• Latest
  • Trending
Happy New Year?

… is not capable of learning an instrument.

September 8, 2017
2025 Teachers’ Choice Award Winners

Teacher’s Choice Awards at the Midwest Clinic

January 8, 2026
NAMM Show 2026 – A Can’t Miss Event

NAMM Show 2026 – A Can’t Miss Event

January 6, 2026
Sweetwater Instrument Rentals
BEGINNING BAND

BEGINNING BAND

December 30, 2025
New Products December 2025

New Products December 2025

December 30, 2025
Musical Detective: Why? When? How?

Musical Detective: Why? When? How?

December 22, 2025
Holiday Gift Guide for Music Businesses: Tools to Boost Engagement and Growth

Holiday Gift Guide for Music Businesses: Tools to Boost Engagement and Growth

December 21, 2025
The Perfect Culmination: How One Violinist Found His Calling in the U.S. Air Force Strings

The Perfect Culmination: How One Violinist Found His Calling in the U.S. Air Force Strings

December 19, 2025
The Road Ahead for Music and Arts Ed: Keeping it Human

The Road Ahead for Music and Arts Ed: Keeping it Human

December 29, 2025
The Power of Small School Music Programs

The Power of Small School Music Programs

December 29, 2025
Rehearsal AI: Transforming Artificial Intelligence into Authentic Musical Intelligence

Rehearsal AI: Transforming Artificial Intelligence into Authentic Musical Intelligence

December 15, 2025
Crafting a Creative Mindset for Band – Part 2

Crafting a Creative Mindset for Band – Part 2

December 14, 2025
Headlines December 2025

Headlines December 2025

December 30, 2025
Friday, January 9, 2026
  • Contact
SBO+
Exclusive Content on artistpro.media
  • Subscribe Free!
    • Manage Subscription
  • Departments
    • Choral
    • String Section
      • String Section
    • Concert Band
    • Modern Band
      • Mariachi
    • Orchestra
    • Instruments
      • Woodwinds
        • Wind Talkers
      • Percussion
        • GoodVibes
      • Repertoire
      • Playing Tips
    • Marching Band
    • Resources
      • Fundraising
    • Jazz
    • Brass
    • General Music
    • Advocacy
      • NAfME Neighborhood
      • MAC Corner
      • MusicEd: Mentor Minute
    • Commentary
      • Bubbett’s Bookshelf
      • Leadership Tips
      • Perspective
      • InService
        • America’s Bandmasters
        • America’s Musicians
      • Tone Deaf Comics
    • Features
    • News
      • Headlines
  • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
  • Support
  • Awards/Entries
    • 50 Teachers Who Make a Difference
    • Teachers’ Choice Awards
  • Advertise
    • Email PR!
No Result
View All Result
  • Subscribe Free!
    • Manage Subscription
  • Departments
    • Choral
    • String Section
      • String Section
    • Concert Band
    • Modern Band
      • Mariachi
    • Orchestra
    • Instruments
      • Woodwinds
        • Wind Talkers
      • Percussion
        • GoodVibes
      • Repertoire
      • Playing Tips
    • Marching Band
    • Resources
      • Fundraising
    • Jazz
    • Brass
    • General Music
    • Advocacy
      • NAfME Neighborhood
      • MAC Corner
      • MusicEd: Mentor Minute
    • Commentary
      • Bubbett’s Bookshelf
      • Leadership Tips
      • Perspective
      • InService
        • America’s Bandmasters
        • America’s Musicians
      • Tone Deaf Comics
    • Features
    • News
      • Headlines
  • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
  • Support
  • Awards/Entries
    • 50 Teachers Who Make a Difference
    • Teachers’ Choice Awards
  • Advertise
    • Email PR!
No Result
View All Result
SBO+
No Result
View All Result
Romeo Music

… is not capable of learning an instrument.

byMike Lawson
September 8, 2017
in Perspective
0
Happy New Year?
Share on Facebook
ADVERTISEMENT

I saw this image posted on Facebook by my friend, Julie Duty, founder of United Sound. It was, in a word, heartbreaking.

SBO profiled her amazing non-profit in the March, 2016, and their amazing work of creating a program that allows special needs students to participate in band and orchestra, and gives these students and their “general ed” students the chance to work together, bond, and learn so much from each other, well beyond the ability to play music at their individual level. Please refer to the back issue online at sboplus.net/digital-archives.html, where you can learn all about what they do, in case you missed it the first time. This image is a permission slip that would have allowed a child to participate in an after-school program where they would learn to play an instrument, with the assistance of a typical three-to-one student peer learning situation. And even if the part they play is four notes in ten measures, it is going to be a part written for their ability within the arrangement and those four notes are going to count. My heart sank as I read it. Why would any parent return the slip with this written on it? 

