Rotary Club holds used musical instrument drive for Penticton kids | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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Rotary Club holds used musical instrument drive for Penticton kids

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PENTICTON - Aside from personal enjoyment and cultural growth, music education can make a transformative difference in a child’s intellectual and emotional development. Current neurosciences research has revealed a causal relationship between music training and brain fitness, both structure and function. Identified cognitive benefits are numerous, ranging from improved language ability and increased emotional resilience, to greater compassion and increased attention span and self-confidence.

Regrettably, certain children are prevented from realizing these life-enriching benefits, because their families cannot afford to purchase the desired musical instruments. To help alleviate this financial barrier confronting our less fortunate youth, the Rotary Club of Penticton-Okanagan is spearheading a drive to collect musical instruments, along with providing some funds to restore instruments, where necessary.

This community service project is being undertaken as a joint venture with Pen-High and Maggie Schools and Penticton Academy of Music. Collected instruments will be shared among their respective music programs, along with those at KVR and Skaha Lake Middle Schools. 

The general public is invited to donate ‘gently used’ musical instruments that after the kids have left the nest, for example, are currently gathering dust and cobwebs in residential closets and basements. The collection drive will run from Oct. 3 to Oct 21. All types of instruments, except pianos, drum kits and keyboards, will be gratefully accepted. Instruments may be dropped off Monday to Friday at Pen-High and Maggie (9 a.m. to 4 p.m.) and Penticton Art Gallery (11 a.m. to 4 p.m.).

Tracy Stuchbery, piano instructor with the Academy of Music and Artistic Director, Musaic Vocal Ensemble, enthusiastically endorses the Rotary project as a wonderful starting point for educating and engaging the community in music education.

"I know of no other activity that fully integrates the experience of being human than engaging in the act of playing music. Cognitive, social and emotional needs are met and nourished in a wholesome, life-giving environment with benefits that last a lifetime," Stuchbery says.

“Clearly, music education can be game-changing in empowering children to reach their full creative, cooperative and caring potential. Our intent, as service-minded Rotarians, is to help ensure that every child, irrespective of social status, is afforded this opportunity”, says Mac Paterson, project co-chair.

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