
Teaching for Tomorrow | Michael Callahan
Special | 2mVideo has Closed Captions
Michigan State University Educator Mike Callahan expanded his curriculum to be inclusive
Inspired by a piece by Florence Price Michigan State University Educator Mike Callahan is expanding his curriculum beyond the traditional to include music from diverse artists and styles. Callahan hopes by teaching tomorrow’s teachers a broader view of the musical world it will be a step toward justice.
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Music for Social Justice is a local public television program presented by WKAR
Supported in part by
MSU Federal Credit Union
Michigan State University Office for Institutional Diversity and Inclusion

Teaching for Tomorrow | Michael Callahan
Special | 2mVideo has Closed Captions
Inspired by a piece by Florence Price Michigan State University Educator Mike Callahan is expanding his curriculum beyond the traditional to include music from diverse artists and styles. Callahan hopes by teaching tomorrow’s teachers a broader view of the musical world it will be a step toward justice.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
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This is music that I want them to know about and hear and perform.
I ordered a score of Florence Price's meditation.
It's one of the most beautiful minute and a half long pieces of music I've ever experienced.
I was playing through the piece at my piano and I had this moment of just I couldn't believe that I had gotten this far in a music career and not discovered this music before.
And that's something that I did not want to perpetuate for my students.
I think if you'd ask most non-expert musicians to name some classical composers, they'd probably name white European men.
I love the music of Mendelssohn and Brahms and Beethoven, but that can't be all that we teach.
There's a responsibility there in terms of what message we're sending by asking students to pay attention to some music and not other music.
And so the privileged status of that one particular style of music is something that I think we should work toward dismantling.
I think it's essential that the ways of music making that we foreground in our curriculum represent all of the interests of our students and show that there isn't just one valid way of music making.
Early in my career, I spent a lot of effort thinking about how I teach techniques, methods, assessments, and I now spend much more time thinking about what I teach, who's music, what's the message, implicit or explicit.
And that has really enlivened teaching for me in this really powerful way, because it can be a small but important step toward justice.
Music for Social Justice is a local public television program presented by WKAR
Supported in part by
MSU Federal Credit Union
Michigan State University Office for Institutional Diversity and Inclusion