Vol. XXIV No. 1
September 2008

1st Academy Fellows Graduate

On June 11 in the Rohatyn Room at Carnegie Hall, The Academy—A program of Carnegie Hall, The Juilliard School, and The Weill Music Institute in partnership with the New York City Department of Education—celebrated the end of its 2007-08 season with a proper send-off for the first group of fellows to graduate from the two-year fellowship, marking the end of the second pilot season of this newly designed program. Staff members from these three organizations, along with teachers and principals from the schools the fellows worked in, were in attendance to congratulate the Academy’s first graduates. Among the speakers at the morning reception was pianist Elizabeth Joy Roe, who had been nominated by her peers to represent the graduating class and share her experiences with the program, and who agreed to let us reprint her speech in our pages.

Elizabeth Joy Roe with her "star student," Melanie, at her fifth-grade graduation at P.S. 131Q (the Abigail Adams School) in Queens.

Good morning. I am truly honored to be addressing such a distinguished audience full of colleagues, mentors, friends, leaders; people whom I respect, admire, and love. Today marks an end and a new beginning, and it is a day of celebration: for the inaugural graduating class of The Academy—A Program of Carnegie Hall, The Juilliard School, and The Weill Music Institute in partnership with the New York City Department of Education, and everyone who has been involved in this unique fellowship. I am humbly speaking on behalf of the second-year fellows of the Academy, of which I’m a very proud member.

What has the Academy meant to us? I can personally say that my experiences here have led me to greater awareness, clarity of purpose, and renewed inspiration. From the moment I received a phone call in fall 2006 from Rachel Sokolow with the invitation to join a brand-new program of unusual scope, I knew that a remarkable opportunity had serendipitously fallen onto my path.

Looking back at my initial impressions of the Academy, I recall entering the Kaplan Space at Carnegie Hall on a cold morning in January 2007 with a mixture of anticipation and uncertainty about what I had signed up for. My initial uncertainty metamorphosed into fascination upon hearing compelling speeches given by the directors of the program. I also found the orientation activities refreshingly insightful, especially the “ways of seeing” aesthetic exercises. How wonderful and almost radically simple it was to consider art without labels and hyper-intellectual theories, and just to open our eyes and tap into our intuition. The wonderment, simplicity, and intuitiveness of my perspectives that day didn’t end there; I eventually encountered these qualities even more powerfully in the perspectives of my young students.

Another thing that was apparent from the very start was the uniqueness of the people in this program, from the marvelous staff members to my proactive, perceptive, outspoken, energetic colleagues. I thought to myself, these are exactly the kinds of people I’d like to be around—and it’s fortunate I felt that way, because I’ve ended up spending a significant part of my life with these individuals! To be sure, the pilot phase of the program was a time of growing pains, trial and error, bumps and triumphs, but in just a few short months it was heartening to feel our bonds strengthen as a collective, especially as a performance ensemble.

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