A
Statement by John J. Mahlmann, Executive
Director, MENC |
|
“Music of the Heart,” the
Miramax film is based
on the real-life story of Roberta Guaspari,
a woman who started and maintainedas
she maintains to this day a music performance
program for kids in East Harlem. The plot highlights
the teacher’s strength
and spirit in overcoming
adversity, the friendships
that helped her accomplish
her goal, and the way that
the kids and community benefit
from her efforts.
All of which makes for a great movie. But the part that really interests
me, as the director of an association of more than seventy thousand music
teachers, is the fact that she meets her goals and touches the lives of children
through music.
Now I suspect that most viewers
will find this eminently
believable. Most parents can reflect on their kid’s experiences
in school or think
back to their own school yearsand conclude that many, many children
stay engaged in school and rise to new heights as students because of involvement
in the music program. Students are drawn into the unique mix of group identity
and personal accomplishment offered by the experience of playing music with
others in an ensemble. And they soon learn something of the nature of work
as they strive to make the group sound better and be better by the collective
and individual efforts of each musiciana learning
process that they carry over into their other studies.
This result of music studythe development of a deep sense of community
accomplishment based on personal effort comes out beautifully in Streep’s
portrayal of the music teacher in the movie. It’s
a believable portrayal because parents and students seem
almost universally to grasp this result of music study
and to expect it from their music teachers and music programs
in their schools.
But can parents universally expect that their local school
has an adequate music program? The answer is more nearly “yes” now
than it was five or ten years ago because of two factors:
first, our current national prosperity has meant fuller
funding for schools in general, and second, the establishment
of national standards for music education and the development
of similar standards in most states has forced music teachers
and everyone else in the educational establishment to reconsider
any ill- conceived notion that music study can be marginalized
And the standards have come just in
time for a new wave of expectations by
parents. Parents now have higher expectations,
based on a growing body of research
that shows that music study will help children
grow and achieve success in many ways in
society, in school, in developing
intelligence, and in life. There are
enough solid results from this research
(though, to be sure, some results of
the earliest studies in the field continue
to be debated) that parents are on
firm ground when they add these expectations
to their arguments calling for a well-planned
music curriculum.
But though the picture for music education
for kids is rosier now than in the recent
past, we are not yet at the point where
parents can expect an adequate music program
in every school. True, our strong economy
has allowed most school districts to feel
capable of funding music programs but
too often, problems in the local picture outweigh the national trend. Too
often, local decision-makers are faced with hard choices regarding time and
funding for various academic programsand too often, the music program
suffers. Too often, schools and school districts with low levels of achievement
are faced with making these hard decisionsand too often,
the children that could most use the discipline and engagement
brought by music study are the ones to be denied the opportunity.
“Music of the Heart” shows what can happen when a school gives kids
the opportunity to study music. I hope that everyone who sees the movie
comes to understand the importance of music in our schools and our communities
and spreads the word about why music is so essential to us all. And then,
we need to work together to support music programs, keeping the benefits of music
in mind when making decisions as parents, as taxpayers, and as citizens.
If it can be done in most of the country in the midst of prosperityand
if it can be done in East Harlem in the context of an economically struggling
communitywe can ensure that it is done everywhere in our
nation. For all our children.
www.menc.org for information on how to help support music education.