CMA FOUNDATION ANNOUNCES 2016 MUSIC EDUCATION GRANT RECIPIENTS

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Thanks to the generosity of Country artists and fans at CMA Music Festival, the CMA Foundation announced its annual donation for music education as well as grant recipients for 2016 with 29 charitable groups receiving a record $2.68 million.

The grants bring CMA’s total contributions since 2006 to more than $13.68 million for this important cause.  

“If it weren’t for the artists, who all perform for free during CMA Music Festival, and the thousands of fans who support the event each year, these donations would not be possible,” said Sarah Trahern, CMA Chief Executive Officer. “The CMA Foundation donates to causes that are important to our community, but every dollar is given on behalf of the artists and fans that support Music Fest each June.”

Programs benefiting from the CMA Foundation in 2016 include: 

4H
The 4-H Mission is to empower youth to reach their full potential, working and learning in partnership with caring adults. National 4-H Council exists to support this through a direct mission: to increase investment and participation in high quality 4-H Positive Youth Development. Through investment in promising, scalable programs nationwide, Council promotes replication of life-changing experiences and outcomes for youth. CMA Foundation is proud to support the inaugural Music Education Matters Summit in Atlanta. 

Camp Southern Ground
The vision for Camp Southern Ground in Peachtree City, Ga. is that of CMA Award-winning artist Zac Brown. Inspired by his own experience as a camp counselor, it is to create a state-of-the-art facility that will serve children ages 7-17 with both typical and special needs. It will be a place for children and their families to learn healthy life skills through an advanced program involving superior nutrition, physical exercise, music and arts, technology, and embracing the outdoor environment. Camp Southern Ground will have activities to challenge, educate and inspire children with diverse abilities, and from all socioeconomic backgrounds, races, and religions. 

Chicago Center for Music Education
Chicago Center for Music Education (ChiME) maintains a commitment to bring about whole-school change by providing year-round, age-appropriate music programs directly to schools. Their in-schools program breaks down barriers of race, culture, and economics through the universal language of music, and utilizes music as the vehicle for cognitive development as well as the development and enhancement of age appropriate social-emotional learning skills. 

Classical Kids Music Education
Classical Kids Music Education in Chicago is a theatrical organization that produces the highly acclaimed Classical Kids Live! symphony concert series. Classical Kids has collaborated with more than 400 distinguished orchestras in introducing more than 2 million children and their family members to the extraordinary lives and musical masterpieces of the great classical composers. Classical Kids works to enrich communities through direct access to culturally significant venues, professional artists and organizations, and high-quality theatrical productions, while fostering a new appreciation for classical music and the vibrant culture of that era. 

Education Through Music
Education Through Music (ETM) partners with inner-city schools to provide all students with music as a core subject, and to create school communities that value the arts. ETM’s mission is to promote the use of music in schools as a means of enhancing students’ academic performance and general development. The ETM model currently serves nearly 27,000 students in inner-city schools in New York City and reaches another 10,000 children through the work of their licensed affiliate organization in Los Angeles. 

Ethos, Inc.
Ethos believes that all kids, regardless of socioeconomic status or geographic location, deserve access to music education. Founded in 1998 in Portland, Oregon, Ethos is a 501(c)(3) non-profit that provides music lessons, group classes, camps, multicultural performances, and workshops to more than 7,000 students across Oregon each year. Initial classes were held in a basement at the University of Portland and staffed by a dedicated group of volunteers. Since then, the group has moved into its North Portland headquarters and employed nine full-time staff, eight full-time AmeriCorps members and 52 part-time music instructors.  

Girls Rock
Girls Rock Santa Barbara (GRSB) is a non-profit organization that empowers female-identified youth and fosters self-confidence, creativity, and teamwork by using music and female mentorship as tools for social change. GRSB brings girls together from diverse backgrounds and gives them the opportunity to expand their cultural awareness, develop life skills, and tell their unique group story. It is less about playing an instrument and more about finding one’s voice through music. GRSB is driven by one simple motto: love the music you make, and love yourself for making it.  

Give a Note Foundation
Reston, Va.-based Give a Note Foundation was established in 2011 by the leaders of the National Association for Music Education (NAfME) in response to the increasing threats to music education programs in an education environment that is focused on tested subjects and STEM. It became clear that in order to strengthen and preserve music for every child, we needed to expand support for music education beyond the music education profession. The mission of Give a Note Foundation is to nurture, grow and strengthen music education opportunities – every student, every school, every community. 

Guitars in the Classroom
Guitars in the Classroom (GITC) is dedicated to improving the quality of education for all students by expanding the role of learning through music in every kind of classroom. GITC improves musical access in public education through ongoing teacher training, mentoring and in-classroom coaching, as well as access to musical and instrumental resources. GITC teachers learn to lead hands on music integrated with English Language Arts, math, science, social studies, character development, and special education. GITC’s work promotes teacher effectiveness, student literacy, and academic success in K-12 by boosting student engagement, communication skills, critical thinking, and the capacity for creative collaboration. 

