Professional certification.I am probably "preaching to the choir," since many of you who read this column are certified yourselves and support teacher certification. Hopefully, you will share these remarks with each "doubting Thomas" you encounter. Certification has always struggled to gain in numbers in numbered parts; as, a book published in numbers. See also: Number and importance, not only with our own members but also with the public. Members say, "I don't need to be certified because I have a degree in music." To those "doubting Thomases" of certification, I say, a college degree is the beginning of a lifetime of learning, not the end of learning. Rev. Edward A. Malloy in Monk's Reflections, states, "A college degree is not a sign that one is a finished product but an indication that a person is prepared for life." The public says, "I only care that the teacher live close by and not charge too much, after all Johnny is only a beginner." To those "doubting Thomases," I say, the foundation of music education has to be the very best so that a child will be entranced with learning and excited by all the possibilities surrounding him. The teacher creates the future of music and music-making for each child. The Certification Commission has established a strong foundation for our Certification Program with the development of the Standards--What a Nationally Certified Teacher A certified teacher is a teacher who has earned credentials from an authoritative source, such as the government, a higher education institution or a private source. These certifications allow teachers to teach in schools which require authorization in general, as well as allowing of Music Should Know and Be Able To Do. Certification sets a standard of excellence for the teachers that choose to become and remain certified. Certification goes beyond fine performing skills and advanced repertoire knowledge. Teachers that choose to become certified are accepting the challenge of excellence in everything they do as professionals--not just in the teaching of music and their instruments, but being business and marketing managers, being knowledgeable about pedagogy and teaching techniques and being knowledgeable about human development and learning styles. MTNA MTNA Music Teachers National Association MTNA Middle Tennessee Nursery Association (McMinnville, Tennessee) must market that excellence to the public if certification is to survive. Last year, MTNA developed the Assessment Tools for the Independent Music Teacher, as one way in which teachers can begin to assess their own studios and teaching skills and prepare for certification. They were placed in the August/September 2004 issue of AMT See vPro. and are available through the MTNA website. For me, state and national certification national certification Lab medicine A voluntary form of regulation that affirms that a person has the knowledge and skill to perform essential tasks in a given field, in the lab or in nursing; NC is granted by nongovernmental agencies or associations with was validation that I was indeed qualified to teach, that I had the skills necessary to help others learn about music, learn about a particular instrument and how to play that instrument with proper technique, fluency and expression. This validation came from my peers and colleagues in a comprehensive presentation of students at all levels of advancement. It challenged and committed me to a lifetime endeavor of continued learning through the certification renewal points program. Being a certified teacher does not allow for complacency in teaching, but makes one always look for a better way to present a technique, to teach the intricacies of a music phrase, to find the best repertoire selection for a student's development and promote the love of music. I believe that certification will be chosen by our teachers, and certified teachers will be chosen and are being chosen by parents who desire the best musical education for their children. With the advent of student assessment for public school students, parents are more aware and more critical of the education their children are receiving. A colleague of mine who just received her MTNA certification last summer told me, "MTNA and state certification is a quality control for potential and existing students and their parents." Certification is an affirmation of what we know as musicians, teachers and independent business owners. Certification is a challenge for us to learn what we do not know and to continually upgrade and renew our skills. We have to provide the incentives that will make teachers want to seek out certification, and parents seek out certified teachers. We especially need to publicize pub·li·cize