New Report: With Freedom of Soul to Do and Be
Team:?Dr.? Dennie Wolf , Henry Clapp , Dr.? Steven Holochwost , Matthew García , and Haeun Moon
The air is full of commitments to increasing diversity, inclusion, and belonging for young people. Yet in the contemporary U.S. many young adults seeking possibilities for thriving are undercut by the reality of explicit exclusion, rooted in privilege, the stubbornly uneven distribution of prior opportunity, and the implicit barriers of unspoken assumptions and daily practices that sideline newcomers.?Nowhere is this proving harder to change than in highly competitive settings like selective colleges, universities, conservatories, internships, and training programs in fields like neuroscience, engineering, and the arts where inherited habits, articulated tastes, and concentrations of power often repeat, rather than evolve. Changing those structures is urgent – for young people, for the relevance and vitality of institutions, and because we need the courage to interrogate the long-standing habits of selection, promotion, and recognition, replacing them with alternatives that amplify, rather than limit, opportunity.
Using research on the links between structural opportunities, a young person’s sense of belonging, and their resulting commitment to and pursuit of goals, this paper shares findings from a mixed-methods, longitudinal study of Carnegie Hall ’s youth orchestra, NYO2, a group formed to make advanced musical training more inclusive by changing the micro- and macro-practices characteristic of youth orchestras.?
This work, funded by the National Endowment for the Arts , is exploratory. But even when viewed cautiously, these findings are clear:
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A commitment to diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging demands going beyond optics of who and whose work is featured on posters and in performance. Working in deeply equitable ways that create lasting opportunities requires intense focus on identifying and changing received, unexamined, and exclusionarypractices. Where this happens, there are important consequences for how all young people see their lives as creators and contributors – and for the ways in which teachers, coaches, and organizations see their work. But the effects may be particularly strong among young people who have historically been marginalized. These changes, if pursued, could lead to a next generation of young players, conductors, composers, and audience members who enliven and sustain classical music in and beyond the concert hall.?
Carnegie Hall has had the will and the resources to invest in this work at a national scale, but it is not alone. Other youth orchestras, pathway programs, and conservatories are doubling down on the work of diversifying the field of classical music.??Beyond music there is an equally urgent conversation waiting to be held within fields like theater, ballet, and filmmaking, about who gains entrance, who thrives, and who persists. There is an equally important but uninitiated dialogue across highly competitive fields ranging from music to neuroscience and artificial intelligence. It is a conversation about what transforms the formal equities of recruitment and admissions to the substantive equity of equivalent opportunities to develop and persist. Building those opportunities is all the difference between being offered a place at the dinner table and having a fork, knife, and spoon to dig in and be nourished.
Entrepreneur | Filmmaker
1 年Sounds about right. When I learned about the State Small Business Initiative funding, I was like “I’m American!”