
Planning your advocacy activities!!!
That’s right… planning your advocacy strategy and activities to promote your program.
“But Bob, I don’t have time to focus on advocacy” you may say.
Well if you do not care enough to plan how to advocate and promote your program… who will?
Yes… I know this can be time consuming… But fear not… here are some ideas to help you plan as well as some resources to help get the job done!
Continue reading "Promoting Your Program is No Longer an Option. It’s a Requirement!" »
Posted at 07:44 AM | Permalink | Comments (1)
Today I opened a letter I have not read for nearly a decade. It was from Harold Decker, the president of the American Red Cross. It was a thank you note that accompanied a statue (called Motherland) he sent to me as a special gift. There is a story I have never told behind both the letter and the statue. The story began on 9/11. I decided it is finally time to write it down.
September 12, 2001
On Wednesday, September 12, 2001 I was at home. I got home about 1 AM in the morning following my 19 hours of adventure on 9/11 (which I have detailed in another post). I did not sleep well at all even though I was tired. There was just too much racing through my mind.
We were instructed to check our work voicemail for announcements and instructions from Viacom and MTV Networks (MTV Networks is a division of Viacom and VH1 where I worked was a division of MTV Networks). There was a message telling us the office would be closed Wednesday and to check back for updates. Fortunately, I had grabbed my laptop computer and tossed it into my brief case as we raced out of the building. (This was the famous brief case that created the bomb scare in Hoboken I have written about).
Being an executive with the company I had remote access to our systems so I could log in and check email and have access to files. This would be important.
I made some calls from my home office to check on my staff to be sure they all made it home OK. My boss, VH1 President John Sykes, was stuck in Denver following the Giants/Broncos game trying to get back to New York. I spoke with our head of communications John Kelley and others on our executive team to be sure everyone was OK.
As I sat at my desk I was feeling kind of helpless. Our nation had just suffered this huge tragedy. The many firefighters in the trucks we saw racing through Time Square on 9/11 never came back. The numbers of presumed dead where being reported in the 10,000 range. The images were horrible. So many people had suffered. So many people died trying to save others. So many people were trying to help. Everything was confusing.
Me? I felt like I could do nothing. How could I help? What could I do? I hated the feeling of helplessness. It ate at me.
Continue reading "September 12, 2001: You Can Always Have an Impact... If You Choose To" »
Posted at 06:44 PM | Permalink | Comments (4)
As the 10 year anniversary of 911 approaches all of the coverage has brought back powerful memories and emotions. From escaping the city, to organizing the nation wide public service announcement campaign for the American Red Cross, to my work on the production team for the Concert for New York City, all of these events and my role in them are now part of history. Nothing was more life changing than 911 iteself. On September 11, 2001, I was at my desk in Times Square in Manhattan tending to the start of the day. What would transpire over the next 19 hours is something I will never forget. At the time, I sat down and wrote about what had happened on that day as I experienced it. I shared it with my family and friends. Today, in memory of this solemn day, I am sharing it with all of you. It was written on September 12, 2001 and appears exactly as it was then... errors and all!
Posted at 09:27 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)
I first wrote about this a few years ago. With the recent budget challenges facing public education and the strain on many of our school districts now is a great time to review tis idea one more time.
There is an emerging trend that, until recently, had been isolated to California (Redwood City, Concord, and dozens of others). This trend has now started to pop up in school districts across the country. I call it The Parent Trap.
To illustrate the point here is an actual email I received from someone that illustrates the point:
I am a parent in a NY school district, and although I no longer have anyone in the elementary school I am worried. Our school's budget recently failed and cut from the school program was our music program in our Elementary schools. Our Board of Ed says that if we can raise $170,000 in donations, grants or scholarships we will be able to restore our elementary music program.
Did you see what just happened? In a two-step move the school district has now shifted the responsibility to fund a core subject, music, from the school board to the parents.
This is The Parent Trap. And more and more parents and concerned citizens, with the good intentions of trying to keep their music programs alive, are falling for it. What happens?
The minute a school district is able to shift the responsibility to fund a program from the district to the parents... THEY WILL NEVER TAKE THE RESPOSNIBILITY BACK.
Posted at 12:13 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
“Just as there can be no education without learning; no education is complete without music” Growing Up Complete (1991)
As we gather this March to celebrate “Music in Our Schools” month - many of our readers may not be aware of the events that occurred twenty years ago to help preserve music education in our schools and launch the modern era of music and arts education advocacy. Thus, my riff on the opening stanza of the Beatles, Sargent Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band.
But it’s also a question for the future. When leaders of the future twenty years from now look back on 2011… what will they say… about our actions?
Posted at 03:36 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Dear Santa,
Well it is that time of year. PRESENT TIME! Once again, I ask that you indulge me by foregoing any gifts for me (hair club for men!!) and bring to some of the many more deserving, or needy, the gifts they need the most.
So here is my list of those who have been either naughty or nice with an appropriate present suggested for each!
