Accent on Access Program, Youth Orchestras of Fresno

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ACCENT ON ACCESS VIOLIN PROGRAM

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Violin Program: an intense, immersive learning experience The Youth Orchestras of Fresno, in partnership with the Fresno County Office of Education and the Bonner Family Foundation, initiated the Accent on Access Violin Program at Edison-Bethune Charter Academy in fall 2011 with a class of 25 second- and third-graders and three teachers. The program is now in its third year, having grown to accommodate 60 second- through fifth-graders and seven teachers. It has also grown beyond violins—already cellos have been added to the orchestral mix! We are deeply influenced by the example of Venezuela’s El Sistema program, which promotes social justice through music training for youth, and has done so with such breathtaking success that now some 400,000 children in that country of 30 million inhabitants participate in youth orchestras. The Venezuela experience supports the findings in a 2012 report from the National Endowment for the Arts that “socially and economically disadvantaged children and teenagers who have high levels of arts engagement or arts learning show more positive outcomes in a variety of areas than their low-arts-engaged peers.” Past NEA chair Rocco Landesman expands on the study’s results: “Students who have arts-rich experiences in school do better across-the-board academically, and they also become more active and engaged citizens, voting, volunteering, and generally participating at higher rates than their peers.”


ACCENT ON ACCESS IMPACTS ACADEMIC SUCCESS Every day with our Accent on Access students we see an intensity of focus and love of hard work that astounds and gratifies us. Even if their scores on standardized tests were not improving (but they are!) we would know there is something important happening here, something that should be happening for all children, everywhere. We hope this pilot program will spark an ever-expanding network of similar programs throughout the Central Valley.

You take 60 students four days a week, 90 minutes a day and you not only train them in violin techniques and music theory, but teach them life lessons. They are learning that work and discipline pay off. They are learning how to listen to others and encourage each other. They are learning about independent practice plus teamwork. Violin gives some of these students a sense of belonging that they have never had before. —Edison-Bethune teacher

I like playing violin because that is how I know my notes. I want to be a violin teacher. First-year Accent on Access student

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iolin Program students as compared to non-participating peers: • ELA scores 15% higher • Math scores 13% higher • Attendance rate 26% higher

I like playing the violin because we get to pluck. I want to be a rock star when I grow up.

Partners Bonner Family Foundation Edison-Bethune Charter Academy Fresno County Office of Education Consultants Robert Bullwinkel Kaye Cummings Rodolfo Garcia Thomas Loewenheim Katherine Penner Cheryl Schellenberg Limor Toren-Immerman

Supporters A.J. Parker Memorial Fund Bill and Linda Rogers California Arts Council East Fresno Kiwanis Educational Employees Credit Union Fresno Regional Foundation Foundation@FCOE Patrick’s Music PG&E

CONNECT! office@youthorchestrasfresno.org (559) 275-6694 youthorchestrasfresno.org youth orchestras of fresno 444 west shaw avenue fresno ca 93704


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