Project STEP changes young lives through music
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| Boston
Sitting on the floor of the tiny choir room, the three children listen, brows wrinkled, as Emileigh Vandiver plays a series of notes on the piano.
鈥淥ne, two, three, four,鈥 Ms. Vandiver counts. 鈥淢ake sure you have four beats in every measure.鈥 聽
The students scribble furiously on their sheets of paper. One girl turns hers in. Vandiver looks at the penciled-in musical notes, then returns the page. 鈥淐an you listen to what you鈥檝e written?鈥 Vandiver asks her. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not right. But it鈥檚 so close.鈥
Vandiver plays four keys, slowly, and the student鈥檚 face lights up. The girl rubs her eraser across the page, fills in the blank spaces, and again hands in her work. This time, Vandiver nods in approval.
The class, one of many that take place every Saturday in the underbelly of Boston鈥檚 Symphony Hall, the home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra (BSO), is part of solf猫ge 鈥 the study of music using the sol-fa syllables. It鈥檚 a standard lesson for students in Project STEP, a nonprofit classical music program headquartered in the historical building.
Like other serious music initiatives, Project STEP chooses the most promising students, who test in at kindergarten age via a two-tier assessment process. It also employs top teachers, who work closely with the students for years. But unlike other programs, STEP focuses solely on minorities who are underrepresented in the classical music profession, giving them the chance to learn both classical string instruments and critical life skills.
鈥淲hen we were founded, the goal was to place the students in orchestras,鈥 says executive director Mary Jaffee. 鈥淣ow, the broader goal is to give them the opportunity to do what they want.鈥
The program started with seven students in 1982 after the BSO鈥檚 then-personnel manager, William Moyer, discovered how difficult it was to find musicians of color with the experience and skill necessary to earn a seat in a professional orchestra. Part of the problem was, and is, the prohibitive cost of training.
STEP, which stands for String Training and Education Program, subsidizes a large part of the teacher, orchestra, and music camp fees that are part of any comprehensive classical music-training program. Parents pay between $25 and $350 a year for courses that would normally cost as much as $8,000.
鈥淭he point was to completely remove the financial barrier,鈥 Ms. Jaffee says.
Today, the program鈥檚 roster consists of 44 youths, all black or Latino, from first through 12th grades. If history is a guide, each of them will go on to a college or music conservatory: STEP graduates boast a 100 percent rate of acceptance at higher-education institutions. 鈥淭his training is transferable,鈥 says Jaffee, who has been with the program for about a decade. 鈥淲e want our kids to have the life skills it takes to be productive, happy members of the world, their world.鈥
Alex Hernandez, age 15, is nothing if not productive. When he鈥檚 not in class at Dexter Southfield, a Brookline, Mass., private school where he鈥檚 an academic scholar, the ninth-grader is at crew or football practice. On Saturdays, Alex, who plays the viola, rehearses with the New England Conservatory鈥檚 award-winning Youth Philharmonic Orchestra. Throughout the week, he takes music lessons as part of the STEP curriculum.
鈥淭here are those who want it, and there are those who want it more,鈥 says Alex with a grin, quoting his Salvadoran mother. A STEP student since age 5, he has long applied the adage to his busy schedule and his life 鈥 with the program鈥檚 help. 鈥淓verything here [at STEP] is teaching you discipline,鈥 Alex鈥檚 mother, Itsva Cerritos, says. 鈥淭his program has opened doors for him.鈥
Success, however, takes work. The program鈥檚 core curriculum consists of thrice weekly private lessons with a STEP music teacher, chamber music practice, and orchestra practice. Music theory and solf猫ge classes are also required, as is community service 鈥 playing for a church, school, or nursing home.
Students also write reports on famous composers, attend concerts and summer camps, and participate in 鈥渕aster classes,鈥 special sessions taught by prominent musicians. At the end of each academic year, students perform a musical piece from memory for the spring recital. 聽
鈥淚鈥檝e always had a multitude of things going for me because of music,鈥 Alex says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard, but I make myself do it. I grow every time.鈥
The program can be tough on parents, too. Yvonne Brooks, a single mother whose three children were at one point all STEP students, describes the harrowing experience of going through a divorce and trying to hold down a job while shuffling kids back and forth to school, music lessons, and home.
鈥淚t was absolutely insane,鈥 Ms. Brooks says.
But high demands yield high returns. Brooks鈥檚 eldest daughter is now a sophomore at Yale University, and her son is headed to Howard University in Washington, D.C., in the fall.
Njioma Grievous, who at 15 is Brooks鈥檚 youngest child, plays second violin for the prestigious Boston Philharmonic Youth Orchestra, with whom Njioma has traveled across Europe and played at New York鈥檚 Carnegie Hall. In April, the BPYO performed the third act of Richard Wagner鈥檚 鈥淪iegfried鈥 at Boston鈥檚 Symphony Hall 鈥 a first for a youth company and a powerful rendition of a complex piece of music.
鈥淪tudents are encouraged to aspire to new heights, and are provided the tools to reflect, self-assess, and build on their current skills,鈥 music education specialist Keuna Cho observed during her three-year evaluation of the program. 鈥淸T]hese results 鈥 help to explain why Project STEP鈥檚 young musicians play as beautifully as they do.鈥
Brooks puts it a different way: 鈥淭o be able to sit back and relax and listen to one of my children 鈥 or all of my children 鈥 playing, I can reflect on the sacrifices,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t washes the pain away.鈥
The students鈥 success both at music and in life after the program serves to further Project STEP鈥檚 other goal: to make orchestras and their audiences better reflect the communities they serve. Even as the US population grows more diverse, just over 4 percent of the country鈥檚 orchestral musicians are black or Latino, according to the League of American Orchestras.
Noah Kelly, adopted from Ecuador in 2000 by an Irish-American couple, Brian and Kathi Kelly, sees STEP as a place that connects him with both his beloved violin and his culture. Of all the opportunities he鈥檚 had since starting at STEP 10 years ago, his favorite has been going to Costa Rica with the New England Conservatory鈥檚 (NEC) Youth Symphony in 2013.
鈥淎s he was playing onstage, he looked up, and he was just smiling,鈥 his mother, who had watched the performance, recalls. Noah later told her it was the first time he had played for an audience 鈥渢hat looked like him.鈥
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 great that Project STEP gives minorities the chance to be on the big stage,鈥 Njioma, who is African-American, says. The training, her mother adds, pushes the students incredibly hard, so that their skill can dispel any immediate stereotypes that come to mind.
For all three students 鈥 Alex, Njioma, and Noah 鈥 the effects of that training are clear even when they鈥檙e away from their instruments.
Alex dreams of becoming a history major and pursuing his passions for both ancient Rome and writing, while playing his viola on the side. Njioma, who plans to major in music psychology, can discuss the pros and cons of everyone from Brahms to Mozart to Gandolfi without batting an eye. And Noah, who hopes to enter a top arts school such as Juilliard or the New England Conservatory, waxes poetic about the virtues of rock n鈥 roll on the electric violin.
All three swear by Project STEP and the people behind it, insisting that their lives would not be the same without their years of struggle and triumph through the program.
The people at STEP are like 鈥渁n extended family,鈥 Alex says.
鈥淚 would not be where I am without the training that Project STEP has provided, the mentoring,鈥 Njioma says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a clich茅, but I鈥檓 so grateful.鈥