Happy #GivingTuesday, Friends! We hope you’ve had a gratitude-filled Thanksgiving, survived or ignored Black Friday, and are gearing up for Tuesday’s amazing window of opportunity to make a 200% charitable impact by donating to GITC on Facebook! Thanks for checking in with us about ways to make a big difference for kids. The need for our programs is growing quickly and your help is requested to make musical learning in classrooms possible this school year! On Facebook, a 100% Match Means 200% Good! If our mission warms your heart, please give and your tax deductible gift will be matched dollar for dollar through our fundraising campaign HERE! Our main Facebook page can be found HERE. The Way It Works If you donate on Facebook, Facebook and PayPal will team up to:
How To Earn a 100% Match! If you wish to see your dollars go up and total 200%, please give first thing in the morning on Tuesday, November 27th! Then you will be sure to get the match. Giving later could work fine, too, but we don't know. You’ll want to watch to see what amount of funds are still available for matches as the hours go by. Our tip- mark your calendar and set your alarm for 6 a.m. Pacific, 7 a.m. Mountain, 8 a.m. Central or 9 a.m. Eastern. Then click and make public schools a better place to learn and grow! You Deserve Thanks So Please Send Your Address! If you donate on Facebook, we will be able to see your gift come in, but we will need your snail mail address in order to send you an official GITC thank you letter and gift. Since Facebook doesn’t collect or give that to us, could you possibly help us find you? When you donate through the campaign, please drop us a line at giving@guitarsintheclassroom.org and you will get a GITC goodie in the mail. Want to Donate on Tuesday but Not Through Facebook? Want to Contribute but Not in the Morning? No Problem! Visit Us at GlobalGiving! If you prefer to drink your coffee slowly, meditate, do some yoga or go for a run and then give....or your morning meetings and duties prohibit getting online so early, then this option is perfect for you! Please visit GlobalGiving.org and donate to GITC projects there anytime Tuesday! 3 GlobalGiving.org Projects From Which to Choose Our special campaigns at GlobalGiving are also providing donors with a match on any gift given to one of our 3 active campaigns on #GivingTuesday. You can channel your giving to your favorite project. Here they are: https://www.globalgiving.org/projects/keep-music-alive-in-k8-classrooms-nationwide/ https://www.globalgiving.org/projects/special-learners-deserve-music-too/ https://www.globalgiving.org/projects/songs-for-care-comfort-hope-and-healing/ Is There a Best Time To Get a Match on GlobalGiving? Donating anytime on #GivingTuesday will get you a match. This platform is making it easy to donate without the risk of matching funds running out all day. You can contribute there from 6 a.m.until midnight EST to qualify. How Much Will Be Matched? Globalgiving is giving away $150,000 in matching funds over the course of the whole day/night proportionally. We will learn the amount of the match on Wednesday. The amount will be based upon how many donors give - and how much they give- to each charity. Though it will most likely be well under 50%, it totally helps us get music out there and we appreciate every extra dollar you give and that they increase! Thank you Friends for taking the time to make this crucial difference for students. They need us and so do the teachers. If we stand up for music in education and make our love felt through supplying teacher training, musical instruments, instruments, supplies, educational materials and more, the students will benefit at every level- physically, emotionally, intellectually, socially and spiritually. You can help them become passionate learners by making music a positive part of every day, and give their teachers the tools and support that make teaching the inspired endeavor that brought them to education in the first place. Let's do this!
