Advocacy

Tools to communicate the importance of music and the arts.

Featured Article

  • icon Music's Value as an Educational Tool (191.66 kB)
    Two strategies to meet the rising standards of delivering quality education worthy of 21st Century learning with reduced funding and resources.  Both include music!
    Dr. John R. Gerdy, Founder and President, Music for Everyone, PA, 2013

 

What Parents Can Do

  • Attend school board meetings.
    Observe the process, personalities and effective persuasive techniques. Always be polite and cordial to school board members. Sometimes your mere, consistent presence will speak volumes if a budget cut comes into play in the future.
  • Ask school board members about their views on the arts and music education.
    Be positive. Do not be defensive if an administrator or school board official opposes arts education. Simply get the facts, preferably in writing. Ask questions.
  • Invite officials to speak at concerts, with the support of the director, of course.
    Develop a rotating schedule with the music teacher, and include administrators, school board members, community leaders and/or government officials. Write thank you notes to every person who speaks during a music concert.
  • Write pro-active emails to Administrators, Board of Education members, Legislators.
    Thank them for their continued support of your program. Take this opportunity to express key points of music education. 

Preconcert Presentation

Download The Presentation: Quicktime File (9.4 MB), Apple Keynote File (11.6 MB) This is the perfect scrolling presentation to play prior to the start of a concert or during intermission.  Utilize these precious moments with the audience to educate them on the benefits of music education.
Andrew Spang, Music Advocates of Carroll County, MD 

Articles

  • icon Educating Your School Board (1.05 MB)
    T
    ake a positive approach.  Create a binder of important music facts relevant to your community.  Invite your school board members to lunch and share the facts of the state of music in your school district.  See the suggested binder template this program used to forward their success.
    Maggie Fischer, Music Advocates of Carroll County, MD, 2013

  • icon Using Statistics to Your Programs Advantage (1.48 MB) 
    Use your school's grading statistics to show those involved in a music program have better grades than the average school population.  See how this program's stats show grades are even higher during a time intensive marching band season!  Chris Kreke, Associate Director of Bands, Carmel H.S., IN, 2011
  • icon Keep Music Education Strong in Public Schools (60 kB)
    Students learn to express their emotions better through music.  Learning about this as young people will affect them all their lives. This article is adapted from remarks by Michael Yaffe, associate dean of the Yale School of Music, at the final event of the school's Morse Summer Music Academy, 2011 
  • icon Trimming Music Ed in Schools is a Mistake (57.63 kB)
    Mark George CEO, Music Institute of Chicago sums it up best, "Ultimately though, school administrators and political leaders are responsive to the community. People who understand the power and importance of serious music education must raise their voices in a great crescendo of advocacy and emotion. It comes down to something very simple: Children deserve the opportunity to reach their full human potential" www.chicagotribune.com, 2011
 

PowerPoint Presentations

What Research Is Telling Us

A brief, customizable PowerPoint presentation on research studies exploring music's impact on student growth and achievement. Provided by Support Music.

The Advocate's Plan

Utilize this PowerPoint presentation when you would like a more in-depth tool to help local music education supporters plan activities and actions to keep music education strong. Provided by Support Music.

Communication Tools and Templates

These templates, brochures, and posters, help parent advocates, school music dealers and band directors communicate the benefits of music education.

Letters to the Administration

 

Concert Invitations

This is a sample of the many communication templates you will find here on the AMP website.  All templates, articles, and forms are accessible to members only.  If you are not a member, please register today!

Concert Invite - Superintendent

Date
Prefix First Name Last Name
Superintendent
XXXX School District
Street Address
City, State Zip

Dear Prefix First Name,

We are excited to be parents of a student in the XXXX school district that values music and the arts as part of its complete curriculum. I've noticed that above your message on the district web site is a picture of you standing in a band classroom. Thank you for your support of the arts. So much of the successes of our school's music and other arts programs are directly tied to administrative support. That support leads to quality music experiences for our students, which prepares them to be creative and expressive individuals ready for the 21st century workforce. We do not take for granted your genuine efforts on our children's behalf.

We have fantastic music teachers at XXXX Jr. High, and they have been working hard with the students to prepare the first concert of the year. With the permission of the directors, we would like to invite you not only to attend our XXXX Jr. High Fall Concert, but to also provide a few words during the concert to the parents and students in attendance. This concert will take place in the XXXX gymnasium on DATE and TIME. The concert will conclude with a special guest appearance of the XXXX High School Marching Band. It would mean much to the parents and their students, as well as the great teachers we have. Please RSVP via email at XXXX, so we can plan appropriately for your attendance.

Every parent sees their child's chosen discipline as vital to their growth and development. We couldn't agree more about the benefits that MUSIC and the arts should bring to every young girl and boy who walks through our school doors.

Daniel Pink, author of the New York Times and Business Week bestseller, A Whole New Mind - Why Right-Brainers Will Rule the Future, states the following in his book:

"The era of 'left brain' dominance, and the Information Age that it engendered, is giving away to a new world in which 'right brain' qualities – inventiveness, empathy, and meaning predominate. That's what business is about today. This is a hard-headed argument that arts education is not ornamental but fundamental for economic reasons. We should be adding not cutting the arts."

Knowing your sensitivity concerning the welfare of our students, we thought you would profit from this man's perspective. Obviously, it not only agrees with what is taught in our music program, but demonstrates the positive implications of music education from a more global vantage point.

Thank you for your time and interest in our students.

Sincerely,

 

Your Name
Parent Advocate for the XXXX Music Program

cc: Director's Name
     Assistant Director's Name

 

In this day and age of electronic mail, sometimes a personal invitation received in the mail stands out.  Each invitation has an embedded pro-advocacy message.

Concert Materials

Contact Forms

Research Posters

Printable fliers featuring key research studies on the benefits of music education. Provided by Support Music.

Petition Template

Customizable petition provided by Support Music. Circulate this in response to potential cuts in music education budgets.

Brochures

  • icon 25 Things To Do Today (3.12 MB)
    This 4 page color brochure from VH1 Save the Music Foundation lists 25 things you can do today to promote music education in your schools.

 

 

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