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GrantSpace - Collaboration Hub YOSA Music Learning Center Participating Organizations ● Good Samaritan Community Services, San Antonio, TX Primary Contact Name:Steven Payne Title:Executive Director Email:[email protected] Url:http://www.yosa.org Please note that all data below was derived from the collaboration's nomination for the Collaboration Prize. None of the submitted data were independently verified for accuracy. Formation Type of Collaboration: Joint Programming to launch and manage one or more programs Geographic Scope: City Collaboration Focus Area: Arts and Culture ● Education ● Human Services ● Population Served: Children and Youth ● Economically Disadvantaged ● Minorities ● Year Collaboration was Established: 2008 Goals Sought Through Collaboration: Serve more and/or different clients / audiences Address unmet and/or escalating community need ● Leverage complementary strengths and/or assets ● ● Reasons Prompting Collaboration: ● ● Advancement of a shared goal Response to a community need Who Initiated Collaboration: Board member(s) ● Executive Director(s) / CEO(s) / President(s) ● Number of Participating Organizations: 2 Were Partners Added or Dropped?: No We submit these details as an example of a strong and developing program-focused collaboration, in which two mature, well established organizations have pursued extension and elaboration of their mission and services in an area that, for different reasons, is quite unprecedented for each—or, indeed, for their respective type of organization. Youth Orchestras of San Antonio, or YOSA, is San Antonio’s only community-wide youth orchestra. It is the direct successor to the San Antonio Youth Symphony, created in 1949. Today YOSA serves more than 500 young musicians through five ensembles at graduated levels, a summer strings camp, a triennial international tour (YOSA musicians have just returned from their Great Tour of China) and a growing after-school program. YOSA’s programs are supported by collaborations with multiple organizations, but the focus of this proposal is our long and still growing relationship with Good Samaritan Community Services. GSCS was founded in 1951 on San Antonio’s near west side by the Episcopal Diocese of West Texas. Today, GSCS is a private, non-profit 501(c)3 neighborhood center providing comprehensive services to over 6,000 low-income individuals and 1,800 families annually. YOSA’s collaborative relations with GSCS date back to 2002, when YOSA’s Neighborhood Strings program, first offered in 1998, was moved to the Good Samaritan Center on San Antonio’s near West Side. Serving impoverished children from surrounding neighborhoods, this program provided free Saturday morning beginning strings classes, with violins and cellos provided for each participant. YOSA’s Music Learning Center, launched in 2008 in pilot phase and now providing free after-school orchestra immersion classes every school day at GSCS, is a major step forward in this mission, demanding a significantly deeper and more extensive collaboration between the two organizations. YOSA’s president had previously been chair of GSCS’s board. He grew up in poverty on the West Side and attended classes at Good Sam, where learned to speak English. One of the first goals he articulated as president was to see YOSA expand its service in underserved parts of the community. YOSA’s executive director responded that a model existed for such an effort—the phenomenally successful national youth orchestra system in Venezuela, known as El Sistema. This has grown over 30 years from serving a handful of students in the founder’s garage to multiple orchestras around the country that today serve almost 300,000 children and youth, the large majority living in extreme poverty. From the beginning, the MLC was conceived as a multiyear commitment as grade-levels are added until the center is serving several hundred students grades K-12. The initiative was strongly endorsed by YOSA’s board, despite the unprecedented growth in budget delineated in a multiyear pro forma, an increase that would be entirely dependent on a corresponding increase in charitable contributions. GSCS approved YOSA’s efforts to recruit students for the after-school music classes from its existing after-school program, which serves about 300 young people from the neighborhood. The Center also provided space for the classes and for storage of the instruments, which are provided free to participants. Management Management Structure: Management team / oversight committee with representatives from each partner Early in the school year just ended it became apparent that more formal structures were needed to lead and manage this increasingly ambitious program. The chief executives of each organization had already been appointed to sit on the other organization’s board, greatly improving understanding of respective strategic directions, funding initiatives, etc. Also at the board level, an ad hoc committee of representatives from both organizations’ boards of directors was created, meeting every other month. This has proved valuable in bringing together directors with, for example, professional expertise in music education with those deeply grounded in human services. Members of the staff of both organizations also meet regularly. Challenges Challenges to Making the Collaboration Work: Coordination / integration of programs & services The MLC, like several similar efforts around the country, is frankly conceived as an experiment in the sense that plans and projections are based on activities that have