Saturday, May 24, 2008

On Teaching

Just thinking about June and the upcoming months is enough to make even the most lionhearted person quiver in fear... and I'm definitely no Aslan.

It seems I shall be teaching in all levels. Yup... preschool (aka CASA, since I work in a Montessori school), gradeschool (I'll be handling the Music classes of Grades 1-3), high school (my bosses say I'm handling English classes, I'm not sure which particular levels as of the moment), and college (I'll be teaching part time in CMu as well)!

I'll know my final teaching load this coming week. Thank goodness that I'll be under the guidence of the CASA Directress, so the workload for kindergarten isn't that bad since she'll be doing the bulk of the lesson planning. But I've heard talk around the work place that I'll be asked to handle 2 clubs... they're forming a Choir and need a conductor (and since I'm the only music graduate, I'm the most suited to take on the job *gulp*)... and they want me to take on a sports-related club as well. So it's either arnis or taekwondo. *double gulp*

Talk about getting out of your comfort zone. :) I pray that I'll be given the strength and wisdom to discharge all my teaching duties well.

~ ~ ~ WHY TEACH? ~ ~ ~

"Yes, there are places when a man no longer feels the need of conquest but of purification and innocence, where he longs for simplicity and peace. In that innocent peace man seeks for a renewal of his life, for a kind of resurrection from the burdens of the world.

Yes, there must be in man great aspirations that are far removed from those of ordinary life. They represent a divine voice that nothing can still, calling men together to stand about the child...

... Countless experiences have brought to light a truth that is of great importance for education and society. It is clear that if men had a nature different from the one we know, they would have a different form of social organization. But if such a normalization of adult society is to be brought about, it must be done through education. A social change of this type cannot come from the ideas or energies of individual reformers but from a slow and steady emergence of a new world in the midst of the old, the gradual appearance of the world of the child of the adoloscent... The energy that can help mankind is that which lies within the child..

... Within the child lies the fate of the future."

--- from Maria Montessori's "The Secret of Childhood"

~ ~ ~

My uncle gave the best grad gift ever... two tickets to Lea Salonga's show, My Life Onstage!!!

Tata and I saw it last night, and were blown away by Ms. Salonga's stellar performance. 'Twas our first time to see her live, and what a treat it was! She was marvelous, incredible... I could list all the superlatives and still it wouldn't be enough to fully convey how awesome it was to hear favorites like Sun and Moon, I'd Give My Life For You, Kailan, A Whole New World, Reflection and the highlight of the show (for me) as well as the subject of a previous post, Two Words performed L-I-V-E.

*sighs in remembered bliss*

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Talking about performing... I'm very lucky that my day job allows me to accept harangs aka gigs (though I'm not sure if this will still be the case, come June). Last week I sang at a dinner in the Executive House, and just this Thursday we had a show in Baclaran (read all about it in my twinnie's blog).

I had an epiphany that night. You see, half of the 20 songs we did were Filipino kundimans and folk songs like Sarung Banggui, Nasaan Ka Irog, Matud Nila, Pakiusap, Madaling Araw, Bituing Marikit, etc. And it was so overwhelming, how a lot of the audience members were septa/octogenarians, and how they shed tears and were deeply moved when they heard these pieces performed.

And I realized it doesn't really matter that not very many people listen to the kind of music we perform, if these few truly appreciate it. And if we want to expand our audience, we have to start from the grassroots level... with the kind of music education our people are getting.

Also, I realized more fully the importance of music graduates in the preservation of our heritage. When our grandfathers/grandmothers pass on, who will be left to study and perform the wealth of beautiful Filipino music of past generations?

It is a sweet burden to bear.

~ ~ ~

I have to prepare for two lectures I'm giving this week... one on Dalcroze and one on Kodaly. I'll be sharing what I learned in the summer workshops I took to my fellow teachers. Wish me luck!!!

27 comments:

  1. what subject are you teachng in Cmu?

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  2. yup that has been my advocacy for the longest time now....
    these people really like these songs. these are the people who actually have been untapped by the music industry for the longest time, who have been ignored by producers just because they don't seem to matter anymore.
    that is why we have to convince these businessmen--this "kundiman" market must not be ignored. they are the ones who are less prone to music piracy because they are less likely to be in the net stealing mp3s. it could be cited that the highest-selling original cds are "classical" in orientation (Ryan's SMO recordings and Josh Groban) in the recent years.
    they must realize that it's profitable to produce classical recordings and concerts and operas and zarzuelas, that if given the right kind of marketing the philippines could be the new classical music hub in asia, that with the abundance of talent here in our country it could be really competitive and full of vitality.
    and it's up to us to keep the tradition going. we should not keep these songs in the library to be forgotten or to be merely performed as academic requirements in half-completed music halls.
    this is the battle which the BEST OF US should fight.

