Nebo parents fight for music program
John Benham, director of graduate studies in music at Bethel University in St. Paul, Minn., and a music advocacy consultant since 1981, will talk with parents Saturday morning.
"I'll work with the community in helping them understand how the system works and see what we can do to facilitate the program and perhaps expand it," said Benham, who has consulted with some 300 school districts in 46 states and six Canadian provinces. "I don't come in to tell people what to do."
Nebo District chiefs plan to move sixth-graders into elementary schools, and push seventh-graders into junior highs. That will eliminate middle schools and create building space for new schools.
The south Utah County district is one of the fastest-growing in the state.
Shuffling will begin fall 2006 in schools in Springville. Schools in Spanish Fork and Payson will change the following year, Nebo Superintendent Chris Sorensen said.
Parents last spring formed the Nebo Performing Arts Council. They have created a Web site www.NeboMusicFriends.org to drum up support for the music classes, said Su Tullis, a parent who is active in the council.
Nebo officials from the district will be at the Saturday meeting.
"We're trying to listen to a lot of things the music coalition is saying," Sorensen said.
Still, Sorensen said he can't make any promises that sixth-grade band, choir and orchestra programs will continue when the students are sent to elementary schools.
"It's impossible to replicate the same kinds of music programs at 25 elementary schools that we've had at three middle schools," he said. "The best proposal we've heard from the coalition is to have a program before and during school, and the instructors would be rotating."
Benham has found that music programs often work well when students begin serious training in voice or an instrument in the fifth grade. Starting music education early is integral to brain development, he said.
In some elementary schools in other parts of the country, he said, fifth-graders are pulled out of their regular classrooms for music classes.




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