Harmony Project
Harmony Project offers music instruction to Los Angeles children with the greatest needs and the fewest resources. Founded in 2001 with only 36 students, the Harmony Project now commits to more than 2,000 students for their entire childhood to ensure they receive the support necessary to graduate high school and continue to college. Their mission promotes the healthy growth and development of children through the study, practice, and performance of music; builds healthier communities by investing in the positive development of children through music; and develops children as musical ambassadors of peace, hope, and understanding amongst people of diverse cultures, backgrounds, and beliefs. 

Metro Nashville Public Schools
A joint effort of Metro Nashville Public Schools, the mayor’s office and music industry and community leaders, the Music Makes Us® initiative aspires to be a national model for high quality music education. With a focus on music literacy and student participation, Music Makes Us® is strengthening traditional school music while adding a contemporary curriculum that embraces new technologies and reflects our diverse student population. 

Mr. Holland’s Opus Foundation
The Mr. Holland’s Opus Foundation keeps music alive in schools by donating musical instruments to under-funded music programs, giving young people the many benefits of music education, helping them to be better students, and inspiring creativity and expression through playing music. The Foundation was inspired by the acclaimed motion picture “Mr. Holland’s Opus,” the story of the profound effect a dedicated music teacher had on generations of students. In nearly twenty years, the foundation has donated just over 18,000 instruments to 1,357 schools nationwide. Over the life of the instruments, generations of students will benefit for years to come. 

Music & Youth Initiative
The Music & Youth Initiative in Boston establishes sustainable, high-quality after-school music programs for underserved youth, ages 10-18, through collaborations with leading youth development organizations (such as Boys & Girls Clubs and YMCAs), universities, and corporate partners. These “Music Clubhouse” programs are free (or for a minimal cost) to the participating youth. Music & Youth currently has 17 Music Clubhouses in Massachusetts and Texas, where more than 600 teens and pre-teens participate in formal contemporary music lessons every week. Founded in 2004, Music & Youth Initiative is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. 

Music Resource Center – Cincinnati
MRC-Cincinnati is a multifaceted, non-profit, after-school music and recording studio for adolescents that utilizes music education, recording, and the performing arts as a way to mentor teens, resulting in a sense of empowerment and accomplishment in an urban setting. Members can choose to take music lessons (guitar, drums, piano, voice), learn to make beats in the Teaching Studio, record their bands’ songs in the new, professional, multi-track recording studio, hold band practice in the rehearsal room, create original music in one of four project studios, have an after-school snack, hot summer lunch or help with homework in the lobby or perform in their new venue. 

Musicians Corner
The mission of Kidsville at Musicians Corner is to utilize the arts and play to help educate Nashville’s youth in the areas of music, nutrition, fitness, and literacy to enhance the development of healthy and successful futures for the city’s youngest citizens. They believe in the intrinsic value of play and provide opportunities for experiential learning, and multi-sensory, object-based exploration. 

Nashville Children’s Theatre
Nashville Children’s Theatre (NCT) is a professional theatre company providing the children, families, and educators of Middle Tennessee with theatrical experiences that inspire imagination, develop creativity, and build community. Founded in 1931 with a belief that a cultural heritage is the right of all children, NCT serves 80,000 Middle Tennessee youth, educators, and families each year with world-class productions and theatre education programs. In order to create future leaders who can solve tomorrow’s challenges with innovative ideas, NCT’s programs are developed and executed by the highest caliber artists and are accessible to children and families at all levels of financial, developmental, and physical abilities. 

Nashville Symphony Association
The Nashville Symphony is the largest performing arts non-profit in Tennessee and a major contributor to music education in Middle Tennessee. Music education and community engagement have been at the heart of the 83-member orchestra’s mission since its founding in 1946. Through concerts, classroom presentations, curriculum materials, instrument lessons and other hands-on learning opportunities, the Symphony’s free education and engagement programs reach and engage tens of thousands of adults and children in Middle Tennessee every year. 

New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Foundation
The mission of the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival and Foundation, Inc. (Jazz & Heritage Foundation) is to promote, preserve, perpetuate, and encourage the music, culture and heritage of communities in Louisiana through festivals, programs, and other cultural, educational, civic, and economic activities. 

Notes for Notes
Notes for Notes® is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that designs, equips, and staffs after-school recording studios inside Boys & Girls Clubs offering youth the opportunity to explore, create, and record music for free. Notes for Notes studios are packed with professional instruments (guitars, basses, drums, keyboards/synths), equipment (DJ gear, digital music workstations), and full recording facilities. Beyond providing access to equipment and resources, they educate youth about careers both on the stage and behind the scenes. 

Play On, Philly! (POP)
POP partners with Philadelphia schools to provide an educational and social preparedness program while developing high-level musical knowledge and performance skills. During its 2011 pilot year, POP served 110 students in grades K-8 at St. Francis de Sales School. In 2012, the tuition-free program was expanded to Freire Charter Middle School, serving students in grades 5-8. Today, Play On, Philly! trains 250 students at these two Music Center sites. Students are immersed in intensive, after-school music instruction 2.5 hours per day, 5 days per week throughout the school year and in a rigorous summer program in July. 

