In the year that Patrick Bents has taught band at Heritage E-STEM Magnet School in West St. Paul, he's heard legends of the jazz band at the old junior high and pored over old trophies and band uniforms, evidence of the West St. Paul-Mendota Heights-Eagan district's tradition of strong music programming.
After several years of budget reductions, some which affected music, the district spent the last year moving in the opposite direction — restoring and adding to its music offerings. By hiring music teachers, adding lessons, repairing old instruments and standardizing music instruction time across the district, West St. Paul is bucking a national trend toward erosion of music offerings in school.
"There's something that was here that I think people would like to see again," Bents said.
The decision to reinvest in music came after a 2011 task force recommended strengthening existing music programming and restoring things that had been cut.
"We do have a really strong tradition of music in this district," said Katie Pearson, choir director at Friendly Hills Middle School and a task force member. Many parents and staff members "wanted staffing to be restored and opportunities back for their children."
As a result, the district added two staff members to teach pull-out lessons for middle school band and orchestra students so kids can have small-group instruction, Pearson said.
The district also spent $50,000 to repair district-owned instruments, many of which hadn't been fixed in years, Bents said. Other efforts include ensuring that elementary school students receive 90 minutes of weekly music instruction — previously, the amount varied by school — and allotting hours to a part-time position coordinating music districtwide, said Superintendent Nancy Allen-Mastro.
One of the district's goals is to increase participation at all levels, but particularly in high school, where music is an elective, Allen-Mastro said.