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Desiree Cera is one of GITC’s new Teaching Angels. She is both a Behavioral Interventionist in the STARS Program for San Diego Unified, and a GITC Faculty Trainer for teachers from San Diego who meet after school at Wegeforth Elementary in Serra Mesa. Desiree’s heart has always been in serving people, especially children. Desiree began her career in education assisting kids with emotional disturbance and was soon noticed for her quality of character and her skill set. She was then recruited as an itinerant behavioral interventionist by the San Diego School District’s Behavioral Support Department. Her job consisted of moving from school to school to support the teachers. In the process, Desiree learned different teaching styles and modalities. She gained an in-depth understanding of effective teaching strategies and classroom management to make learning accessible to all children including those who are severely affected by Autism and a wide range of other conditions. When the Department reorganized again, they reassigned Desiree to the STARS Program: Successful Transitions Achieved through Responsive Support. STARS is an alternative special education program in specialized settings and is located on five different campuses in our home district. STARS students are considered challenged but college-bound. From her cumulative experiences, Desiree was well-equipped to bridge the gap between classroom instruction and the needs of these high functioning but highly sensitive and potentially volatile students. She can quickly identify and analyse their needs and create a plan to meet those needs within the scope of the available resources. As is true for most special educators working with moderate to severely affected students, Desiree’s job has long been difficult and physically dangerous, but she has never given up. Like her SpEd colleagues, she serves as the buffer between students in crisis and those around them, containing, redirecting, calming, channeling and modulating student behavior in ways to keep students safe. This is courageous work. Throughout her journey, music has been an important part of Desiree’s personal life. “Music has carried me through the weight of the emotional stressers of my job. After work I sometimes feel drained and empty. That’s when I pick up my guitar and sing. I literally strum my way back to energy. Then I am able to return to work refreshed.” The inclusion of GITC ukulele has been life-changing for Desiree. It gives her context, daily, to express who she is more fully as she teaches members of the faculty and also implements the tools she has learned in her work with students. Desiree shared with us how GITC has allowed her to deeply integrate her personal creativity and musical life more into her work as an educator. The organization supports her to make meaningful connections between music and meeting the needs of both children and colleagues. She explained, “Everything I do now is under one umbrella - the business side, the creative side and the nurturing side.” She finds the work of training other teachers after school exceptionally rewarding. "It's humbling and inspiring to support these amazing educators to cultivate their own musicality and bring it into their classrooms. As they begin to make connections between singing, playing ukulele and guitar, writing lyrics, and working meaningfully with their students, I feel immensely excited to share their discoveries and to guide them on this journey." Desiree believes strongly that Guitars and Ukes in the Classroom offers a succinct solution to meet the needs of children. “GITC is simple, adaptable, and supports teachers and students.” She carries her ukulele everywhere on campus and feels equipped to respond to emerging situations through music as they occur. As a result, she is seeing daily miracles that illustrate just how profoundly and immediately music can address every need within a dynamic student body such as the one at Wegeforth. Over the span of just two and a half days in the past week, she has seen music make a crucial difference in a crisis intervention, a literacy lesson, and as a de-escalation strategy for aggressive behavior. In one instance, Desiree had shared singing and strumming ukulele with a socially isolated child. This girl discovered that she felt so passionate about playing and singing that she actually initiated social contact through music with a younger student who she found alone in tears. Bending down to be with this little one, she made up a song on the spot to soothe her - a first and very remarkable act of creative compassion for this student. Music became her bridge to others. On another day, Desiree inserted ukulele and songwriting into her work with one of her students, George. In a group, George and some other students rewrote Woody Guthrie’s classic love song to America, “This Land is Your Land” into “This Class is Our Class.” George, who is working on communication and social skills, was suddenly uncorked! Through the compelling melody and rhythm, he found himself a capable and confident lyricist. This breakthrough gave his self esteem and verbal skills a tremendous boost. Here he is conversing with her about his experience. We share this video with permission from his family. Desiree brings so many great gifts to the work we are doing here at Guitars and Ukes in the Classroom. She leads with her heart and follows with her incredible mind. She teaches both children and educators how to sing down obstacles and strum up bridges with music and hope, friendship and learning. She leads us all across- special learners, teachers, faculty and community members, too. Desiree Cera is inspired and she is an inspiration to all who meet her. We welcome her wholeheartedly to our ever-expanding musical family and look forward to a long and fulfilling relationship!
