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  • Home
  • ABOUT US
    • History
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    • OUR STAFF
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    • FACULTY TRAINERS & TEACHING ARTISTS
    • POLICIES
      • Health Policy
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    • ARTISTS
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Twenty-Twenty-Two, GITC in Review!

12/22/2022

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Friends, thanks for joining us for this visual journey through some of the many highlights from Guitars & Ukes in the Classroom's services and experiences the past year. We were big on programs, both during and after school, and in the summer, but smaller on gatherings.  Like everyone, we are hoping for a healthier and safer 2023 when community events such as our popular house concerts, retreats, and more in-person professional development classes can once again ring out with the sounds of music. Thank you for helping us take such big steps back into teaching in person in 2022!
Glimpses into GITC 2022 Classrooms
Adaptive Music Rocks! Adaptive Music for Achievement in Inclusion & Special Education

Teachers and support staff train with us in Adaptive Music so all students can participate and experience the benefits and beauty of music's transformative power. This is a great adventure! We encourage everyone to release preconceived notions and begin exploring music as organized sound. We start by playing basic beats, rhythms, and patterns using a variety of instruments.
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We deepen our listening, noticing how students respond, and which sounds bring fascination and joy. From that point, we go with what they like, and develop unique ways students can touch, hold, shake, blow, hum into or strum an instrument to create their own music. Whether a student is ambulatory, moves with supports or with a wheelchair, or is in bed full time, possibly hooked up to machines, the passion and creativity of special educators and home hospital teachers is making music possible. Supported by parents, music making for many has become a family experience!

Sometimes musical adaptations are minimal, accommodating just for sound sensitivity. Other times, adaptations require speech generating devices, apps, or touch pads to activate sounds for nonverbal students. One way or another, one student at a time, GITC is supporting these incredible teachers to make music, and it is changing their students' lives. They are discovering their own abilities, sensitivities, and creativity. For some, the music is leading to vocalization, speech, and new motor abilities. For others, it is easing pain. For all, it is creating a stronger sense of aliveness, and most of all, connection to the people in their lives. We are grateful for everyone's support to develop this field of Adaptive Music. 
   

Musical Moments with Level Up San Diego

What can we say? After school music is the bomb! In 2022, we held GITC Strummers Clubs at schools throughout the San Diego Unified School District. Clubs served students from Kindergarten through High School, and grouped students in cross-aged groups, with grades K-1-2 or 3-4-5, 6-8, and 9-12 being the most common combinations. This one-room-schoolhouse approach was a joyful experience and led to improved social skills as older students helped younger students who looked up to them, and a good time was had by all. Our clubs combined music with literacy education, social-emotional learning, visual art, dance, movement, and the music of different cultures. We are excited about the possibility of continuing Strummers Clubs in Summer, 2023! Stiina (first photo) became the Queen of Supplies, getting instruments, art supplies, snacks, and tshirts out to everyone each week!

GITC GATHERINGS & COMMUNITY EVENTS

Faculty Trainers, Teaching Artists, and Summer Strummers Club Leaders and Hosts

2022 was an exciting year for our faculty! We added many more teachers and Strummers Club hosts to make all of our services possible, and we'll be adding more photos and names here as we get them. The fellow in this first photo is an amazing former principal from Los Angeles Unified, Christopher Clarke, who retired in June and has joined our team as a truly remarkable teaching artist! During his leadership first at Lankershim Elementary, then at Canterbury Elementary, Christopher brought GITC to his faculties, set up fabulous music rooms, and visited classrooms regularly to connect with the students and lead songs. We are over the moon that he is bringing is expertise and passion for music to students in his new role with Guitars & Ukes in the Classroom!
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WHAT'S FAMILY MUSIC HOUR? Homebound & Hospitalized ChildrenĀ  Are Jamming with Mr. Jody and Their Own Parents!

12/12/2022

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HOME HOSPITAL FAMILY MUSIC HOUR IS CHANGING LIVES
Parents and Students in San Diego's Home Hospital Programs Are Joyfully Jamming!