I can tell you why. I have a special needs daughter who is now 24. First of all, we mourn. First it is an overwhelming grief, and all of the five stages come into play. Denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance. And they come in waves, out of order. We are afraid to think that they might try and fail. We mourn they may not grow up to live independently, marry, give us grandchildren, drive a car, manage their finances. We worry. We cry. We work hard for the best outcomes. We hope for the best, go to IEP meetings, strive to make sure their rights are enforced by the school districts. How dare anyone suggest that we get our hopes up that our child might be able to participate in a band program, when they can’t tie their shoes at 14? When they can’t tell you the difference between a quarter and dime? 

ADVERTISEMENT

As parents, we are often told what our children will not be able to do. One of the places we hear that, oddly enough, is sometimes from special needs teachers. I experienced this with my daughter, who wanted desperately to sing in the school talent show and was told no, until I got my papa-bear growl going, hired her a vocal coach, and let the administration know she was going to be performing next year. She went on to sing in front of hundreds each of the next four years, winning the “Director’s Choice” certificate, and wowing the audiences with her stage presence, repertoire, and charm. If I had accepted that “she wasn’t capable” of doing this, her high school years would have been very different.  

ADVERTISEMENT

United Sound has experienced enthusiastic band directors stepping in and creating awe-inspiring moments proving that many special needs students of even severe disabilities are capable of participating in a meaningful way in their band program with proper support. Ironically, it is sometimes the special needs teachers who are often far more skeptical of what United Sound’s program can do than the band directors, looking for a way to be more inclusive of students with special needs. 

Children with intellectual or physical disabilities are capable of a lot more than they often appear to be. An extreme example might be Helen Keller, blind, deaf and mute. Go visit unitedsound.org, watch videos of students who look a lot like kids in your special needs classes that you have likely never met. They are not relegated to banging on a triangle or cymbal. They are playing strings, brass, woodwinds, and yes, percussion. Show the videos to your special needs teachers. And never let anyone, another teacher, or parent, or co-worker, ever tell you a child isn’t capable of learning an instrument at their own level. 

ADVERTISEMENT

You may also like:

2012 ’50 Directors Who Make a Difference’ Report SBO Presents the 21st Annual 50 Directors Who Make a Difference SBO Presents The 19th Annual 50 Directors Who Make A Difference Report: 50 Directors The 22nd Annual 50 Directors Who Make a Difference
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Detroit Symphony Orchestra Launches Online DSO Classroom

Next Post

Pershing to President, America’s Military Bands, Part I: History and Organization: An Overview of Bands, Orchestras and Ensembles in our Military Service, Career and Education Opportunities

Next Post
Pershing to President, America’s Military Bands, Part I: History and Organization: An Overview of Bands, Orchestras and Ensembles in our Military Service, Career and Education Opportunities

Pershing to President, America’s Military Bands, Part I: History and Organization: An Overview of Bands, Orchestras and Ensembles in our Military Service, Career and Education Opportunities

Please login to join discussion
Bob Rogers Travel
  • January 2026

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • December 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • November 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • October 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • September 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
© 2005 - 2026 artistpro, LLC
7012 City Center Way, Suite 207
Fairview, Tennessee 37062
(800) 682-8114

Wenger Endur Music Stand
No Result
View All Result
  • Subscribe Free!
    • Manage Subscription
  • Departments
    • Choral
    • String Section
      • String Section
    • Concert Band
    • Modern Band
      • Mariachi
    • Orchestra
    • Instruments
      • Woodwinds
      • Percussion
      • Repertoire
      • Playing Tips
    • Marching Band
    • Resources
      • Fundraising
    • Jazz
    • Brass
    • General Music
    • Advocacy
      • NAfME Neighborhood
      • MAC Corner
      • MusicEd: Mentor Minute
    • Commentary
      • Bubbett’s Bookshelf
      • Leadership Tips
      • Perspective
      • InService
      • Tone Deaf Comics
    • Features
    • News
      • Headlines
  • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
  • Support
  • Awards/Entries
    • 50 Teachers Who Make a Difference
    • Teachers’ Choice Awards
  • Advertise
    • Email PR!

© 2005 - 2024 artistpro, LLC 7012 City Center Way, Suite 207 Fairview, Tennessee 37062 (800) 682-8114