Written by Gail Wingfield Happy October, Music Friends!
As we approach the holiday that big kids love, we are mindful of the way our youngest students, ages 3 and 4, feel when they see scary monsters walking down the street or standing at their own front door. With a larger number than ever of preschool and transitional kindergarten teachers in our programs this fall, we decided to address this with a fun song that gives the singer some control over their fear of the boogie man, Frankenstein, witches and ghouls! Studies show that when children can articulate their feelings with strong simple words like scary or scared, they can get a handle on them. They can share about them. So we worked with teachers in San Diego Unified last week to rewrite the old camp song, "The Ants Go Marching" into something little ones can sing- and add lyrics to- while getting ready for Halloween. I recommend you sing it yourself right now, then add a monster or character of your own choosing in place of ours. Next, substitute a verb that describes the way that monster moves. Now you have the secret of "Substitution Songwriting." Word substitution is a skill that children are learning in the early grades to build word sense as pre-readers so this song does double duty for social emotional growth and literacy learning! This week in GITC classrooms, children will have fun naming their fears and singing about how to make the monsters go away- with candy! Congrats to the creative teachers who have added more verses about witches, dragons, bad guys and so much more! And thank you so very much for your ongoing support of this project! Wishing everyone a happy and funny Halloween! The Monsters Are Shuffling to the tune of "The Ants Go Marching One by One" © 2018 GITC Teachers at Hearst Elementary GITC CHORUS: Am C The monsters are shuffling to the door, Oh no! Oh no! Am C The monsters are shuffling to the door, Oh no! Oh no! Am G7 The monsters are shuffling to the door Am G7 We don’t want to see them anymore Am So we give them candy and tell them to go away! Yay! 1. The zombies are dragging to the door, oh no! Oh no! The zombies are dragging to the door, oh no! Oh no! The zombies are dragging to the door We don’t want to see them anymore So we give them candy and tell them to go away! Yay! 2. The ghosts are drifting to the door, oh no! Oh no! The ghosts are drifting to the door, oh no! Oh no! The ghosts are drifting to the door We don’t want to see them anymore So we give them candy and tell them to go away! What Can We Do with a Hundred Monsters" to the tune of "What Do We Do With a Drunken Sailor?" Composed by the Foussat Strumming Amigas for GITC Michelle Dominguez, Felicia Ayala, and Kristin Albright and Jess Baron Strum: Down Strum First singing note: 1st string fingered in the 2nd fret Lesson activity: Ask your students what THEY would do with 100 monsters and make a verse for each good idea! Extend the activity by illustrating the verses. You can teach math two ways with this song. Either represent 5 groups of 10 and do something special to each group of monsters, or count up by 10s. Can you invent 5 more ideas to get to 100? CHORUS: Am What can we do with a hundred monsters? G What can we do with a hundred monsters? Am What can we do with a hundred monsters? G Am Happy Hallo-ween! Am 1. Tie them all together with a licorice whip! Am Tie them all together with a licorice whip! G Tie them all together with a licorice whip! Am Tie them all together with a licorice whip! G Am Happy Hallo-ween! Am 2. Stick them together with Laffy Taffy G Stick them together with Laffy Taffy Am Stick them together with Laffy Taffy G Am Happy Hallo-ween! 3. Am Fill their shoes with melting chocolate G Fill their shoes with melting chocolate Am Fill their shoes with melting chocolate G Am Happy Hallo-ween! 4. Wrap them up in Foot-long Fruit Rolls, etc. 5. Stick them to the sidewalk with Double Bubble, etc. 6. Help your students make the next 5 verses up about the monsters they want to overcome! Happy Halloween, Friends! Since 2013, GITC educators have been exploring the strong connections between singing, playing ukuleles, and classroom music making in students with minimal verbal skills. It isn't unusual for kids with sensory integration disorders to have difficulty in this area. But when we started hearing from GITC trained teachers that their autistic students had suddenly experienced miraculous break-throughs as a direct result of singing each day, we started looking for research to help us understand why. We also spoke with the students themselves about what had helped them move from silence to speaking in their GITC classrooms. Then in July, we invited music therapist Julie Guy of the Music Therapy Center of California to present a lecture and demonstration at our first adaptive music conference for special educators. This is a full length video of her excellent presentation! As it turns out, music therapists have known for quite sometime that music when used strategically can be exceptionally helpful in quite a number of ways. Whether music is used to calm someone who is distressed, or to shift attention away from something disturbing and refocus a student on a pleasing set of musical sounds and patterns, it can bring relief. But what is it about songs themselves that can help non-verbal or low-verbal learners break the silence? At GITC, we have a lot of experience but have yet to see research that proves out what we see with our own eyes and hear with our ears. We hope to be involved in such research one day. But the bottom line is this; 1. Music is a form of organized sound. It makes sense out of chaos. The rhythm patterns are repetitive and they regulate time; the melodies engage the ears and capture attention, and these are also repetitive. So for a student who is sound-sensitive and overwhelmed, when their inner environment becomes painfully chaotic, a song can offer relief. It can impart order, predictability and peace into an ocean of noise. 