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Her mom, Rousemary Vega, marvels at the difference Weible and the Merit music program have made at the school, which Vega attended in the late `80s and early `90s. It's the reason she has her children stay there, she says. "People used to say, `Oh, that school!' But now they're showing everyone that they have something to offer," she says. Her hopes for Nidalis, her oldest child, are "big, very big," says Vega, who has worked as a baby sitter since she was laid off from her job as an administrative assistant with the city of Chicago. Nidalis' stepfather is a landscaper. Nidalis has her own big dreams. She hopes to get into Lane Tech High School on Chicago's North Side. She'd like to play in the orchestra there, wants to study hard so she can get into college. Eventually, she'd like to go to law school. First things first -- while attending eighth grade at Lafayette in the fall, she will likely be concertmistress for the advanced after-school orchestra, making her the designated student leader and teacher assistant. It will be yet another accomplishment for a girl whose room in the family apartment is already lined with trophies and plaques
-- for honor roll, the science fair, pompom squad, perfect attendance and, of course, orchestra. They are the kind of honors that have helped other Lafayette students get into some of the more highly sought-after public high schools in Chicago. Eighth-grader Jaylen Hall will be going to one of those schools, Lincoln Park High School, in the fall. His mother, Yahaira Rivera, has little doubt that playing the violin helped him get in, helped him to focus. "He's at the point where he could be doing other stuff that I could be struggling with
-- gangs or things that he shouldn't be into," she says. That's why, even after they moved to a neighborhood 16 miles away, on the city's South Side, she continued to keep him enrolled at Lafayette, which is just northwest of downtown Chicago. Each morning, they get up at 6 so Jaylen can get to school on time and his mom to her job at a bank near the school. "Jaylen hates to be late, hates to be absent," his mother says, laughing. And that is absolutely fine with her. ___ Jaylen and about 100 others were up early on a recent chilly Saturday morning, gathering in the park for which Humboldt Park was named. It is a park often associated with drug deals and other crime. This morning, however, parents, teachers and students were marching around its perimeter. They were joined by representatives of corporate and nonprofit organizations that have donated to the school's orchestra program. At another school event, dubbed "Stuck for Strings," students bought strands of duct tape for $1 apiece to literally tape those volunteers to a wall. Both events were early signs that principal Shrode might just be right -- that this community and other supporters would rally around her cause. So far, the fundraisers have brought in more than $6,000, while a neighborhood nonprofit called Reason to Give is well over halfway to its goal of raising another $5,000 for the music program, Shrode said. That will cover the cuts made in the Merit budget -- but Shrode eventually would like to raise enough to cover the entire cost to the school, little by little, to make sure the program is always there. As Weible likes to say, "We're doing it by hook or by crook. But we're getting there." Leaders at the Merit School of Music have been so impressed that they invited students from the Lafayette orchestra to play at their spring fundraiser, an event attended by wealthy donors. Leuhrsen, from the NAMM Foundation, also praised the school's efforts. "This is a relentlessness and belief in children that needs to be celebrated and acknowledged," she says. She does worry that many schools in low-income neighborhoods might be missing out on federal funding for arts education through such programs as Title I because they don't know they can get it. Lafayette does get Title I money, which it can use for the music program. But Shrode says the needs at the school are so great for so many things that, if they can raise the orchestra money independently, they could use the federal money for, say, another reading intervention specialist or maybe even full-day kindergarten, some day. For the young musicians at Lafayette, all that matters is that there is enough money so they can keep playing, as they did in May at a Merit festival at Chicago's downtown Orchestra Hall. The morning of the concert, students rushed onto yellow school buses with their instruments, eager for their chance to play on the big stage. "When the lights are shining, they do their best," Weible excitedly told a bus driver. Some of the youngest students, on their first visit to Orchestra Hall, stared up at the ornate ceiling as they waited to play. Others fidgeted. One accidentally plucked a string, prompting a "shh" from an older student. Nidalis and Jaylen were among those who played with an advanced group, which included students from other schools with Merit programs. When they finished their three songs, all of them proudly took a bow. "We rock!" Nidalis shouted, as they walked backstage and out of the auditorium. She removed her shoes and skipped giddily through the hallways, the sound of applause and whistles still echoing behind her. ___ Online: Lafayette school: Merit School of Music: NAMM Foundation:
http://www.lafayette.cps.k12.il.us/
http://www.meritmusic.org/
http://www.nammfoundation.org/
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