Tuesday, November 25, 2014

The Pied Piper of Haydom

Lena Ward - Haydom Lutheran Hospital
 
It has been my great fortune to visit this hospital for a week every month for the last four months. Whilst Kirstein flies nurses and chanjo (vaccines) to remote villages in the area, I have been enjoying a kind of retreat; writing, researching and getting to know some of the people who are dedicating their time and expertise to this astonishing hospital. I was lucky enough to get a detailed tour of the hospital on my first visit, as it coincided with a visitor from a nearby health clinic who was eager to see if their patients could be referred here.
 
A friend suggested that I should take my violin to play for the patients, so on this last visit I managed to play for the children and their relatives. They have visiting hours between 2-4pm; the first afternoon I played in the main room where they have parties on weekends, and the second time I played in each room. A wonderful nurse called Sister Paulina was my escort to the different rooms and joined in singing with me as I played Swahili hymns and Christmas carols. It was great to hear relatives joining in (mostly the mamas) and clapping along.
 
There has been a lot of debate in the media recently about the well-intentioned Sir Bob and the re-release of 'Do they know its Christmas?' to raise money for the ebola crisis. It's hard to believe that the same tales of the woes of Africa are still being thrown out today - that the West hasn't moved on in their misconceptions and misjudgements after 30 years. Yes, the ebola crisis is horrific and requires external help, but it is only the crises that demand money that ever reach the wider attention of the West. I want to focus on the assets and the potential. The children and families in the Lena ward are receiving good care, they most definitely know it will soon be Christmas, and they most likely have a better idea of the true meaning of Christmas than their counterparts in the West. Mungu awabariki! 
 


Monday, November 17, 2014

Ignition!

I have just finished reading Daniel Coyle’s The Talent Code, and I was especially interested in his idea of there being, in the learning journey, points of igniting desire to commit to deep practice of skills – Coyle says that along with master coaching this leads to being an expert of whichever discipline is involved. This ignition could also be termed as intrinsic motivation. We used this term a lot in our discussions and writing during the Fellowship, but we didn’t have time to really unpack what it means.

Coyle cites the following factors as tinderboxes waiting to ignite a passion for ‘deep practice’:
1) Having an expectation and understanding of commitment involved: Gary McPherson studied students new to music in 1997:
“We instinctively think of each new student as a blank slate, but the ideas they bring to that first lesson are probably far more important than anything a teacher can do, or any amount of practice. It’s all about their perception of self. At some point very early on they had a crystallizing experience that brings the idea to the fore that says, I am a musician. That idea is like a snowball rolling downhill”.
2) Role models
3) Sense of belonging to a group 
4) Sense of danger or lack of safety - dissatisfaction leads to efforts to change our situation or the pressure of impending accountability such as a concert or exam
5) Being the underdog
6) Praise of effort rather than achievement
Daniel Pink is his book Drive adds the following:
7) Autonomy – Being able to choose your own direction
8) Mastery – Satisfaction of getting better at something 
9) Purpose - this could be personal “I want to be the first person who goes to college in my family” or seeking a change in the lives of others “I empathise with this person’s situation and I want to do something to help”.
I’m writing this at a Lutheran missionary hospital in Tanzania. As the hospital approaches its 60th anniversary, you can’t help but consider the ‘deep practice’ of Norwegian missionaries who built the best equipped hospital in the country, in the middle of the bush, surmounting cultural, logistical, geographical, financial and linguistic barriers, and who have sponsored children from primary school age to have them return to the hospital as surgeons. I’m not sure you could even grasp a sense of the commitment that would be needed from those early years to now, although there was and is a sense of danger in terms of providing decent medical services to a catchment area of 2 million people. It is their sense of purpose that has ignited their commitment and perseverance in this task.

I have one more point to add:
10) Personal relevancy – searching and learning about yourself leads to personal satisfaction, relaxation and often emotional and spiritual uplifting.

 

The El Sistema program in Venezuela has been able to create a culture that ignites many of the above:
1) Understanding of expectations - Students see the progression from paper violins to to youth orchestra level in the nucleo and the daily commitment to the program.

2) Role models - Along with the inspiring figure of Dr Abreu, Dudamel is the hero of many musicians in Venezuela.

3) Sense of belonging - Students go through their years in the nucleo belonging to the ensemble, and the Venezuela jacket is their uniform showing that they belong to a greater group of the Venezuelan people.

