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An Instrument for Every Child
The Federal Cultural Foundation's contribution to the European Capital of Culture 2010
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In 2010, the city of Essen and the Ruhr region will join Pécs and Istanbul as Europe's Capital of Culture. The German Federal Cultural Foundation will participate in the German programme of Europe's Capital of Culture with a major project to support cultural education. Cultural education is one of the key areas which requires pan-European efforts to develop new projectsin order to improve the chances of coming generations and reveal common perspectives. The Federal Cultural Foundation has made a conscious decision to initiate a "Capital of Culture project" that addresses what the Capital of Culture will need in the future, to what extent art can make a contribution toward that goal, and how the project can take topics of European significance into account.
To achieve these goals, the Foundation initiated a dialogue with artists, cultural policymakers, sociologists, theatre directors, teachers, city government officials, social workers and mayors in the Ruhr region to develop a project that could support the local culture on a wide scale in the long term.
All primary school children in the Ruhr region will be given the opportunity to receive qualified instrumental instruction once or twice a week over a period of four years (2007 to 2010). Each child will be given an instrument of his/her choosing for the duration of the project.
With this project, the Federal Cultural Foundation will be expanding on an idea developed for children in Bochum, giving school-age children in the entire Ruhr region the same opportunity to learn an instrument. The project combines the competence of music schools with the resources of primary schools, thereby promoting long-term cultural education. The Foundation hopes to create a visible example of how cultural education can be realized as a basic provision for society.
The programme will be carried out jointly by the Federal Cultural Foundation, the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, local communities and the GLS Treuhand Foundations for the Future (Zukunftsstiftung Bildung in der GLS Treuhand). Furthermore, its funding will be supplemented by donations from corporate and private sponsors. The state of North Rhine-Westphalia has agreed to continue funding the programme beyond 2010 which will ensure its sustainability.
The concept
An Instrument for Every Child is intended to supplement regular musical instruction and works together with existing music schools on location in order to ensure qualified instrumental instruction. The parents of all the children involved in the programme - even the youngest entering first grade - will be informed about the project which will provide every child an instrument of his/her choice. The students receive the instruments on loan and are encouraged to take them home to practice.
Children in the first grade spend their instruction time being introduced to rhythm and musical notation through games, as well as learn about a variety of instruments. The joint instruction by both primary school teachers and music school teachers enable the instructors to work intensively with the children. It is also important to the Federal Cultural Foundation that the professional standards of the instrumental instruction be guaranteed.
In the second grade, instrumental instruction will be given to smaller groups of 4 to 6 children per teacher. Each child will be allowed to choose an instrument. The guitar is the undisputed favourite among the children, followed by the violin and recorder. However, the accordion and the Turkish baglama saz will also be offered. The strings will be placed together in one group; the woodwind and brass players will likewise be divided into groups of their own. In this way, the children will become familiar with the characteristic ensemble sound and learn how to make music together at a very young age.
From the third grade up, the instrumental instruction will be supplemented by ensemble performance in an orchestral situation. All the upper-grade children will perform together in a school orchestra once a week. Of course, the social aspect of this activity is just as important for the children as the experience of musical performance. And naturally, the rehearsals must culminate in a public performance as an orchestra. At the end of each school year, the students will perform a large final concert in their city's philharmonic orchestra or concert hall. This will not only familiarize the children with the backstage area of concert halls, but also let them feel the butterflies in their stomach before going on stage, experience the limelight and revel in the applause.
The cultural programme developed by the Capital of Culture 2010 plans to feature a large concert performed by the school children.
In summer 2008, the "Instrument for Every Child" project office began providing instruments to children.
The cultural-political background
In recent years, many have emphasized the importance of early musical training for childhood development, relentlessly criticized antiquated teaching methods in school, and pointed out the problem of socially integrating children from all classes of society. The initiators of this programme hope to create new impulses for aesthetic education which will influence other areas beyond the musical field. Fostering cultural heritage should not merely focus on preserving and securing material goods, but also create new experience and competence in order to awaken people's interest in culture.
