In 2014 we offered Arts Award Explore as an optional extra element to our family community project Musical Beacons. The project is based in a community centre in a Tower Hamlets social housing estate, and families with children of all ages attend weekly sessions to compose their own music inspired by their local area and identity.
We offered Arts Award as a way to encourage participants to attend every week, and therefore be able to recognise and celebrate their progress and achievements. Nine young people between the ages of 5 and 10 took up this opportunity, and committed to staying an extra half an hour after the sessions each week for one term. During this extra time we facilitated extension activities, such as opportunities to interview professional musicians, and allowed time for reflection and documenting of their work in the main sessions to build the Arts Award portfolio.
Inspire
Part A of Explore encourages young people to participate in a variety of activities, discovering and identifying what inspires them. Whole group activities included: trying new instruments such as keyboards, ukuleles and iPads; storytelling through music; and writing our own ceilidh style music and dance. The Arts Award element came in supporting young people, especially the under 7’s, to articulate what had inspired them. We found it helpful to break this down into simple ideas:
Rebecca, aged 5, shared with a Soundcastle facilitator how she came to understand her own inspiration. Rebecca was able to explain why the drums were her favourite instrument – “When they go fast and low, they go quiet and loud” – before explaining that she would like to keep playing “in the Olympic Park, with my Dad.”
Explore
Each week we had a performance from a guest musician, who was then interviewed by the young people about their careers and art forms. The highlight was a visit from members of musical theatre company Showstopper, who take ideas from the audience and spontaneously improvise a show. The following week our team of young people made a film explaining the process and modelling it themselves, with great enthusiasm! These intimate performances encouraged young people to find out more about the artists themselves:
Create and Present
Over several weeks the young people worked in teams in the main music sessions to compose their own songs, choosing the musical structure and instruments they wished to use. Each week they wrote and drew pictures to document their creative process, so that they could see how their ideas grew into fully-formed songs. We taught the singing parts to the whole participant group, so that at the end everyone could perform and celebrate the music together before reviewing their journey:
A Positive Journey
The Arts Award journey gave our team of young people a tangible and motivating way to progress and develop their music-making, and celebrate their achievements. However there were also many other benefits to this experience:
We found that the addition of Arts Award enhanced the learning, inspiration and enthusiasm of our participants, offering an exciting pathway within our informal setting. It allowed young people of different backgrounds to progress with their music-making in line with their own interests and identities.
Next steps
Musical Beacons is now up and running for another year, supported by Youth Music. As returning families and new recruits come together to create new music, we will offer Arts Award Explore to another
Jenni Parkinson is Co-Director of Soundcastle
Soundcastle are a social enterprise who promote and enhance community wellbeing and cohesion through inclusive creative music-making. We put participants at the heart of our projects, encouraging them to express and celebrate individual and community identity and stories. We aim to provide meaningful access to culture in areas where there may be barriers preventing this, encouraging people to create their own living arts and music through active engagement.
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