Music Event Contest | Make Music Chattanooga

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Music Event Contest | Make Music Chattanooga

First, we all need to know about Make Music Day. Make Music is a free celebration of music around the world on June 21st. Launched in 1982 in France as the Fête de la Musique, it is now held on the same day in more than 800 cities in 120 countries, including Chattanooga. Completely different from a typical music festival, Make Music is open to anyone who wants to take part. Every kind of musician — young and old, amateur and professional, of every musical persuasion — pours onto streets, parks, plazas, and porches to share their music with friends, neighbors, and strangers. All of it is free and open to the public.

Our $1,500 will sponsor a contest where anyone can pitch, plan and lead their own Make Music CHA event. The contest winners will be given our funds to pay themselves and buy any supplies needed that are not donated or cannot be borrowed. A small portion of the funds will also be used to advertise the contest, winning events and pay photographers/videographers to document it. A few examples of past events are the Drum DuetspBuzzCommunity Drum Circle, Music on the Move, Surprise Sax Solos, the Mega Jam.

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Music Therapy | Austin Hatcher Foundation

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Music Therapy | Austin Hatcher Foundation

Pediatric cancer is abominable. Finally something we can all agree on. Enter the Austin Hatcher Foundation for Pediatric Cancer. Based right here in Chattanooga, their mission is to erase the effects of pediatric cancer and optimize each child’s quality of life through essential specialized intervention beginning at the time of diagnoses and continuing throughout survivorship.

Our $1,500 grant will bring music therapy into the mix. Megan Taylor is a music therapist who has worked with teens with behavioral problems and addictions, children with developmental delays and cancer diagnoses, and adults within the memory care units. She is also working specifically with children with Cystic Fibrosis, providing them individualized music therapy services during their hospital stay. She uses a wide range of instruments to help her clients meet their goals, from songwriting to drumming, to playing the guitar, and many other instruments in between.

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Mindfulness Training for Educators | Center for Mindful Living

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Mindfulness Training for Educators | Center for Mindful Living

At the end of the 2017-18 school year, 26% of first year Hamilton County Department of Education (HCDE) teachers left for good. Teacher stress is at an all time high. According to Gallup, 46% of teachers report high daily stress during the school year. This is now tied with nurses for the highest rate among all occupational groups. The consequences are being felt. Teacher stress is correlated with lower student achievement, reduced continuity for students and increased costs. Additionally, higher teacher engagement in their jobs predicts higher student achievement outcomes. Reducing teacher stress benefits students.

Department of Education projects increases in both student enrollment and teacher hiring over the next 5 years, yet enrollments in teacher education programs were down 35 percent and the number of graduates dropped by 23 percent between 2009 and 2014. Reducing teacher stress benefits teachers and public education.

PAUSE (Practices in Awareness and Understanding for Sustaining Educators) is a pilot demonstration program run by the Center for Mindful Living to teach mindfulness in HCDE classrooms.  PAUSE is partnering with three elementary schools in Hamilton County - Hardy, Dupont and Middle Valley, representing a wide variety of communities - inner city, multicultural, and suburban to demonstrate the effectiveness of the model across demographic groups. This program will benefit teachers and students by: reducing teacher burnout, increasing teacher retention, increasing prosocial behavior among students, increasing teaching time during the academic day, and creating a more positive classroom culture. Our $3,000 is well spent.

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Rock and Roll Art Car | Art 120

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Rock and Roll Art Car | Art 120

You would have to travel to Baltimore, Maryland or Houston, Texas to experience an art car as spectacular (take that, Nashville) as the one that now lives in Chattanooga. Master art teacher, Rebecca Bass, has gifted us her latest, student-led, collaborative art car entitled, "It's Only Rock and Roll". This moving tribute celebrates the history, music, and art of the 60's and 70's while featuring several different visual art mediums students can experience firsthand. We are now the art car capital of the region, thanks to Kate Warren of Art 120. "It's Only Rock and Roll" has already been featured on the the History Channel during Car Week and there is talk about doing a documentary on how the car was made. It’s pretty epic.