not been attempted before by either organization, or indeed by many others nationwide. Results are continuously evaluated and goals and objectives reexamined by both partners in the project. The music classes were started as “electives” for children attending Good Sam’s after-school programming, which includes classes of various types for each child. Part way through the fall, realization dawned that attendance at the music classes for interested students could be made routine by synchronizing those classes with Good Sam’s class schedule. Regular attendance significantly increased. Staff from both organizations meet regularly, as does an ad hoc committee of members of both boards. In the spring, both organizations agreed to the logical next step, with tremendous significance for the growth the MLC. YOSA’s and GSCS’s directors and staff have determined that the success of this year’s program justifies a significant expansion—opening MLC participation to all students attending GSCS’s after-school programs. Next school year the classes will be made part of the curriculum and regular class rotation for every student attending Good Sam’s after-school program. The number of MLC students registered is projected to more than double to about 300, with 200 likely to attend regularly based on Good Sam’s many years’ experience with this population. Impact Internal Efficiencies and Effectiveness: Fund development - Access to new / more sources of funding ● Greater ability for each partner to focus on core competency - Greater ability to allocate resources to areas of need ● Improved marketing and communications, public relations and outreach - Improved marketing and communications, public relations and outreach ● Community Impact: ● ● Previously unmet community need now being addressed Greater range / variety of services/programs offered The YOSA MLC uses orchestral music education as a powerful means to individual and social development. Our goal is to transform lives in an impoverished, at-risk neighborhood--to provide resources that will help young people escape poverty and build a stronger community. We therefore strive to measure both artistic outcomes and individual impacts. Model In its particular field, orchestral music education, the YOSA Music Learning Center is already a model. YOSA is currently one of only about a half dozen organizations, and the only independent youth orchestra, developing a program of the MLC's scale (the best known example is the Los Angeles Philharmonic's YOLA program driven by a high-visibility music director). YOSA's Executive Director has been appointed to El Sistema USA's National Advisory Team. Around the country, there is evident interest in learning about and from YOSA's MLC. We believe the Center is also a useful example of program-focused collaboration between two organizations. Experience in practice has already shaped the program’s actual growth in several respect’s divergently from the multiyear strategic pro forma. This has included reconfiguration of the program’s leadership and management structure. This openness to a program unprecedented for each organizations has in fact led to an expansion and strengthening of the core mission of both of them. Efficiencies Achieved To the existing application’s detailed coverage of most of these topics, we add the following. 1) Regarding increased revenue—there is no doubt that funders respond positively to the YOSA MLC’s grounding in a strong collaboration. The collaboration further enhances the “AAA” rating as a well managed, effective nonprofit agency that each organization enjoys in this community. YOSA’s ability to raise more than a half million dollars to date in support of the program is evidence of the leveraging benefit of the collaboration. 2) The primary quantitative benefit to the community is the collaboration’s success in scaling up the number of classes and children served. The quantitative gap between the more affluent parts of the community where schools bring the life-changing rewards of music education through well established programs and those that do not is wide. The YOSA/GSCS collaboration has doubled the number of children served this year, but that responds to only a fraction of the need. We aim to be an inspiring model program locally, and will continuing adapting and adjusting as needed to grow and replicate the program. Other youth serving community organizations have expressed interest in this form of collaboration, as have administrators and teachers in the school districts. Nationally, the YOSA/GSCS is serving as a model through the El Sistema USA network. 3) Measures of successful growth this year. a) Recruitment of students to the capacity of the classes (200 total), participation of 50 in the annual YOSA Summer String Camp and 30 in the GSCS camp for younger children, and retention of participants in the program through the school year and next school year; b) measurable academic achievement in school and improved confidence, self-esteem and social skills; c) musical progress to the equivalent of 5th grade level at schools with strings programs. 4) The social good. Since 1951, GSCS has been the primary social service resource for residents of the near west side of San Antonio, one of this community’s most impoverished areas. GSCS’s commitment to improving the quality of life in this high-risk area is embodied in its mission—changing lives through excellent community services. The mission of the YOSA MLC adds a strong and distinctive approach to this goal— to improve the life opportunities of impoverished children in San Antonio by providing access to the life-changing rewards of orchestral music education. Much recent research shows that music education benefits broad aspects of human development and learning. The orchestra is especially powerful as an incubator of self-esteem, belonging, camaraderie, individual discipline to achieve collective goals, and pride in achievement shared by family and community. The orchestra socially, educationally and spiritually brings the community together. It builds resources for the individual and collective struggle to rise from poverty. We expect that, for most of the children and youth participating, their MLC orchestra will come to seem like family. The YOSA MLC is simultaneously a social and individual development and a music project. Almost all of the children served live in poverty; many come from difficult home situations. Their parents may be separated and working two or three jobs; 64% of students come from single-parent families. We expect that, for most of the children and youth participating, their YOSA MLC orchestra will come to seem like family. We expect to see stability in school and greater academic achievement. The children will receive human services from GSCS—a safe, easily reached place in the neighborhood to go after school. The YOSA MLC will strengthen parents’ engagement with their children, boost educational achievement, build self-confidence and mutual respect and—through Summer String Camp, performance experiences, and membership of MLC students in YOSA orchestras—greatly strengthen community awareness and engagement. Over the years, YOSA has prepared many young people for careers in music. They have been nurtured by strong school programs and parents able to afford private lessons. We anticipate that through the YOSA MLC, students will likewise be encouraged and prepared to join YOSA orchestras. We look forward to the day when young people raised in poverty on the West Side will be performing in YOSA’s flagship Philharmonic Orchestra at the future, world-class Bexar County Performing Arts Center. Over time, this project will expand the number of talented musicians emerging from San Antonio, including much greater numbers of Hispanics (the international icon is Gustavo Dudamel, a product of Venezuela’s El Sistema, who has just begun as Music Director of the LA Philharmonic). YOSA’s MLC will enlarge and diversify the future audience for orchestral music in San Antonio. But the benefits extend to every participant. Two members of the GSCS board of directors, both highly successful members of San Antonio’s business community, one YOSA’s immediate past board chair, got their start as children at Good Sam. We consider each of the young musicians in the YOSA Music Learning Center orchestras as their likely successors—all of them with the opportunity and potential to go as far. Evolution The existing application covers most of these questions but, regarding measurement of the success of the collaboration, we add the following. 1)The program has been conceived from the outset as an innovative venture into new practice that will surely demand future adaptations for both organizations. This has happened already, as previously explained, in the music classes being made part of the regular class rotation for all elementary and middle school students registered with GSCS’s after-school program. This is strikingly in evidence every Friday when all the children attending that day rehearse together with YOSA’s Music Director and his degree of participation is itself an adaptation through experience). There may be more than 120 children of all ages gathered in the room, with both YOSA instructors and GSCS case managers in attendance. But next year, when several of the students have reached high school, there will likely be need for GSCS to make further adjustments to its core programming. And likewise, further changes will surely be necessary in the future. Should we make a serious bid for public funding, that will also likely demand some systemic changes in GSCS’s programs—for example, the addition of core academic components, since funding agencies still tend to regarding arts education as “enrichment.” These are all potential future challenges. Activities of both organizations are being transformed through the collaboration. 2) Measurement of outcomes. Retention in the MLC is documented through attendance records maintained by GSCS staff and sign-up applications and forms. The children's academic performance in school is tracked with the assistance of school administrators in the neighborhood. San Antonio area school music educators will be asked to make an assessment of the musical progress of the students in comparison to the level of performance they see in schools with strings and orchestra programs. As with other YOSA activities, written reports will be submitted by independent professionals. The MLC is closely monitored by YOSA's Music Director. The Asset Building test will be used to measure self-esteem, focus and attention. Achievement of the larger goal of individual transformation and the building of life-skills will be implicit in much of the results described above. The students' commitment to their instrument, their regularity at class and their bonding with peers in the orchestra will all be indicators of greater focus and commitment in other areas. The goal of closer family bonds and parental support is indicated by parents' attendance at recitals and other forms of interaction showing the pride parents take in their children's accomplishments. Copyright ©2017 Foundation Center. All Rights Reserved.