tr.v. pub·li·cized, pub·li·ciz·ing, pub·li·ciz·es To give publicity to. publicize or -cise Verb [-cizing, -cized] our status as certified teachers in our communities. The public must demand a certified teacher like they demand a CPA (Computer Press Association, Landing, NJ) An earlier membership organization founded in 1983 that promoted excellence in computer journalism. Its annual awards honored outstanding examples in print, broadcast and electronic media. The CPA disbanded in 2000. , lawyer or even a doctor. We need the help of every certified teacher in the country to do this. It will take all of us working together to develop the image of the music teacher as a well-educated certified professional member of society who deserves an adequate income and standard of living. Thomas Murton wrote, "It is a temptation to settle for less." Are we going to settle for less or be the best that we can be? Make certification a commitment not only to yourself, but also to our profession. Phyllis I. Pieffer, NCTM NCTM National Council of Teachers of Mathematics NCTM Nationally Certified Teacher of Music NCTM North Carolina Transportation Museum NCTM National Capital Trolley Museum NCTM Nationally Certified in Therapeutic Massage , is immediate past president of MTNA. An independent music teacher, she also is on the faculty of Grays Harbor College Grays Harbor College is a community college located in Aberdeen, Washington. It was founded in 1930. The college sits on an 120 acre campus in Aberdeen with "learning centers" in Elma, Raymond, Ilwaco, and downtown Aberdeen. External links
Rochester, once known as The Flour City, and more recently as The Flower City or . Newly Certified MTNA is proud to acknowledge the following newly certified music teachers: (June 15, 2005 through August 10, 2005) Alabama: Ruth B. Skaggs, Daphne daphne, in botany daphne, common name for, and genus name of, certain low deciduous or evergreen shrubs native to Eurasia. In the United States several naturalized species are cultivated for their handsome foliage and fragrant flowers, e.g., D. , Piano Alaska: Timothy Smith, Anchorage Anchorage (ăng`kərĭj), city (1990 pop. 226,338), Anchorage census div., S central Alaska, a port at the head of Cook Inlet; inc. 1920. , Piano Arizona: Bette J. Franke, Sun City West, Piano Chyleen Lauritzen, Thatcher Thatch·er , Margaret Hilda. Baroness. Born 1925. British Conservative politician who served as prime minister (1979-1990). Her administration was marked by anti-inflationary measures, a brief war in the Falkland Islands (1982), and the passage of a , Piano Colorado: Olga R. Dashevskaya, Lakewood, Piano Jilt G. Hanrahan, Colorado Springs Colorado Springs, city (1990 pop. 281,140), seat of El Paso co., central Colo., on Monument and Fountain creeks, at the foot of Pikes Peak; inc. 1886. It is a year-round resort and a booming military, technological, and commercial city. , Piano Iowa: Melanie Karr Munro, Cedar Rapids Cedar Rapids, city (1990 pop. 108,751), seat of Linn co., E central Iowa, on the Cedar River; inc. as a city 1856. The second largest city in Iowa, it is named for the surging rapids in the river. , Piano Mary E. Schubich, Independence, Piano Oregon: Patti K Widener, Portland, Piano Tennessee: Viktoria Lindsay, Jasper, Piano Joy E. Whetstone whetstone, natural or manufactured stone used as an abrasive solid to sharpen tools. It is used dry, with water, or with oil. Such a stone of the finer grade used with oil is usually called an oilstone. , Jackson, Piano Texas: Sara Miller, Bryan, Piano Utah: Maya A. Beebe, Salt Lake City, Piano Joan W. Brinton, Murray, Piano Valerie A. Evensen, Tooele, Piano Barbara Bryner Gill, Salt Lake City, Piano Norma K. Lambert, Sandy, Piano Denise H. Williams, Provo, Piano Washington: Linda R. Butler, East Wenatchee, Piano
Newly Certified
MTNA is proud to acknowledge the following newly certified
music teachers:
(June 15, 2005 through August 10, 2005)
Alabama: Ruth B. Skaggs, Daphne, Piano
Alaska: Timothy Smith, Anchorage, Piano
Arizona: Bette J. Franke, Sun City West, Piano
Chyleen Lauritzen, Thatcher, Piano
Colorado: Olga R. Dashevskaya, Lakewood, Piano
Jill G. Hanrahan, Colorado Springs, Piano
Iowa: Melanie Karr Munro, Cedar Rapids, Piano
Mary E. Schubich, Independence, Piano
Oregon: Patti K Widener, Portland, Piano
Tennessee: Viktoria Lindsay, Jasper, Piano
Joy E. Whetstone, Jackson, Piano
Texas: Sara Miller, Bryan, Piano
Utah: Maya A. Beebe, Salt Lake City, Piano
Joan W. Brinton, Murray, Piano
Valerie A. Evensen, Tooele, Piano
Barbara Bryner Gill, Salt Lake City, Piano
Norma K. Lambert, Sandy, Piano
Denise H. Williams, Provo, Piano
Washington: Linda R. Butler, East Wenatchee, Piano
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion