Residents
of Franciscan Oaks gathered in their auditorium on Monday, Dec. 17 for
a real treat. The Wilson School was going to perform an abbreviated
version of Tchaikovsky's "Nutcracker Suite." This quiet, life-care
community was filled with more than 70 students, ranging from Pre-K to
eighth grade, the entire student body of the Wilson School.
The performance was delightful and heart-warming to
all who were present: some 50-odd residents, a handful of parents and
most of the school's faculty. The program was arranged by the school's
music teacher, Jo Ann Behr.
Behr has been with the school for three and half
years now and has started many programs at the school such as the
instrumental music program and the composer program.
"Each year the Wilson School chooses a composer as
part of a thematic unit," said Carolyn Borlo, the head of the Wilson
School, as she welcomed the residents of Franciscan Oaks to the
performance. This is the third year in a row that the school has had
such a program be a part of a school-wide music curriculum and the
program has been gaining ground as a key part of the school year ever
since.
This
performance of "Nutcracker Suite" was not just a holiday show done for
parents and community members, but also a part of a larger
interdisciplinary approach to education, which is central to the
program at this school. The Wilson School is a private, independent day
school located in Mountain Lakes, serving grades Pre-K through eight.
This co-ed school focuses on developing individual student programs to
encourage each student to reach his or her personal potential.
The school is divided into a Lower School and an
Upper School, both of which incorporate strong thematic and
interdisciplinary elements across all the grade levels. As a result,
the music program is integrated into the classroom in the form of
general music classes once or twice a week, depending on grade level,
and instrumental lessons offered from grades K through eight. The
composer program has been extremely successful at increasing students
level of consideration for music.
"The first year [of the program] we focused on
Mozart and just had a recital at the end of the year with 30 pieces.
There were piano solos of all different levels. The band performed and
the whole school sang "Ah vous dirais-je, Maman" in French," Behr said.
The tune of this song is better known as "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little
Star," and although Mozart did not write the piece, he wrote 12
variations on the original French folk-tune.
The entire school also performed a period waltz. In
selecting a composer, Behr tries to choose one with a wide range of
performable music, so the youngest of children and the oldest will be
challenged. Last year the composer was Beethoven.
This strong emphasis on the integration of a subject
throughout all of the grades is not found only in the music program but
also in the study extends across other subjects. The students' other
teachers find ways to integrate the composer into their lesson plans
and class activities.
In art, the students helped to build sets for the
performances and a study of the composer's life or time period was
incorporated into lesson plans within the core subjects. By reinforcing
information through a variety of different ways, students are able to
gain a broader, more ingrained understanding of a subject. This is
evident when students tell Behr long after the spring recital that they
heard a piece of music by one these composers on the radio, on
television, or in the store while shopping with their parents. Thus
proving their retention of what they are learning and how it connects
them to the world around them.
The impact that such a highly developed and
thoughtful music program has on the kids is clear in other ways as
well. They were enthusiastic, attentive and well behaved in the
auditorium as many of them waited most patiently to go on stage or sing.
"The students get so much stage experience that they
gain an ease of speaking and public performing," Behr said when asked
about the benefits of this program to the students. This benefit is
evident in the older children especially. Most had an ease about
themselves while performing that can only come from such a high level
of exposure. In a piece titled "The Russian Dance," performed by the
older boys at the school, there was enthusiasm about their performance
as they leapt over one another on stage with a kind of daring, and
disregard for appearance not often witnessed in most pre-teen boys.
In another scene where all of the rats are sword
fighting one another, "The boys helped choreographed this scene
themselves," said Behr. This type of independent expression and
initiative is reflected back as a part of the school's mission, "To
create an environment for success, which will develop an independent,
thoughtful and confident learner."
Confident
is a good word to describe seventh-grade student, Alyssa Luc, age 13,
of Mountain Lakes. Luc was Clara, the lead female of the performance.
In addition to being Clara, Luc also did the choreography to several of
the pieces including "Waltz of the Flowers." As for her favorite part
of the performance, "Getting to be Clara, I've been watching it since I
was little, so I was excited."
Alyssa studies tap, jazz, and ballet as well as voice at Gateway to the Arts in Boonton.
Some
other local children with lead roles in the performance included
Benjamin Wuersch of Mountain Lakes who played Fritz, Clara's younger
brother and Frankie Yi of Boonton who was the Rat King. The role of the
Nutcracker Prince was played by Adam Franklin.
Despite the level of sophistication of this program,
the children always manage to remind one that they are still just that,
kids. For all their seriousness, fun was still high on the priority
list for the day.