Forty fifth-graders stumbling through eight measures of "Jingle Bells" on assorted instruments might sound like torture to some, but it's a welcome addition for Nicole Rubis, a high school band director in Columbia Heights.
Rubis is also director of the newly reinstated fifth-grade band at North Park Elementary, the third and final elementary school in the district to bring back a program that fell victim to budget cuts in the early 2000s.
Fifth-grade band began its comeback in the fall of 2009, when the VH1 Save the Music Foundation chose the district to receive three one-time $30,000 grants. The money was used to buy about 35 instruments and lesson books for each school, and the programs were renewed at Valley View in 2009, Highland Elementary in 2010 and now North Park.
Mary Bussman, principal at Columbia Heights' middle school, said the grant application was submitted as part of the district's five-year plan for visual and performing arts.
"We talked about the need in our district to be able to provide the instruments for the kids," Bussman said. She estimates that more than 70 percent of the district's students live in poverty and would be unable to participate in band without school-owned instruments.
The VH1 Save the Music Foundation officials said they chose Columbia Heights in part because of the commitment from district leadership to the music program. "It's not just one principal or one music teacher who believes in it," said Chiho Okuizumi, grantee and compliance manager for the foundation.
The foundation had previously given about $400,000 in grants to nine other Minnesota schools, mostly in Minneapolis.
Okuizumi said the foundation has seen an increase in demand from districts around the country over the past few years because of the bad economy. "I think our work, in terms of advocating for music education and helping districts start or restore the programs, is getting more and more important," she said.