The Federal Cultural Foundation hopes that this programme will produce far-reaching consequences for the entire country. On the occasion of the European Capital of Culture 2010, the Ruhr region will demonstrate how aesthetic education, the most important resource for conveying our cultural heritage to future generations and strengthening cultural involvement, can be systematically expanded and intensified.
In 2005, the results of a youth culture study showed that young people between the ages of 14 and 25 were clearly interested in participating in artistic activity and attending cultural events. However, there was a distinct discrepancy between children and young people in culturally-minded families and those from less educated classes. Seventeen percent of 14 to 25-year-olds admitted to never having gone to a theatre, museum or concert. The programme An Instrument for Every Child hopes to defuse this problem which is especially prevalent in the Ruhr region with its large immigrant population. It goes without saying that the Ruhr region is not the only place in Germany struggling to culturally integrate its young people.
With this in mind, the programme takes aim at an issue which extends beyond the borders of the Ruhr region and could serve as a model for other European Capitals of Culture. The longer this EU programme (established in 1985) continues, the more evident it becomes that the massive financial transfers connected to the "Capital of Culture" title should be invested in long-term cultural measures. In the wake of the alarming PISA studies, more and more people are beginning to pay increasing attention to the field of cultural education. Germany has much to do to reverse this situation which stands in stark contrast to its wealth of cultural institutions.
The Federal Cultural Foundation has allocated 10 million euros for its project An Instrument for Every Child from 2007 to 2010.
The foundation does not accept direct applications from communities or schools. In summer 2007 the communities and their music schools in the Ruhr region were contacted and invited to participate in the Instrument for Every Child programme.
The foundation "An Instrument for Every Child" is comprised of the following committees:
Board of Trustees
The members of the board of trustees are:
Hans-Heinrich Grosse-Brockhoff - State Secretary for Cultural Affairs of North Rhine-Westphalia; Hortensia Völckers - Artistic Director of the German Federal Cultural Foundation; Herbert Meier - Managing director of the GLS Foundations for the Future Association; Günter Winands, State Secretary of the Ministry for Schooling and Continuing Education of North Rhine-Westphalia; Alexander Farenholtz - Administrative Director of the German Federal Cultural Foundation; Dr. Marion Gierden-Jülich - State Secretary of the Ministry for Intergenerational Affairs, Family, Women and Integration of North Rhine-Westphalia; Thomas Rietschel - President of the College of Music and Performing Arts in Frankfurt am Main
Advisory Board
The following institutions are members of the advisory board:
The NRW State Association of Music Schools (LVdM), Federal Association of Private German Music Schools (bdpm), NRW State Music Council (LMR), Association of German Musicians (DTKV), NRW State Association of Cultural Youth Work (LKJ), NRW State Primary School Parent Association, NRW Parent Network, NRW Regional Office to Support Children and Young People from Immigrant Families (RAA)
Curatorial Panel
The members of the curatorial panel are:
Prof. Dr. Hans Günther Bastian - Founding director of the Institut für Begabungsforschung und Begabtenförderung in der Musik, Salzburg; Prof. Dr. Dr. Wolfgang Edelstein - Max Planck Institute, Center for Educational Research, Berlin; Michael Kaufmann - General Director of the Essen Philharmonic Orchestra; Rolf Kessler - School director at the Reinhardstrasse Community Primary School in Düsseldorf; Dr. Annette Lepenies - Qualified psychologist and deputy chairwoman of the Early Excellence Centre for children and their families, Berlin; Sefa-Inci Suvak - Journalist and editor, Cologne; Tabea Zimmermann - Violist
Partners for the programme "For every child an instrument" are the state of North Rhine-Westphalia and the GLS Treuhand Foundations for the Future (Zukunftsstiftung Bildung in der GLS Treuhand).


Artistic Areas:
Contact:
Dr. Ulrike Gropp
German Federal Cultural Foundation
Franckeplatz 1
06110 Halle (Saale)
Tel.: +49 (0)345 2997 117
Fax.: +49 (0)345 2997 333
>E-mail
Further Informations
Click here to watch an informative film about “An Instrument for Every Child”.
Click here to read an essay by Hortensia Völckers, the Artistic Director of the Federal Cultural Foundation, describing the programme “An Instrument for Every Child”.
Click here to read programme information and frequently asked questions