Curiosity, arts education and music by Dame Evelyn Glennie
As a solo percussionist, Evelyn Glennie performs with the world's
greatest conductors, orchestras, and artists. Profoundly deaf since the age of
12, Evelyn taught herself to hear with her body. She has received over 86
international awards, is a triple GRAMMY award winner and a BAFTA nominee. In 2007,
Evelyn was awarded Dame Commander of the British Empire.
Children's minds are fluid and free. They explore in an undaunted
manner and have a flexibility in the way they connect things. But encouraging
children to develop their own imagination doesn't always fit into the school
setting where their minds can become restricted by categorisations and
boundaries.
Schools and teachers face pressure to produce results and hit targets.
Incorporating the arts across the curriculum can help teachers approach
subjects in many different ways, giving them tools to teach flexibly. As a
child, I was very lucky to have a maths teacher who could see that teaching me
in a formal way was not registering with me. But because he could see my
interest in music, he was able to transform his teaching into a language I
could relate to. Fostering a sense of exploration in children is really
important when dealing with subjects that may feel more rigid in form.
The body is also important in the learning process. Sound is all around
us, and just as things around us vibrate, the body vibrates too and receives
resonance. When I'm teaching young children, I like for them to discover what a
sound is with their body. Because if you imagine that sounds only comes from
musical instruments, you already have a barrier there. But if you ask a
youngster to create a happy sound from a cushion or a chair or a school desk
then suddenly this object becomes a thing of exploration for them, and they're
using their bodies in ways they might not when in contact with an actual
musical instrument. I encourage them to feel the sound, to analyse it in
accordance with their particular journey and thoughts, and to develop a sense
of discovery and freedom regarding who they are.
Some children might say "I can feel that drum through my
feet" and someone else might say "I feel that drum through my
tummy." Whilst the eyes are unable to pick that up, your actual body
becomes the resonator. In fact, the body will receive more of that sound than
the ear, the ear will have lost that sound long before the body has, and the
sound will resonate far longer through the whole body. What young children can
do is really tap into the senses. It's not just that the eyes are there to see,
or the ears are there to hear; everything is connected. Which means we can
relate to things around us in greater ways than we probably are.
And the wonderful thing about the arts is that you never know what's
going to happen because you're feeding off the environment you're in and the
people you're with. Art helps you become comfortable with the unexpected, the
uncertain. It allows a form of creativity whereby if something doesn't go your
way you can feed off that and let it take you in a completely new direction.
I think this is why the arts in education is so important. Art allows
us to listen in different ways, to see in different ways, to connect in
different ways, to move in different ways. But if you're introducing arts at a
later age, there are only a few who can hold onto that childlike curiosity, to
have freedom in their own thinking and to do something that is truly them. The
younger we can catch children the better.
Evelyn Glennie is a solo
percussionist. She graduated from the Royal Academy of Music, London in 1985, and
now performs with the world's greatest conductors, orchestras, and artists. She
performed at the Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City in 2002 and at the opening
ceremony of the Deaf Olympics in Taipei in 2009, then went on to lead 1000
drummers for the world premiere of 'And I Will Kiss' at the London 2012 Olympic
Opening Ceremony. Evelyn is the commissioner of around 170 new works for solo
percussion from many of the world's most eminent composers, and also composes
music for film and television. She advises the next generation through Master
classes, lecture demonstrations, and motivational speaking.
Evelyn delivered a TED Talk in
2003 on 'How to truly listen', which has been watched over 3 million times. You
can watch here.
(c) Word Cloud provided by Art is Education
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