GITC is grateful and excited to be bringing authentic, inclusic music making to homebound and hospitalized children this school year in partnership with  San Diego Unified School District (SDUSD)'s Home Hospital & Transitions Support Programs, (HHTS). Thanks to  the leadership of  Sylvia Echeverria- an inspired, innovative, and visionary advocate for students whose complex conditions necessitate them learning from their homes or hospital beds. Ms. Echeverria has enthusiastically encouraged her dedicated and compassionate faculty to train with GITC, participating in a number of different opportunities to explore, learn and grow in community. We are most grateful to her! 

This year, GITC 
teaching artists and leaders are delivering Saturday workshops, free online courses, and providing individual teaching artist residencies called SSTARs, as well as leading collaborative music making classes in several HHTS programs. Today we are sharing a bit about our STARRs and the GITC Family Music Hour. The magic ingredient in both of these programs has proven to be bringing HHTS teachers, students, and parents into music-making and musical learning together, so music can become a meaningful and joyful way for everyone to connect and communicate throughout the days and weeks. Music is becoming a shared language. 

Since early 2022,  San Diego home hospital teachers have been attending multiple GITC trainings, learning to work with body percussion, chanting, singing, group drumming, percussion instruments, ukuleles, guitars, music apps, speech production devices, kazoos, slide whistles, and Casio keyboards! Several HHTS teachers have also participated with GITC in specialized teaching artist residencies we call SSTARs, an acronym for Single Skill Teaching Artist Residencies.  

The 2022-2023 school year is special because for the first time, our home school district, 
San Diego Unified School District is fully supporting this endeavor with special funding, thanks to GITC's impact on student attendance rates in GITC classrooms.

HOW DID THIS START?
GITC started developing adaptive music and home hospital work, quietly, in 2016.  Our reach into Home Hospital education is part of our initiative called AMAISE (pronounced "amaze"). The acronym stands for Adaptive Music for Achievement in Inclusion and Special Education. AMAISE launched in an effort to bring authentic musical inclusion to students wherever and however they learn. We started exploring possibilities in special education classrooms in San Diego, and home hospital settings in Los Angeles. Mr. Jody, leader of the Family Music Hour, started with us in San Diego classrooms at that time.

We are extremely grateful to our early funders and partners in this work, including Karen and Stephen des Jardins, the NAMM Foundation, the Nordson Foundation, and the Kennedy Center's Office of Very Special Arts. 


SSTARs LED THE WAY TO FAMILY MUSIC HOUR
GITC SSTAR residencies connect an HHTS teacher and one of their students, along with that student's designated Home Music Helper (a parent, family member, or caregiver), and a GITC AMAISE-ing teaching artist, so everyone can learn and develop musical connection and communication together. Our teaching artist pairs with the HHTS teacher to design weekly learning experiences which are then facilitated with the student and their HMH. This dedicated team works together every week, as health permits, focusing exploratory and strategic music making to help the teacher, HMH, and student find ways to work towards accomplishing important personal goals. These can be physical, cognitive, behavioral, academic, and/or social-emotional. Even when we aim to address one goal, two or three others are accomplished as well. Everyone gets instrumental experience including developing physical supports such as holding, moving together, providing hand-over-hand assistance, and using special grips and accessories to create sound. 

The results have been incredibly moving! Students who initially didn't open their eyes or show much response during regular classes have responded powerfully to making music. Students are 
alert and connecting. Some who have not articulated sounds are vocalizing, and students who had been inactive in their wheel chairs are making an effort to sitting up, leaning in, reach for, and play an instrument. For a child with extreme medical and physical conditions, these are very significant improvement.

The parents are growing, too. They are learning to play ukulele, to sing to and with their students, and to access music through a variety of instruments which are  delivered to each participating family at home at the start of any SSTAR. These instruments are now in heavy rotation as parents are spontaneously connecting and guiding their children through music.

