VMTA

Virginia State Music Teacher's Conference 2025

Studio One: Building Studios that Build Musicians. From left to right: Rene Johnson, NCTM( “Building a Better Studio with Policies that Shape Success”), Mark Atkins “From Battlefield to Concert Hall: Military Concepts for Music Studios. Dr. Hyrum Arnesen “Parent Partnering: Guiding Students to Confidence: Building Habits to Manage performance Anxiety”. Dr. Paulo Steinberg “Tech Skills: Engaging Social Media in the Private Studio”. Michele Caragan, “Pedagogy: Alternative Ideas for Group Lessons”. Jeanette Winsor, “Health and Wellness: Self-care to Enable Playing for a Lifetime.”

Highlights from the 2025 VMTA State Conference at George Mason University—music teacher panels, inspiring classes, performances, and creative teaching ideas. This past week was the VMTA Annual State Conference, held at George Mason University in Fairfax, VA. It was great to be with other music teachers, make new friends, attend many classes and hear some wonderful music. I came away inspired and refreshed.

Here are some of the classes and performances I attended:

Leadership Summit—-overview of MTNA offerings, discussion about VMTA.

Why You Need Space to Create—finding hope through music after tragedy hits.

MTNA Certification Panel—I participated in a panel of five teachers who covered the five projects required for certification applicants. (Candace Cleary, Rachel Harmatuk, Aphrodite Mitsopuolou, Jennifer Scott, Rene Johnson).

Broadening the Piano Studio Repertoire: The Richness of Latin American and Spanish Composers—learned about the Venezuelan equivalent of IMSLP. There is some beautiful music there!

VMTA Teacher’s Recital—quite an amazing recital. Here’s a playlist of the music from the conference——the teacher’s recital, the concerto winners: YOUTUBE Teacher’s Recital and Concerto Winners Repertoire.

Studio One: Building Studios that Build Musicians (including topics such as alternative ideas for group lessons, Managing Performance Anxiety, Polices that Shape Success, Make Plans to. Continue Playing for a Lifetime, Capability Development). I participated in this panel talking about policies.

Sparking Creativity in your teaching and playing—-paint chips, paper plates, eraser animals, improvisation.

Sight-Reading for Life—-Nancy Breth says we should sight-read every day of our life for 5 minutes/day.

Crafting Effective Endings—Francesca Hurst. Very excellent class. Artistry and the last 2-3 measures of a piece. She demonstrated use of sound, silence, and gesture to elevate endings of pieces.

Enhancing Well-Being: Strategies for Reducing Stress—Studio activities for emotional and mental well-being: group lessons 2x a month, informal recitals encouraging ensemble performance, facilitate peer performance sessions for supportive feedback, goal-setting, 3 good things-3 things for improvement, collaborate with other studios, community outreach.

VMTA Banquet—gorgeous table decor (thank you to Caroline Kim), fun entertainment (thank you Bharti Soman and friends), tasty food (thank you GMU).

VMTA Concerto Winner’s Concert— accompanied the the McLean Symphony. The soloists were amazing: Beethoven, Rachmaninoff, and a cellist.

Studio Creativity-practical, time-efficient strategies that engage and retain students—more improv demonstrations—work on recital pieces AFTER the recital and take some liberties as you improvise.

Rare Recital Treasures—by Kevin Chance, MTNA President, walking through his new book he compiled with Ingrid Clairfield—-interesting repertoire, great pedagogy tips!

Sight-Singing in the Piano Studio—fun. I really should sing more with my students!

Independent Music Teacher’s Forum—-Some interesting points including some things in which I have different perspectives.

State Competitions—I spent an hour as a volunteer helping with the State Competitions. I greeted contestants as they arrived, tried to help them feel more at ease, helped them prepare their music for the judges and answered questions in the hallway. I enjoyed listening to the young people play. They were remarkable! Young and impressive!

Break Room—-This is such a fantastic addition to the conference. We spend all day listening, talking. This room is for quiet, introspection. The room was filled with affirmations, 4-5 worksheets with guided thinking about strengths, ways to improve, some battery powered tiny lights in jars, some Mandala coloring pages and markers, stickers with uplifting messages, a yoga mat with various moves depicted. I appreciated it for a short nap one day, and some guided pondering exercises.