To Secretary of Education Duncan: New Words. Yes, I know you said that the federal government has no real influence over education at the local level. But then you went out and provided buckets of cash to states that agreed to “voluntarily” raise the caps on charter schools and increase teacher accountability based on student achievement. If you really support arts education why not do the same thing? Instead of saying “We have no influence” how about a bucket of cash incentives for states “voluntarily” make the arts a requirement for EVERY student? Now that we know you are willing to use cash as a tool available for your OTHER priorities, what does this say about your support for the arts? If you are not going to put your money where your mouth is… then quit talking about how much you support the arts. Talk is cheap. Put your money where you say your priorities are or stop saying the arts are a priority. Simple.
Texas Legislature: A Day Off! The passage and implementation of a middle school arts requirement has led to a significant increase in middle school instrumental music students. Reports from Texas this fall have highlighted waiting lists of students to get into programs and music stores running out of instruments to rent.
To All Other States Legislative Bodies: A Legislative Copy Machine. This is so each state may copy what Texas has done and bring the middle school arts requirement to every state in the nation!
Supreme Court: Some Logic. The court upheld a ruling supporting a New Jersey school district’s ban on holiday music deemed to be religious… even if the music HAS NO WORDS. So, you believe PERFORMING instrumental versions of music deemed to be religious during the holidays is unconstitutional. Really? Is it just me or have we taken this whole thing a little TOO far. How can a song be offensive if there are no words to offend? What makes one combination of notes offensive and another combination not? Is the next step the harmony police? Move to the back of the class!
STEM (Science Technology Engineering and Math) Proponents: A Vowel! Specifically… an “A” for the arts. I know… I asked you to give this to them two years ago. Honestly, I do not think they ever opened the package. The proponents of STEM STILL feel they have exclusive province over creativity. I know, it’s crazy, but it’s STILL true.
President Obama: A Calendar. How did President Obama spend the first “arts education week” this past September? By announcing a STEM initiative. You read it correctly. With all the hype around arts education week, NATIONAL ARTS EDUCATION WEEK and you go off and schedule a big event for STEM. Is anybody paying attention over there? A new calendar I am sure will do the trick. We wouldn’t want to you to schedule another one of these during Music In Our Schools Month would we?
Charter School Advocates: Arts Classroom and Programs. The research documenting the presence of an arts program in charter schools is beginning to mount and the findings are not good. Most Charter Schools do NOT include a comprehensive arts program. A few do… mostly in arts centered charter schools. The majority of charter schools have NO arts. In an environment where there is this great movement to build more charter schools there is a compelling need to demonstrate FOR charter school leaders HOW to include the arts in their schools.
Our 2012 Presidential Candidates: A Video Compilation of the 2008 campaign! Why would I want the presidential candidates to look at this? Well, 2008 was the first time in our history where we had a majority of the presidential candidates speaking eloquently about music and arts education and the need to help support the arts in schools. Without a doubt the highest visibility of our cause ever. We can only hope the candidates, who will begin announcing plans to run as soon as we enter the New Year, will be equally out spoken for our cause. And who knows… maybe we will be able to elect someone who will not only talk about the cause of music and arts education… but actually… DO SOMETHING (see Secretary Duncan)
The Avon High School Marching Band: A New Music Wing! Let’s face it; you are going to need more space to hold all your national titles. Winning Grand Nationals once is a great accomplishment. Two times in a row is a great achievement. Three times is a row is a feat of which legends are made. Congratulations to Jay Webb, his staff, and the members of the Avon Marching Band for an incredible string of successful seasons!
Sir Ken Robinson, Daniel Pink and David Pogue: A Nationwide Tour! Their opening session at the Creativity World Forum is the stuff legends are made of. Perfect messages, from engaging messengers, tying together technology, business, education and music and arts education in a very compelling way. The more these three are talking to big crowds of decision makers and business leaders the better it will be for the rest of us.
For God: A New Music Room! This year saw the loss of many colleagues who have shaped our discipline: legendary music advocate and industry executive Karl Bruhn, University of Massachusetts Minuteman Marching Band Director George Parks (and the greatest drum major to ever live) and the legendary Florida A and M University Band leader William Foster all took there place in that big band room in the sky. With all the folks that have been using the place over the past century I am thinking everyone may be due for an upgrade. (PSST… hey God… be sure you bring the band BEHIND the stadium after they march out. Otherwise, George will sick the Tuba players on you… and you do NOT want that.)
And to our readers, who bring the wonderful gift of music to students across this nation everyday: may you have everything you may ever want and a very happy, healthy and prosperous new year!
Posted at 08:26 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
The advocacy committee of the New Jersey Arts Education Partnership developed this tip sheet for arts educators to use to promote arts education programs during this holiday season.
Some quick idea highlights:
Speech ideas:
• 4 times more likely to be recognized for academic achievement
• 3 times more likely to be elected to class office within their schools
• 4 times more likely to participate in a math and science fair
• 3 times more likely to win an award for school attendance
These are just a few ideas to help get you started. Be creative! Here are some great resources to help:
SupportMusic Coalition http://supportmusic.com
Music Program Inserts from NAMM/MENC
Americans for the Arts: http://www.artsusa.org/
Art Educators of NJ: http://www.aenj.org/
NJ Music Educators: http://www.njmea.org/
NJ Arts Education Partnership: http://www.artsednj.org
Keep Arts in Our Schools: http://www.keepartsinschools.org/
You may download the tips here!
Posted at 10:33 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)