From these STARRs, Family Music Hour was born. Based on the stunning impact of the SSTARs, Ms. Echeverria and her phenomenal colleague Carola Querobim recognized the potential importance of getting the family groups together for a weekly class via Zoom. Calling it Family Music Hour makes everyone feel welcome. Each Friday these gatherings, led by Mr. Jody, cultivate and nurture exuberant expressions of caring joy, hope, individuality, and connection between children, parents, and families- all through the shared experience of making music. 


Mr. Jody recently shared,"One of our long-time participants turned five this year, and is set to attend school with his peers in the classroom, which is a big deal on its own.  Last year, this student's participation with the group was mostly confined to self-soothing behavior on his keyboard. In his most recent sessions, he has been using a communication device to "say/sing hello" to his friends in the group, and to express preferences for songs and instruments! Also, when the group is prompted to say hello using a gesture or instrument, he takes the initiative and grabs his guiro to be ready to play when it's his turn. The amount of expressive language that this student is now bringing to the Family Music Hour is a joy to see, and his improvement underscores the opportunities that our music and language routines provide students for expressing themselves."

​THE BACKSTORY: WHERE OUR HOME HOSPITAL WORK BEGAN
​The photo to the right was taken in 2017 at All Saints Hospital in LAUSD where teaching artist Ana Robles, right, trained the nursing staff and the teachers to lead music each day with the children in residence at All Saints Hospital. She often led groups of children in adaptive music there, as many as 10 children at a time, with staff members playing and singing along. Talk about spreading joy!

CARLSON HOME HOSPITAL SCHOOL
The story of how we began serving in Home Hospital programs goes back to 2016, when GITC teaching artists in Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) first became partners and coaches with an amazing group of home hospital and special educators at the Carlson Home Hospital School (CHHS), who travel around the largest district in California to bring learning to students who are too medically fragile, physically dependent on machines, severely disabled, or ill to attend school in person. We HIGHLY recommend you click on the Carlson Home Hospital School website and watch the documentary found on the left side of their homepage to get a clear understanding of the children who need and deserve to receive these special services.

In the history of CHHS, our organization was the first arts provider to venture with them into students' homes and hospitals.  GITC is grateful to Margaret Olivares-Gilkyson, now Principal of CHHS, for her vision and dedication, to all participating HHTS teachers who learned to lead adaptive music with us, and to GITC teaching artists Ana Robles, Shiri Goldsmith, and Kristen Herbert for welcoming the Home Hospital teachers and students into their hearts and work with GITC! Donors made all of this possible.

At first our efforts were entirely exploratory, and we approached the work by placing our faith in the power of music to transcend barriers, touch hearts, and open minds. We didn't know what might work, so our teaching artists began bringing a wide variety of instruments to the children. We adapted ukuleles so they could be strummed safely, held securely, or stabilized on wheel chair trays and tables if students could sit up. Not only did music deliver on its promise, children in the program participated and benefited in amazing and liberating ways.

This approach still characterizes the work we do today, and any educator or paraprofessional working with students who might benefit from adaptive music is welcome to join us for free. Our newest virtual course, focusing on physical adaptations and teaching practices, begins the week of January 23, 2023! This training, like all GITC training, is supported by donations and grants.

COMING SOON: AMAISE-ing SATURDAYS 2023
Interested in learning with us in person? Please stay tuned for exciting monthly Saturday morning workshops for special educators and home hospital teachers in a series we are calling AMAISE-ing Saturdays! We'll post at the website and in socials about this opportunity soon.

CONTRIBUTE TO THE CAUSE?
If you or someone you know might like to contribute to our Home Hospital programs, there are many ways to help. Donations can be made directly through this website in one of our Matching Campaigns throughout December, or sent to our secure mailbox at 1286 University Ave, #389, San Diego, CA 92103. In addition, here is specific link to our online fundraiser on GlobalGiving.org to fund musical access for medically fragile children. We truly appreciate your support!

If you know of an educator who might like to participate in AMAISE with us, we hope you'll share this blog, and give them our main email address, info@guitarsintheclassroom.org

Thanks so much for reading, and for joining us in our musical outreach and adventures spreading the love,

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