Yorkshire Post

Schools out of tune with the sound of music

Proms boss attacks lack of lessons to engage young ‘Education must evolve despite funds pressure’

- RUBY KITCHEN EDUCATION CORRESPOND­ENT Email: ruby.kitchen@jpimedia.co.uk Twitter: @ReporterRu­by

THE DISCORDANT clamour of an enthusiast­ic choir is a sound synonymous with the memory of music lessons in school.

Yet these time-honoured traditions in musical education, a former controller of the BBC Proms has warned, are in danger of disappeari­ng.

There are “huge disparitie­s” in education provision, Sir Nicholas Kenyon has said at the close of an 18-month inquiry by The Music Commission, alongside a failure to recognise how young people engage with the subject. Music education must evolve to fit the needs of the 21st century, he warns, before the talent of today’s youth is squandered in the absence of appreciati­on.

“Every young person should be supported to achieve their musical potential, whatever their background,” report chairman Sir Nicholas has said. “This is a basic issue of equality of opportunit­y.”

There have been rising concerns over access to an arts education, with an investigat­ion by The Yorkshire Post last year revealing a patchwork picture of provision. The subject was being pushed to the margins of the state curriculum, experts warned, with schools facing mounting pressure over performanc­e and funding.

There were tales of classes being cut, of falling exam entry rates, and of parents being asked to pay financial contributi­ons.

But there were also moving stories of bold moves to maintain provision, and no more so than in Queensbury, Bradford, home to the original Black Dyke Band.

At the village’s Foxhill Primary, more than half of the children are in the choir. And despite the school having to fundraise for provision, headteache­r Sally Hey said, she remains convinced over the benefits it brings. “For as long as I’m head, I’m not going to take any enjoyment out of school for the children,” she added.

Now, as the findings of the full inquiry are published, there are calls for changes to widen participat­ion for children. Among the suggestion­s is a move towards universall­y-free music tuition in schools, a stipulatio­n that schools can only be classed as ‘outstandin­g’ if they have a broad cultural programme, and initiative­s to involve young people more.

The music industry generates “significan­t economic value”, the report concludes, but education in the arts also improves confidence and broader academic attainment.

Inquiry chairman Sir Nicholas, stating that he recognised the pressures on schools when it came to targets and results, added: “There’s a growing understand­ing that this is not enough. Part of this is about funding and connecting young people with the opportunit­ies there are to progress, but we have got to do more to move music education into the 21st century.

“There is some great practice out there, especially in the early years, as we’ve shown that we can start them on this journey.

“The problem is that too often we are then failing them – and ourselves – by not supporting them to progress.”

 ?? PICTURE: SIMON HULME. ?? SOUND PRACTICE: Lilly Manton and Nathan Elam, members of the brass band at Foxhill Primary School, Queensbury.
PICTURE: SIMON HULME. SOUND PRACTICE: Lilly Manton and Nathan Elam, members of the brass band at Foxhill Primary School, Queensbury.

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