Things to do:

Listen to Renee Fleming in Casta Diva (Bellini) to learn how to shape Chopin.

Catherine Price Ted Talk about “fun”.

Look at Bradley Swish’s foot tambourine.

Teaching scales—just remember 3478 for majors.

Improvise to favorite cake and favorite frosting rhythms.

Learn to count aloud while playing!

Sight-reading—keep track of QUANTITY of pages. Keep track of QUALITY of sight-reading with a point system. Reward winners of each category.

Listen to Scherzo Waltz by Chabrier.

Questions:

Where do you draw the line between improvisation and composition?

Noteflight—consider premium level at some point?

Why do publishers want music in the public domain? I imagine cost.

MTNA Certification Panel: Left to right: Rene Johnson, project 5, Aphrodite Mitsoupoulou, Project 4. Rachel Harmatuk, Project 3. Jennifer Scott, Project 2. Candace Cleary, Project 1. All are NCTM Certified. Diane Perrett is the State Certification Chair.

Student Accomplishments 2018-2019

June 2019  Recital.JPG

2018-2019

Fall Festival

Event sponsored by NVMTA. The requirements include two memorized pieces one of which must demonstrate contemporary compositional techniques.

Underlined and bold means superior from both judges.

Adam Baker, Zaria Bartel, Ellie Cox, Sloane Dorotheo, Qing Shuang Downing, Quinn Downing, Peter Hinckley, Lawrence Madi, Bradley McMullin, Henry McMullin, Jack McNair, Myla McNair, Walker Schmidt, Sam Youkeles


PTA Reflections Composition Contest

Annual event sponsored by the Parent Teacher Association and run through the local schools.

Peter Hinckley-1st place in Middle School, 1st place in District, 1st place in VA State and competed at the National Level with “SuperHero”


Alma Grayce Miller Composition Contest and Honor’s Recital

An NVMTA event. Students enter their original compositions. Prizes include cash, and an opportunity to have their piece performed by the McLean Symphony if chosen.

Peter Hinckley earned Special Recognition for his piece “SuperHero”

Quinn Downing earned Honorable Mention for his piece, “Altered Reflection”.


Theory Mastery Day

Virginia Music Teachers Association event with 16 levels of graded, written tests include aural exams.

Students who achieved over 90% in bold, top three scores **

Ellie Cox (1A), Myla McNair (2A)**, Lawrence Madi (2B), Zaria Bartell (3A),Sloane Dorotheo (3B), Quinn Downing (3B), Qing Shuang Downing (3B), Henry McMullin (3B), Katie Dinkelman (4), Jack McNair (4), Peter Hinckley (5)**, Walker Schmidt (5), Sam Youkeles (6)**, Adam Baker (6), Bradley McMullin (7)


Bach/Baroque

NVMTA event where students perform one piece by J.S. Bach and another by him or a different Baroque Composer. Students can play their pieces on a harpsichord. There are honor’s recitals for this event if chosen.

Student who achieved superior in bold.  Called for 2nd Round*

Bradley McMullin*, Adam Baker, Sam Youkeles, Peter Hinckley*, Lawrence Madi,, Henry McMullin, Quinn Downing, Qing Shuang Downing


Piano Concerto Festival

NVMTA event, Very competitive event with 1st, 2nd, 3rd awards.

Henry McMullin, Bradley McMullin

Others who learned concertos this year:  Qing Shuang Downing, Sam Youkeles, Terry Burridge


Piano Ensemble Festival

NVMTA event where students prepare duets or duos (2 pianos) and perform for judges either in festival (comments only, requires one piece) or competition (requires two pieces).

Bradley McMullin and Adam Baker


40 Challenge

Studio event. We document all pieces passed off during the year. In 2018-2019, I noticed a trend: a group of students who passed off 20-25 pieces in a year and a group that passed off over 40.

Recommended practice time to meet this goal is 5 days of practice for at least the length of your lesson.

Ellie Cox (81), Henry McMullin (70), Adam Baker (54), Lawrence Madi (48), Terry Burridge (45), Bradley McMullin (41), Peter Hinckley (40)

First Recital

Congratulations!

Elizabeth Zuckerman and Kyla Dorotheo