Making Positive Impact Through Music
Music educators have a role in facilitating responses, music learning and teaching in relation to hate and bigotry occurring throughout contemporary society.
Valerie Strauss suggests that “The first thing teachers should do when school starts is talk about hatred in America” and provides numerous resources for doing so. Music plays an important role in helping people make sense of, meaning, of, and respond to the world. Music programs can play an important role in supporting young people express themselves through music.
Efforts to address current events take thoughtfulness and empathy. If you plan to provide the space in your program to have students explore recent and future events where bigotry and hatred occur throughout society, and larger issues of justice, equity here are some resources below.
Note: This post is an attempt to make meaning and address current events where bigotry and hatred are explicit as well as long-term societal issues that are less explicit, so it is incomplete and will always be incomplete. Continue to search for resources and collaborators! Please submit resources, links, other efforts that you think should be added in the comments. If there are larger initiatives taking place let me and others know as well. The post began in connection to the #CharlottesvileCurriculum initiative, but is in process of addressing longer-term issues of equity and justice.
Remember the importance of addressing one’s own local context and community. Consider the larger overarching issues of hate, bigotry as well as equity, justice, and community that are far longer-lasting than a particular moment or event.
Scroll to the bottom for musical responses shared online.
Potential Generative Questions For Music Programs
- How might music learning communities respond to events or moments in time where bigotry or hatred are explicit?
- How might music learning communities respond to long-term and less-explicit aspects of bigotry and injustice?
- What roles can music play in addressing hate?
- What roles can music play in fostering love, fellowship, understanding, and community?
- How might people use music to de-escalate and diffuse tensions?
- How might music contribute to justice and equity?
- What are our responsibilities and opportunities as musical and artistic citizens in times of tension?
Resources
Music Learning and Teaching
- Cultural Diversity and Social Justice (CDSJ) Resources WIKI CDSJ is an Area of Strategic Planning and Action group of the Society of Music Teacher Educators)
- Note: The CDSJ is an Area of Strategic Planning and Action Group of the Society of Music Teacher Educators)
- SoundTracks – Songs that Define History – many focused on social movements – CNN
Arts
- The U.S. Dept of Arts and Culture Art Became the Oxygen: Guide to Artistic Response
- U.S. Dept of Arts and Culture Public Folder of Artistic Response Resources
- Note: The U.S. Department of Arts and Culture is not a government agency. “The U.S. Department of Arts and Culture is a people-powered department—a grassroots action network inciting creativity and social imagination to shape a culture of empathy, equity, and belonging.”
- The UK’s Creativity Works Socially Engaged Art site
- A Blade of Grass – Organization that works with artists who do work on socially engaged art and social change
- Animating Democracy: Aesthetic Perspectives – Attributes of Excellence in Arts for Change
- GrantMakers in the Arts Emergency Readiness, Response, and Recovery Resource Site
Education
- Facing History and Ourselves
- Larry Ferlazzo’s post on #CharllotesvilleCurriculum initiative
- There is No Place for Hate in Virginia – Message from Virginia Center for Inclusive Communities President & CEO Jonathan C. Zur
- Consider collaborating with students and colleagues to develop a music learning and teaching version of the “10 Things you can do to Stand Together” included in the message
- Curriculum for White Americans to Educate Themselves on Race and Racism–from Ferguson to Charleston (Thank you to Martin Urbach for sharing the link to this resource)
- Teaching Tolerance Resources
- The Critical Media Project
- Equal Justice Initiative’s Public Education Materials
- Anti-Racist Education Resources Google doc (not sure who created this)
- How To Talk to Your Kids About the Violence in Charlottesville – LA Times – Sonali Kholi
- Teaching About Race, Racism, and Police Violence: Resources for Educators and Parents – Washington Post – Valerie Strauss
- Summer Reading for Your Woke Kid – NPR in collaboration with the org Teaching for Change
- Social Justice Books – Teaching for Change
- Anti-Bias Education Resources – Teaching for Change
Prior Posts on Music Education and Social Justice or Responding to Events
- Music Expression and Responding to Current Events: Michael Brown and Ferguson
- Music Expression and Responding to Current Events: Trayvon Martin and National Music Standards
- Supporting Transgender Students Communicate Through Music Creation
- Sofia Ashraf: Social Justice Through Music
- Musical, Community, and Political Leaders: FM Supreme Working Towards Justice in Chicago
- Jazz, Democracy, and Education: Dr. Wesley Watkins and the Jazz and Democracy Project
Musical Responses
Wilco created the song “All Lives, You Say?” and will be donating all proceeds of its sale to the Southern Poverty Law Center.
Anti Flag’s song Racists and related Facebook post
This is a great list of resources. I appreciate you writing this article. Thank you!