Lessons Learned
Vermont MIDI Project 1995- 2003

Mentoring is one-to-many
Traditional online mentoring has been one on one. In our project, everyone views the comments made to individuals. Everyone who reads the comments learns from them. Students relate the comments to their own composition and teachers relate the suggestions to their own instruction.
Composition with notation software preferred
Even though other software has been provided to students and instruction given, both students and teachers prefer notation software. Serious high school students tell me, they really want to learn about theory and composition and they want their music to be seen that way. Students want their music performed by others. Teachers want to composition to be both an application of theory and a creative activity.
Connections across K-12
This is one place in the music education world where elementary music educators talk with middle level, high school, college/university and vice versa. Wonderful relationships have developed. Just one example - High School students create music to represent a well known fairy tale in sound. Shared with elementary students as an example of composition. Critique by middle students in respect to musical elements demonstrating the story line.
Integrated multiple technologies
Composition software combined with online communication - both the public website, password protected website, and e-mail updates.
Critical thinking and problem solving
The process used in Vermont MIDI relates to the "Writing Process": pre-writing, first draft, revising, editing, publishing. When sharing online students are expected to describe their work and ask specific questions of the mentors to help them improve the piece.
Live Performance
In interviews conducted last spring, students say that having their work performed is "the best". Many now only write works that can be performed by peers or professionals.
Professional Development for Teachers
Teachers need support in order to be up-to-date when technology is involved and we're in a position to provide this. They want to know what's new and then make a choice for themselves about its application in their classroom. Many find intensive workshops in composition and critique - the same as the process for their students - are rewarding and challenging. The Vermont MIDI Project provides multiple ongoing opportunities for teacher PD.