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  3. Yup, our country has been overwhelmed by a depreciating music education system for the longest time now, but not only due to the lack of really good music teachers but more so because of the prolifiration of "commercial" music recordings on tv and radio stations (the NEW music classrooms), and the seemingly "snobbish" reaction of music producers to classical and other Filipino indigenous music (except OPM, which is rock, RnB, gospel and jazz forms by orientation).
    This had been compounded by the reaction of the music academe who chose a rather "passive" and "safe" tack the past few years, being rather "spoiled" by government fundings during the Marcos years.
    We have continually refused to be "soiled" by the "masa" marketing strategies of pop music, not realizing that even New York's Met have succumbed (with the rise of sexy opera stars Anna Petrovka and the like) to this trend. Needless to say, I'm not proposing that we should put kundiman in the ST bandwagon--what I'm trying to say is: kundiman needs proper PR handling.
    With this in mind, i remember Mimi's demise in Puccini's "La boheme", and likened it to the death of art. i always have interpreted this opera as the Illica and Giacosa's (the librettists of La Boheme) commentary to the state of art after the demise of European aristrocracy, and thus the loss of support for artistic exploits during that time. Mimi (or Lucia, which means "light"or illumination, a depiction of art) died because of sheer poverty, to the utter helplessness of Rodolfo the poet.
    What did give classical music give a new lease of life during that time? Enrico Caruso's recordings, that's what. with the rise of the industrial revolution so did classical music move with the times, which eventually gave us recording greats Mario Lanza, Maria Callas, the Three Tenors and now, Andrea Bocelli.
    Now we could all learn a lesson or two from all these. What matters in what I'm trying to say is this question: should we let a great music form like the kundiman die, or should it remain with the Filipino psyche for generations to come?

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  4. that's a lot of teaching!!! may God give you the strength for that :)

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  5. wow!!! gabi the teacher sounds definitely nice!!! :) best of luck to you!! :D

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  6. Yeah, what ill you be teaching at Music? Baka mamaya teacher na kita!

    "MA'AM GABI!"

    Wah! Ang weird XP

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  7. hahahahaha "ma'am gabi francisco?" hahahaha

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  8. Hi Gabi! Didn't know you were there at Lea's concert. I played 2nd keyboard, and was at the back of the video wall hehehe. Sana I'd have said hi. Marami din kaming ni-arrange na pyesa dun...

    Anyway, I love that you posted the excerpt by Maria Montessori. I believe in it too. I remember being in Soc Sci 2 in college, and the teacher asked the class how we think true social change could be brought about. I answered "through education", and then she said "Masyadong matagal yun." Pwedeng matagal nga. But it's also the type of change that's real and lasting.

    As for teaching children, I think it's even more daunting than teaching adults. The responsibility is so huge since they are still in the formative years.

    God bless, good luck dun sa bagong duties mo :)

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  9. Oh this is gonna be great, my sister-in-surname. I can bug you even more about how old you are. :) Galingan mo, ma'am!

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  10. Ei Keith... it looks like i'll be teaching Diction 1. Waaaa!!

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  11. Kuya Raymond, thank you for your wonderful insights!! I'm grateful for multiply, for allowing us to exchange ideas, like this.

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  12. Thanks Ate Ria... tuwang tuwa ako when I saw your name on the program, I nudged my sis and told her, "Uy... compo major namin yan!" ;) Hehe school pride. CONGRATS on a wonderful job last weekend!! Sayang di ko kayo kita behind the wall.

    I really love that excerpt from Montessori... I've believed in it for the longest time and thus far, I have yet to encounter another who encapsulated those thoughts more beautifully than she.

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  13. If you "Ma'am" me in public I'll take an arnis stick to you, haha ;p

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  14. Wow what a load for a fresh grad! But I'm sure you can handle all of that what with your achievements in school how can you go wrong. You've chosen the most noble profession good luck! Good you had the chance to watch Lea, always worth watching. I watched Miss Saigon here in LA, Enrico was part of the ensemble, they were good and the Kim was fantastic but I was wishing it was Lea doing it.

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  15. AAH you watched LEA!!! jealous... XD

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  16. Ei! Gabz!!! Grabe i'm so happy that you'll be teaching at CMu!!!! Ang swerte ng mga incoming freshies :)

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  17. swerte? hahahaha let's just imagine gabi the terror prof. hmmmm...

    hindi. di swak. swerte nga. hahahahahahahahaha!!!

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  18. Diction 1? Haha. Naalala ko tuloy ang "diction class best friends" days natin.

    Btw, do you have Joan Wall with you already? It's just with ate Lisa.

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  19. Those were the days. :) Aaaaw parang kailan lang!

    Uy Kim I really can't thank you enough for this... I'm going to UP on Wednesday, will photocopy it then. THANK YOU THANK YOU TO THE MILLIONTH POWER!

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  20. Thank you Ma'am!! :) Yup, Iba talaga pag si Lea. I saw Miss Saigon in Manila as a little girl, the Kim was also great... but I realized na malayo pala when I heard Lea sing excerpts from Miss Saigon last weekend.

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  21. You jealous of me?? haha, ikaw nga, live interview pa with her... plus you got to shake her hand! :)

    Lea fans unite!

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  22. No problem, Gabi. It's my pleasure to have you touch my Joan Wall book, baka mahimasan mo ng kahit konti lang ng iyong kabaitan at talino. :D

    Just leave it at Ate Lisa's na din, coz I won't be around to get it til enrollment.

    I'm sure your students will enjoy being under you. May you continue to bless others with your talents and your wonderful heart. :)

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  23. Me too!! :) Haha I love CMu... I love UP! I'm so glad, I don't have to leave.

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  24. haha.. hindi ko yata maimagine na "terror prof" si gabi! hmm.. mas madami kaya or mas konti syang magbigay ng work load kesa kay sir leslie? abangan... bwahaha..

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