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MUSIC TO THEIR EARS: Florence 1 gets violin program funding By: Gavin Jackson
The district will be buying 28 new violins (which have four strings each) to split between Lester Elementary School third-graders and Dewey L. Carter Elementary School sixth-graders, allowing each student in the classes to have access to a violin without the need of having students purchase or rent them. "Many children here don't have the opportunity to get a violin," First Reliance Bank Community Development Officer Joan Billheimer said. Since the program’s start, Billheimer said, she has seen an impact. "We saw an appreciation from the parents. We got letters from the parents who said they could never afford a violin for their child," she said.
"There wouldn't be a program here if it weren’t for the grant," said Allen Johnson, strings band instructor at Savannah Grove and Timrod elementary schools. "The schools have always offered a strings program but it's always been very small, so now we’re able to offer it to fifth-graders as well as sixth-graders and since kids don’t have to buy the instruments it makes it a lot easier for them to participate." Johnson offers violin lessons at both schools once a week, which is crucial for schools that don't have dedicated string band faculty. Timrod teacher Joy Hilton, who assists Johnson during class time, said she has been thrilled with the program that has been at the school for two years. "We want to have lifelong musicians and lifelong appreciation (of music)," Hilton said.
"If nothing else, we want to offer these students the opportunity to play an instrument," Florence 1 Performing Arts Coordinator Laura Greenway said. Some students stick with the violin or string instruments, but Johnson said many move on to band instruments in sixth-grade and middle school. But he said the training they receive on string instruments helps them just as much. “You still have the idea of how music works, how to read music and the coordination between fingers and brain,” Johnson said. Despite what looks like a difficult instrument, students said they look forward to class. "It has a beautiful sound," sixth-grader Nyaysia Young said of her violin at the end of class. "I want to play an instrument that has a challenge." ### Courtesy of The Morning News, scnow.com |
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