Music Education alumni lead
One look at the attendee, presenterand most importantly, award recipientlists at meeting-of-the-mind gatherings of music educators, and one can plainly see a trend emerging out of Boulder. The Music Education area at the College of Music routinely produces leaders in the field, the most recent of whom is Claire Glover (BME 17), who won the 2020 Colorado Music Educator Association (CMEA) Young Music Educator Award.
So what makes CU Boulder so successful? And how do you define success as a music educator? We asked Associate Professor of Music Education David Rickels, chair of the Music Education area. Thats a big question, he says. For most music educators, success means your students achieve the musical outcomes they want.
Music educators equip students to fulfill their vision of music in their liveswhether they enjoy music in school, along with its personal and social benefits, and whether they carry music with them and continue to enjoy music as listeners or music makers in different forms.
For Glover, the mentorship she received at the College of Music is key to her own success as director of bands at Mountain Ridge Middle School (MRMS) in Colorado Springs and president and concert band coordinator of the Pikes Peak Middle School Honor Band. In turn, her students are thriving.
When I started, there were less than 300 kids in band, recalls Glover, whose tenure at the middle school began in 2017. Since then, that number has grown to 400 participants, translating to the schools greater participation in the CU Middle School Honor Band.泭
Indeed, at MRMS, she has led the concert bands to receive superior ratings at the Colorado Bandmasters Associations Middle School Concert Band Festival and Ca簽on City Blossom Festival. Additionally, the eighth-grade symphonic band under her direction was invited to perform at the 2019 CMEA conference, and the MRMS Honors Band received an invitation to perform at this years conference in January.泭
Ive always been a big believer in asking questions and soliciting advice from mentors, adds Glover. Mentors are my guideposts.
![ben pollack and claire glover](/music/sites/default/files/styles/medium_750px_50_display_size_/public/article-image/ben_and_claire_0.png?itok=E0bXFWGc)
For Ben Pollack (BME 14)a teacher with the Huerfano School District RE-1 in Walsenburg and the CMEA's Young Teacher of the Year in 2019passion for the job is also key. Teaching泭music is the most important thing I do, he says. Its not just about music, eitherits about teaching my students that theres more to life than the three exits of freeway where they live.
Concludes Rickels, reflecting on the success of these brilliant young music educators: In every society, music is a part of our lives. And by bringing music educators into a profession that focuses on making music in schools, music becomes an even richer part of our lives."