Quest Center
The Quest Center is a 501(c)(3) non-profit music education and resource center located in Dickson Tenn., a largely rural and lower-income community 35 miles west of Nashville. The Center offers programs and a curated environment for music education, enrichment and community development. The program serves children grades pre-K-12, including at-risk youth; those with behavioral, social, and emotional issues; and developmental delays. 

Rocketown of Middle Tennessee
Founded by contemporary Christian music artist Michael W. Smith in 1994, Rocketown in Nashville serves children and teens through innovative and one-of-a-kind programs. Their vision is to be the place of peace, purpose, and possibilities for youth. All young people are welcome at Rocketown, and they regularly interact with those who are under-served, unsupported, disconnected, and feel isolated and hopeless. They believe young people grow and learn more readily in a community that is welcoming, diverse, and challenges them to think. 

Rosie’s House: A Music Academy for Children
Rosie’s House in Phoenix is dedicated to the long-term success of Arizona students and utilizes music as a method of inspiration, motivation, and intervention for youth. Rosie’s House Free Afterschool Music Lessons for Underserved Youth acts as a method of prevention by providing a “home” for more than 200 youth vulnerable to drug and gang violence. In Arizona, at a time when the average per-pupil expenditure on arts instruction is less than $1, they are a beacon of opportunity for youth that need a safe after-school “home.” Overall, they serve 410 youth annually through their string, wind, brass, piano, choir, and mariachi programs. 

Tennessee Performing Arts Center
TPAC’s Disney Musicals in Schools (DMIS) is a free semester-long, after-school musical theater program that inspires students and their school communities to organize around the challenging work of mounting a 30-45-minute musical production. Guided by TPAC Teaching Artists, this program utilizes active partnerships that combine school, professional, and community resources to create rich avenues for student learning while providing teachers with the training and tools needed to strengthen their arts programs. DMIS is expected to reach nearly 1,300 Metro Nashville Public Schools students in 26 elementary and middle schools this school year.  

The People’s Music School
The People’s Music School’s mission is to deliver access to the benefits of high-quality, tuition-free music education. Through intensive instruction and performance, students achieve excellence in music that transfers to other areas in life. They grow musically, socially, emotionally, and intellectually, and develop a foundation of responsibility, self-esteem, resilience, and purpose. TPMS currently serves nearly 500 at-risk students through individual instruction, group ensemble participation, music theory, and performance opportunities across the Chicago metropolitan area.  

The Young Americans
The Young Americans in Corona, Calif. is a non-profit 501(c)(3) performing arts and educational company with no political or religious affiliations. The group was founded in 1962 by Milton C. Anderson and is credited with creating the very popular “glee” and “show-choir” concepts in the early ‘60’s. The Young Americans serve as the oldest and largest youth music advocacy group in the world whose main focus is to help strengthen music education programs in schools and communities, and to inspire people though music and the arts. 

Virginia Tech Foundation, Inc.
The Virginia Tech String Project, established in 2007, is the signature outreach program for the School of Music at Virginia Tech. Their mission is twofold: to provide affordable string instrument lessons to students in the community and to prepare Virginia Tech’s undergraduate music students for success in the field of music education. They fill a significant gap in the public school system curriculum by providing low-cost beginning lessons in string instruments to students in the third and fourth grades. The students are taught by undergraduate music students, who are overseen, evaluated, and given critical feedback by the conductors and director. 

W.O. Smith/Nashville Community Music School
Since 1984, W.O. Smith Music School has provided music instruction to low-income students in the metropolitan Nashville area. Their vision is simple: transform lives through music. They strive to offer the best music education possible for their students, and do so through private instruction, classes, ensemble opportunities, as well as master classes and performances by both local and national artists. The children are provided an instrument, necessary musical materials, and a volunteer teaching artist for their instruction. Lessons are offered for fifty cents and no student is turned away due to an inability to pay fees for any school programs. 

Youth Empowerment through Arts and Humanities
YEAH! provides a conservatory-style learning atmosphere in which students are immersed for one week in the art of making music. Established 13 years ago in Murfreesboro, Tenn., YEAH! provides music programming that is accessible and engaging for young women because of its emphasis on pop, rock ‘n’ roll, and Country Music. Girls participate in instrument instruction, music industry workshops, social justice workshops, ensemble practice, and guest artist performances. Participating students form a band and learn in an ensemble setting using popular music to build music fundamentals. Students are taught how to play instruments, work together, write original songs, and market their bands.

Studies show students who participate in the arts are more likely to graduate, have better attendance rates, and higher GPAs than students not enrolled in arts classes. The CMA Foundation recognizes the importance of music education in keeping kids engaged and in school as well as providing access to higher education through scholarships.

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