Originally posted by Mary Chambers
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To any parents who have found a state school which has active music making and teaching, I would say, please voice your appreciation and support to the headteacher and the governors (and the music teacher). The perennial challenge is the arrival of a new head. Apart from their many responsibilities, their main fixation is Ofsted/league tables/ the inquisition visits of "advisors" etc and unless they in some way value music, it will be a struggle, all over again, for the teacher to a) be left alone to carry on b) not be disregarded, seen as an inconvenience and for music to be marginalised. Its got progressively worse over the years with the mechanisation of teaching, monitoring, control from above. Unless parents monitor this and if necessary challenge the marginalisation of music, in all probability it will happen......
What makes it worthwhile is bringing the joy of music to a cross section of society and all of the proven benefits (often referred to from research) to the children who delight in what they do, and can tell quality from the rest. (And the delight with LSO/LPORPO/ etc children's concerts are heartening to witness...)
We conclude that Classical** music is seen as elitist by some, and it has progressively become the case that most of the population have no real experience of it - not even the former basic level of familiarity with what we call music; so they don't know more than 2 or 3 carols, they can't sing a hymn at a wedding or funeral. (I've taken no time to read up about the Julian Lloyd Webber etc movement, but I should because its sorely needed).
And yes, isn't it interesting that most independent schools see it as necessary to have some decent music provision, because their parents value it, either because they see it as something to which they aspire, or because they well know its value. So, for the rest of state schools, its nearly always the middle class parents ferrying their children to music schools, teachers and youth orchestras, choirs etc. As we did when we chose a primary school we understood to have decent music to find that the music teacher left soon after, and the teachers opposed instrumental teaching because it disrupted lessons......
I haven't exhaustively looked at this blog (and its forerunner) but it conveys some view of the music teacher's world (in outer London) :
**I do wish we had a better term to express the non rock, non pop, non roots, non jazz, non world, non etc etc music. "Composed music" seems good enough to me to be going on with.....
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