2. Songs insert language into that rhythmic pulse and melodic contour. In simple folk songs, certain words occur often, especially in the choruses of songs. These "high frequency words" come at predictable moments and allow students to anticipate their occurrence each time. We think this becomes a form of brain training that naturally builds vocabulary. More than that, the predictability and practice of these high frequency words instills confidence in the student, bolstering their sense of control. When they have heard the song enough times, it is embedded in their memories and they find they are able to recite language accurately. 3. Audiation is the act of hearing music in one's own mind without physically listening to it from an outside source. When we memorize a piece of music or a song, we can listen in the privacy of our own minds without hearing the music performed live or through external media. We own it! For a student with minimal verbal skills to be in a singing classroom, they hear certain songs at school many times. When they leave school, the songs stay with them. This unconscious and perhaps involuntary practice of songs (or "earworms") may be "silent singing" for a while, but for some kids, a break through happens when they suddenly find themselves opening their mouths and letting the music out. Our founder interviewed one child who spoke for the first time in 3rd grade. She asked the girl what had prompted her to begin to speak. The child responded that she discovered that she liked the sound of her singing voice. When our founder asked how she knew that, the girl answered that she had started humming along in class. No one else could hear her, but SHE could. From that experience, she began to sing words, and in time, to allow others to hear her. Once she could manage this, she simply made a transition to speaking. 4. We believe that adding an accompaniment instrument to singing, especially a rhythmic one like guitar or ukulele, brings a great deal of support to the singing process and may speed the acquisition of verbal skills. Why? The ukulele and guitar provide a set of guiding pitches with a strong tonal root. The young singer can rely on these pitches to frame the notes in a song and offer musical steps on the melodic ladder. If you can hear the difference between low and high, and from there interpret the sequence of pitches between them, you have a musical framework. You can train your ear to hear the differences and your voice to match them. It just takes repetition, listening and time. We are also pretty certain that strumming these instruments regulates the body's involuntary actions such as heart rate and breathing. Some studies show that music has the power to decrease stress by slowing down the heart rate. If you strum strings to a steady beat and sing in a way that locks into it, you may be improving your mental health by generating brain chemicals that elevate the spirit and give a sense of joy and satisfaction. We are sure these things deserve study. So while we see all of this going on with students, we cannot provide conclusive research about it- yet. But we can share with you a few articles about work being done in the field along these lines- or related ones. Please take a few minutes to check them out. First, please have a look at this article. It first appeared in the 2016, volume 4 issue of ARI's Autism Research Review International newsletter. "AMMT (technique called Auditory-Motor Mapping Training) combines “sung” speech with the use of specially tuned drums in order to build new connections in the brain. In the procedure, a therapist sings two-syllable words or phrases, using a different pitch for each syllable, while simultaneously tapping on a drum tuned to the same two pitches. Children first listen and then participate in speaking and drumming. The final goal is for the children to produce the words or phrases independently." https://www.autism.com/speech_training Next, please have a look at the amazing research coming from Northwestern University's Auditory Neuroscience Laboratory. Dr. Nina Kraus and her team have been studying the role of music in reading for many years and her studies are easy to digest through excellent video presentations. http://www.brainvolts.northwestern.edu/. One visit to their homepage gives you access to a feast of important studies. We will be adding more articles over the coming weeks to share with anyone interested in the role of music in supporting students with minimal verbal skills to learn to express themselves more comfortably and expressively. If you have articles you wish to send us to add to the list, please drop our executive director a line! It's time to start thinking about teacher training classes. You can register for courses (including classes with details to be announced) by using the registration link below.