4) Sense of danger  - not just a feeling of unease on the streets of Caracas, but that the music education available to them at the nucleos is not found elsewhere and is therefore to be treasured and appreciated. Some facilities are barely suitable for their purpose but they soldier on regardless. Students are also prepared for a performance shortly after starting to play their instrument.

5) Underdog – Venezuela has no strong history of classical ensembles or a place in the classical world compared to the cultural bastions of Europe and the US.

6) Tochar y luchar – 'fight and play' rather than you’ve either got the X factor or not.

7) Autonomy - One aspect of motivation that El Sistema may not be encouraging; there doesn’t seem to be much choice of instrument and repertoire, and there is lack of opportunities to study other musical disciplines such as composition and improvisation. There also doesn’t seem to be much flexibility in terms of how much you want to commit to the program, the daily rigorous rehearsals and regular performances, and there is not uniform access to auditions, more advanced ensembles and touring opportunities throughout the country.

8) Mastery - Many El Sistema commentators remark on the sheer brilliance of students, the joy apparent in performances and how many hours they are willing to commit to practice. Being invited to take over the Salzburg Festival must say something about the excellence of the musicians in the program.

9) Purpose - The corporate mission that music belongs to the community and exists to serve others.

10) Personal relevancy - Eric Booth: "El Sistema conductors and teachers invest far more instructional time in describing sections in terms of stories, or giving visceral images for a note or a phrase, than do traditional conductors. This enables the musicians to make stronger emotional and physical connections to the music. This investment in emotional connection fuels the Sistema teaching truth that “passion provokes precision”—meaning that a young artist’s emotional investment leads to mastery more reliably over the long haul than technical drill; indeed, the hunger to express more fully drives the improvement and creates motivation for technical solutions more than compliance or a generalized hunger for improvement."

Maybe the fact that El Sistema reaches 9 out of 10 'ignition' points explains why so many people devote their time to the program, both in and out of Venezuela. 

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Uraki Secondary School


Last week, I went to visit the music program at a government school on the other side of town. Uraki has had a link with Makumira University Music Department for two years now, and three students and an university tutor deliver classes there every other day. The school is a secondary school with students in Form I-IV and roughly ages 11 to 16 years. At the end of Form IV they take their O-Level exams, and like most secondary schools in Tanzania, there is no provision to progress to A-Level.

In fact, they are now in the midst of the end of year exams and many students were busy cleaning the classrooms ready for exam week, and even the District Educational Officer was visiting. She was especially interested in the science laboratory which had been equipped with donations from the UK, and another lab was also being constructed. As part of the Secondary Education Development Plan, the government has ordered that each secondary school build a laboratory, without providing the resources to do so.

We had a chat first with the Headmaster who is very eager to have musical provision in the school. The music students are hoping to give a music class for the teachers, but they had already left the school leaving just a few staff around including the Teacher On Duty who walks around with a stick!

The bell was rung for assembly, and all the students lined up in their separate forms with different colour jumpers for each form. I introduced myself and then the students were given the choice to clean or take part in a music activity. The session I saw was interesting - they didn't seem quite into learning new material at this point in the afternoon, and some just walked away. However, at the end, they sang a well-known song from their early music classes (see video above) and were having a great time.

In addition to the practical ensemble classes, the students are receiving music theory lessons which enables them to take the predominantly theoretical national exams in music (NECTA). Throughout the school, pass rates are very low, but they are started to excel in their music exams. The university tutor remarked that their goal is to show how music can change a school, and with the best pass marks in music, the students can begin to gain a sense of what they can achieve!

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Music For One Foundation


A couple of months ago I met up with the second cohort of musicians from the South Korean organisation Music For One Foundation. The Foundation describes itself as "a performing arts-based humanitarian organisation dedicated to working with children and their communities worldwide to reach their full potential through music and music education". There are many programs that make up the organisation but volunteers Stacy, Kris and Chanmi are part of the Gift of Music Program which seeks to deliver music education to communities in less developed countries.

Their program has funding from the Korean government for three years and they are teaching at a university music department, a Lutheran Bible school and a children's centre with 300 primary aged children. Let's hope it can continue!


 

SFRC Reception

The next two years on the Sistema journey! The formal transition of the Sistema Fellows Program to the Sistema Fellows Resource Center occurred yesterday at the New England Conservatory. I so look forward to joining my fellow alumni making music with youth across the world when my project starts soon...



Go to this link to find the final report on the Sistema Fellows Program:
http://necmusic.edu/sistema