On Saturday September 24, Murray Sate University invited twenty-five marching bands to participate and compete in the annual Festival of Champions. Luckily for me, the Boonville High School Band of Gold was one of those bands. I was working most of the day, trying to help with running the competition, but I got a few hours to prepare the students for the preliminary competition. I met up with the band at the warm up site, and immediately knew, just by the look on their faces, that they were ready to perform. It had been two weeks(the competition on September 10) since I last saw them perform, and this time they were a lot more focused. The band, during warm up, sounded more mature than I had ever heard them throughout the season. They had a nice, rich and dark tone and only missed one release during the entire warm up. I was very pumped up for them to perform, especially after asking the band kids if they were ready to throw down their best performance to date, and getting a screamed reply "YES!!!!" The students marched on to the field and played an amazing show. After their performance, the students, the rest of the staff, and myself all eagerly awaited the announcements of which bands made it to finals. Out of the twenty-five bands that competed in the preliminaries, the judges selected twelve for finals. Although I watched a great performance by the band, I was still unsure if it was going to great enough for a spot in finals. To both mine, and the band's surprise, the announcer called Boonville High School as one of the finalist bands for Festival of Champions 2011.
This is when I realized that if you come focused, and perform as if you will never get to perform again. even against all odds, you can come out on top. The students did perform this way, and were rewarded for it. They made it to finals, and performed well again. The band placed 11th overall, next to some very fierce competition. Great job guys!
This post will also be my last, sadly, because my project for this term has drawn to a close. I Have learned so much and will now take this opportunity to reflect on what I have learned. The biggest lesson I probably learned about myself and my teaching abilities is that to be an effective teacher you must have patience and remain open minded. Even though these are very broad lessons, they have really helped me to learn more about myself. I learned that in one class period, you can't try to fix everything that needs to be fixed, it's impossible, especially if you're picky. If I could do things differently, I would just try to focus on one thing at a time so that the students don't get information overload. Most students can't handle trying to change multiple things about their show at one time. The other lesson I learned, which is to remain open minded, is one I am sure will help me grow as a future educator. Staying open minded is what can make or break a teacher in my opinion. Over the time span I spent working with this band, I sometimes caught myself only trying to teach with one technique, instead of being open minded to how students learn, and teaching using multiple techniques. I feel that if I can really broaden my horizons on different styles of teaching students, I can become the "master teacher" and build up a great program for the arts in whatever school I end up in. Overall, this experience has been quite rewarding and, if given the chance, I would do it all over again.
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