(https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/GITCregistration) Alabama City: Mobile, Alabama Instructor: Kate MacMahon Instructor Email: kjmac01@msn.com Class Location: U.S.A. Children's & Women's Hospital, 1700 Center St, Mobile, AL 36604 Course Level: Beginner- for medical educators, social workers & staff Day: Mondays Dates: Sept 28 - Dec 1 Time: 1:30 - 2:30pm Arizona City: Phoenix, AZ Instructor: Gerry DeLaTorre Instructor Email: gerrygitc@live.com Class Location: Desert View Elementary School, 8621 N 3rd St, Phoenix, AZ 85020 Course Level: Beginner Day: Mondays Dates: Oct 8, 15, 22, 29 Nov 5, 26, Dec 4, 11 No Class Nov 12th (Veteran's Day) or Nov 19th (Thanksgiving break) Time: 4:30 - 5:30pm California Region: Northern CA City: Oakland, CA Instructor: Eli Wise Instructor Email: eli.wise@ousd.org Class Location: International Community School (ICS) music room, 2825 International Blvd., Oakland, CA 94601 Course Level: Beginner Plus Day: Tuesdays Dates: Oct 9, 16, 23, Nov 6, 13, 27, Dec 4, 11 No class Halloween or Thanksgiving weeks Time: 4:00 - 5:00pm City: Weed, CA Instructor: Nancy Longworth Instructor Email: nlongworth@cot.net Class Location: Butteville Elementary, 24512 Edgewood Rd, Weed, CA 96094 Course Level: TBA Day: TBA Dates: TBA Time: TBA Region: Central CA City: Elk Grove, CA Instructor: Michael Hemsworth Instructor Email: michael@elkgrovemusiclessons.com Class 1 Location: Herburger Elementary School, 8670 Maranello Dr, Elk Grove, CA 95624 Course 1 Level: Beginner Plus/ Strummer Day: Wednesdays Dates: October 10, 17. 24, 31, November 7, 14, 28th Time: 3:15 - 4:15pm Class 2 Location: Herburger Elementary School, 8670 Maranello Dr, Elk Grove, CA 95624 Course 2 Level: Beginner Day: Wednesdays Dates: October 10, 17. 24, 31, November 7, 14, 28th Time: 4:15 - 5:15pm City: Mariposa, CA - On Hold Until January 2019 Instructor: Gail Dreifus Instructor Email: gailpisces1@att.net Class Location: at the instructor's home, address to be shared after enrollment. Course Level: Beginner Plus Day: TBA Dates: TBA Time: TBA Region: Southern CA City: Victorville, CA Instructor: Brittan Egnozzi Instructor Email: begnozzi@vasd.net Class Location: West Palms Conservatory, 14375 Del Gado Road, Victorville, CA Course Level: TBA Day: TBA Dates: TBA Time: TBA City: Reseda, CA (Los Angeles) FULL & CLOSED Instructor: Terry Brockmann Instructor Email: tab1815@lausd.net Class Location: Shirley Elementary School, 19452 Hart St, Reseda, CA 91335 Course Level: Beginner/Beginner Plus Day: Wednesdays Dates: Oct 17, 24, Nov 7, 14, 28, Dec 5, 12 No class Halloween or Thanksgiving weeks Time: 3:30 - 4:30pm City: Mid City, CA (Los Angeles) Instructor: Heidi Swedberg Instructor Email: heidiswedberg@gmail.com Class Location: Saturn Street Elementary, 5360 Saturn St, Los Angeles, CA 90019 Course Level: Beginner Day: Thursdays Dates: Oct 18, 25, Nov 1, 15, 20, Dec 6 Time: 4:00-5:00 pm City: Panorama City, CA (Los Angeles) On Hold Until January 2019 Instructor: Kristen Herbert Instructor Email: kristenherbert@gmail.com Class Location: Chase Elementary, 14041 Chase St, Panorama City, CA 91402 Course Level: Beginner Day: Wednesdays Dates: TBA Time: 3:30 - 4:30pm City: San Pedro, CA (Los Angeles) - On Hold Until Winter Instructor: Aurora Thompson Instructor Email: dawnmuse@hotmail.com Class Location: TBA Course Level: TBA Day: TBA Dates: TBA Time: TBA City: City Heights, CA (San Diego) - On Hold Until Winter Instructor: TBD Instructor Email: TBD Class Location: Euclid Elementary, 4166 Euclid Ave, San Diego, CA 92105 Course Level: Beginner Plus/ Strummers Day: TBA Dates: TBA Time: TBA City: Del Cerro, CA (San Diego) Instructor: Jess Baron Instructor Email: jess@guitarsintheclassroom.org Class Location: Hearst Elementary, 6230 Del Cerro Blvd, San Diego, CA 92120 Course Level: Beginner Plus/ Strummers Day: Changed to Fridays Dates: October 19, 26, 29, Nov 2, 9, 16, 30, Dec 7 No Class Nov 23 Time: 3:30 - 4:30pm City: Encinitas, CA (San Diego) Instructor: Stephanie Lewis Instructor Email: sclewis67@gmail.com Class Location: Encinitas Union School District Farm Lab, 441 Quail Gardens Dr, Encinitas, CA 92024 Course Level: Beginner Plus/ Strummers Day: 6 Saturdays til winter break Dates: Oct. 13, Nov. 10, 17, Dec 1, 8, 15 Time: 9:30-10:45 City: La Mesa, CA (San Diego) CLOSED AND FULL- waitlist only Instructor: Julia Cole & Bari Zwirn Instructor Email: julia.cole@lmsvschools.org & bzwirn@me.com Class Location: Murray Manor Elementary, 8305 El Paso St, La Mesa, CA 91942 Course 1 Level: Beginner Day: Tuesdays Dates: October 23 - December 11 Time: 3:30 - 4:30pm Course 2 Level: Beginner Day: Wednesdays Dates: October 24 - December 14 Time: 3:30 - 4:30pm City: Lemon Grove, CA (San Diego) Instructor: Dan Decker Instructor Email: ddecker@lemongrovesd.net Class Location: San Miguel Elementary, 7059 San Miguel, Lemon Grove, CA 91945 Course Level: Beginner Plus/ Strummer Day: Tuesdays Dates: Oct 2, 9, 16, 23, 30, Nov 6, 13, 27 Time: 3:30 - 5:00pm City: North Park, CA (San Diego)- FULL & CLOSED- waitlist only Instructor: Bari Zwirn Instructor Email: bzwirn@me.com Class Location: Mid-City Community Music at Our Savior’s Lutheran Church, 4011 Ohio St, San Diego, CA 92104 Course Level: Strummers Day: Thursdays Dates: Oct 11, 18, 25, Nov 1, 8, 15 Time: 4:30 - 6:00pm City: Paradise Hills, CA (San Diego) Instructor: Jefferson Jay Instructor Email: jeffersonjaye@yahoo.com Class Location: Paradise Hills Elementary, 5816 Alleghany St, San Diego, CA 92139 Course Level: Beginner Day: TBA Dates: October, TBA Time: TBA City: Serra Mesa, CA (San Diego)- CLOSED AND FULL- waitlist only Instructor: Desiree Cera Instructor Email: desireecamillecera@gmail.com Class Location: Wegeforth Elementary, 3443 Ediwhar Ave, San Diego, CA 92123 Course Level: Beginner Day: Mondays Dates: October 8, 15, 22, 29, Nov 5, 26, Dec 3, 10 No Class Nov 12th (Veteran's Day) or Nov 19th (Thanksgiving break) Time: 4:00 - 5:00pm Colorado City: Aurora, CO Instructor: Joan Maute Instructor Email: joanmaute@gmail.com Class Location: Sunrise Elementary School, 4050 S Genoa Way, Aurora, CO 80013 Course Level: Beginner Day: Thursdays Dates: Oct 11, 25, Nov 1, 8, 15 Time: 3:45 - 5:15pm City: Loveland, CO Instructor: Joan Maute Instructor Email: joanmaute@gmail.com