What did we fund if the car was free? Transporting it to Chattanooga from Houston. Fortunately just in time for the Mainx24 parade December 1st. After that, "It's Only Rock and Roll" serves as a teaching tool for art and career track education students in Hamilton County. It reaches some of the thirty-two elementary schools in Chattanooga that do not have an art program and animates local public events with her presence. Yes, its a she.

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Reading with Black Santa | Mary Walker Historical and Educational Foundation

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Reading with Black Santa | Mary Walker Historical and Educational Foundation

First, in case you don’t know, let’s learn about Mary Walker. Mary Walker Historical and Educational Foundation has been in operation since its founding in 1970. It was named for Mary Walker, a tenant of what is now Mary Walker Towers in South Chattanooga, the foundation was created in her honor. Mary learned to read at age 117. She lived to be 121. Wow.

On December 15th Black Santa was available for pictures, and thanks to our $500 grant, gave away books, light refreshments and a few giveaways for children at Olivet Nation on Jersey Pike. Thanks to partnerships with Olivet Baptist, The Chattanooga News Chronicle, and The Chattanooga Courier the event was well attended and will grow each year. This was Black Santa, but he is a Santa like all Santa's for all children, regardless of race.

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Rebuilding a Band | Tyner High School

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Rebuilding a Band | Tyner High School

Roy Collins is the new band director at Tyner Academy. He has a problem. He recruited more students to join band than he has instruments. There are as many as 5 students playing the same instruments and students rotating mouthpieces during class. So, we gave him $1,500 to buy 3 trumpets, 3 clarinets, 2 alto saxophones and a baritone. He still needs more! Are you a band geek at heart and want to do something? You can! Make a donation to Tyner Academy and earmark the funds for Roy Collins, Band.

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Cafe Donaldson | Calvin Donaldson Environmental Science Academy

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Cafe Donaldson | Calvin Donaldson Environmental Science Academy

Calvin Donaldson Environmental Science Academy (CDESA) has a new principal, Rose Odom. She has an idea to end food fights, intentional spilling, eating with hands (when a utensil would be appropriate), talking over each other, inappropriate line behavior, and inappropriate table manners in the cafeteria. Cafe Donaldson will create a restaurant dining atmosphere with our $1,500 grant for tabes and chairs, that the students have a chance to earn the opportunity to eat in. This will be special for them, they will have music and sometimes special guests.

Students are so eager to please when they are given a clear set of guidelines and expectations. Instead of shaming them and always using discipline, Rose wants to create something that they can work towards with clear expectations, so that they are learning and having positive behavior change at the same time. Why this? It may be a hard stretch of the imagination if you were raised in a household where table manners were taught, food was plenty, and your family sat down together to share meals. For many of these students, they do not share this same upbringing, for what ever reason, maybe their parents are working during the evening hours and they are being watched by an older sibling, or maybe food is scarce at their house and they learn to hide and stash food for themselves. This idea can help. We can help.

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Soil Resources | NEEMA Community Garden

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Soil Resources | NEEMA Community Garden

We have a saint among us. Her name is Charlene Nash. Read about her work helping farmers in Africa here. After a recent trip to Madagascar, Charlene will be assisting Father Peter Kanyi build out the community garden of NEEMA, the Kiswahili name for grace. NEEMA promotes self-sufficiency for refugee and immigrant individuals and families by providing advocacy, support and education in the Chattanooga area. The community garden on Main St is in need of building materials to make it more productive and a more comfortable gathering place, while still remaining mobile if it needed to move, for the immigrant farmers growing foods familiar to them in their home country.

This $3,000 grant benefits all refugees who garden at NEEMA as well as those in the neighborhood with beds of their own. With all the services NEEMA provides (culture counseling, housing, medical care, pastoral care, transportation, translation, ESL classes, etc), the garden just adds another human, friendly dimension to an already confusing transition for many refugees/immigrants. Growing familiar foods as well as the non judgmental, social interaction in a garden cannot be reproduced anywhere else. Making sure these people who are new to our area can make a successful transition and become contributing members of the community will benefit Chattanooga as a whole.

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