Class Location: Van Buren Elementary School, 1811 W 15th St, Loveland, CO 80538 Course Level: TBA Day: TBA Dates: TBA Time: TBA City: Longmont, CO Instructor: Linda Emmermann Instructor Email: lemusic55@aol.com Class Location: Hygiene Elementary, 11968 N. 75th Street, Longmont, CO 80503 Course Level: Beginners Day: Tuesdays Dates: Oct. 23- Dec 11 Time: after school, specifics forthcoming. City: Pueblo, CO Instructor: Joan Maute & Linda Emmermann Instructor Email: joanmaute@gmail.com & lemusic55@aol.com Class Location: TBA Course Level: TBA Day: TBA Dates: TBA Time: TBA Kansas City: Kansas City, KS Instructor: Amanda Johnson Instructor Email: amanda.guitarsintheclassroom@gmail.com Class Location: Noble Prentis Elementary, 2337 S 14th St, Kansas City, KS 66103 Course Level: Beginner/ Beginner Plus Day: Mondays Dates: September 17, 24, Oct 1, 8, 15, 22, 29, Nov 5 Time: 4:00 - 5:00pm City: Olathe, KS Instructor: Amanda Johnson Instructor Email: amanda.guitarsintheclassroom@gmail.com Class Location: Ridgeview Elementary, 1201 E Elm St, Olathe, KS 66061 Registration continues: 8/21/18, 2nd week for those who have already taken the trainings, 8/28/18 for those who are new trainees in other schools Course Level: Beginner/ Beginner Plus Day: Tuesdays Dates: September 11, 18, 25, October 2, 9, 23, 30, Nov 6 Time: 4:00-5:10pm Mississippi City: Ocean Springs, MS - on hold until January 2019 Instructor: Kate MacMahon Instructor Email: kjmac01@msn.com Class Location: TBA Course Level: Beginner Dates: TBA Time: TBA Missouri City: Kansas City, MO Instructor: Amanda Johnson, in development Instructor Email: amanda.guitarsintheclassroom@gmail.com Class Location: TBA Course Level: TBA Day: TBA Dates: TBA Time: TBA North Carolina City: Bolivia, NC (Brunswick County) Instructor: Jeremy Matthews Instructor Email: mrmathews70@gmail.com Class Location: Brunswick County District Office, Building K, 35 Referendum Dr NE, Bolivia, NC 28422 Course Level: Beginner Plus Day: TBA Dates: TBA Time: TBA City: Wilmington, NC (New Hanover County) Instructor: Jeremy Matthews Instructor Email: mrmathews70@gmail.com Class Location: Noble Middle School, 6520 Market Street, Wilmington, NC 28405, Room 27 Course Level: Beginner Plus (Brush Up!)Participants will review skills learned in the GITC Beginner class such as playing chords, songwriting and incorporating music in their school curriculum. This class is for school personnel who have already taken the GITC Beginner class previously. Day: Tuesdays Dates: November 13-December 18 (No class Thanksgiving :-) Time: 4-5 p.m. Texas City: Wichita Falls Instructor: Jess Baron Instructor Email: jess@guitarsintheclassroom.org Class Location: TBA Course Level: Beginner for Special Olympics leaders & teachers When: One Day Workshop - Monday Oct 8 Washington City: Langley, WA (South Whidbey Island) Instructor: Quinn Fitzpatrick Instructor Email: quinn.guitarsintheclassroom@gmail.com Class Location: South Whidbey Elementary School, 5380 Maxwelton Rd, Langley, WA 98260 Course Level: Beginner Day: Tuesdays Dates: October 9, 16, 23, Nov 6, 13, 27, Dec 4, 11 Time: 4:00 – 5:00pm West Virginia City: Clay, WV (Clay County) Instructor: Tracy Wayne Instructor Email: twayne37@hotmail.com Class Location: Clay Middle School Room G2, 19 Church St, Clay, WV 25043 Course Level: Beginner Day: Thursdays Dates: Oct. 11, 18, 25, Nov. 1, 8, 15, 29, Dec 6th Time: 4:00 - 5:00pm City: Charleston, WV Instructor: Kelley Laseter Instructor Email: KelleyLaseter@gmail.com Class Location: Clay Arts and Sciences Center, 1 Clay Square, Charleston, WV 25301 Course Level: TBA Day: TBA Dates: TBA Time: TBA If you teach or assist students with special needs, this fun and fascinating 2 day conference with a marvelous kick off evening are for you! You can learn to drum, strum, sing and operate the cool BEAMZ interactive unit each day with sped experts in each discipline. Travel through this musical journey with other educators who understant what it means to work with students with mild to moderate or moderate to severe "dis" or different abilities. We like to play to everyone's strengths and music makes this possible. Already know you want to sign up? Please register HERE. The fun begins Friday evening at the famous Museum of Making Music in beautiful Carlsbad, CA. Never played ukulele before? Take a ukulele crash course, then tour the museum with old or new friends. The evening will continue with a talk from Jared Woosely of One Step Beyond (Phoenix) on leading jam bands for students with special needs and then we get to hear his teen band, Heartstrings perform. They are AMAZING! Hi, Friends,
We are planning our third summer retreat and this summer we are heading up to Julian, CA at Camp Cedar Glen once again. This spacious spot in the woods and mountain air is easily accessible, disability friendly, and so comfortable. Coming to the retreat gives educators time to unwind, bond with friends, deepen your musical knowledge, expand your skills and double your confidence as a song leader! This three-day GITC experience will help them accomplish their musical goals while they renew their spirits and rest their bodies among friends in a beautiful place and all for a tiny price! Located only two miles away from Julian Town Hall, Camp Cedar Glen offers a relaxed and social atmosphere where families and visitors all find welcome and a variety of affordable accommodations and amenities. Registration is now closed. We will be sure to take photos, videos and share the good times with you here later in August! Retreat Dates: August 2 – 5, 2018 Arrival August 2nd - Thursday - dinner (arrival at 4 PM) August 3rd - breakfast, lunch and dinner August 4th - breakfast, lunch and dinner Departure August 5th - Sunday - breakfast & lunch (departure at 2 PM) Written by Sarah Cusey, GITC Programs Coordinator
Jennifer originally started with GITC in 2010, after seeing an email sent to her school about the organization. She had grown up surrounded by music and even pursued various classes on different instruments, but hadn’t fulfilled her desire to play guitar until starting with GITC. She took a break after a year and a half with the organization, then rejoined with Rosanna 2 years ago.
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