2004
Arts & Disabilities Awards Presented to Bernstein & Miller
Accessible
Arts, Inc. (AAI) and the Kansas State Board of Education (KSBE) collaborate
each year to recognize the valuable work of people who include Kansas children
with disabilities in art experiences. To honor these individuals, AAI and KSBE
established two awards in 1983, one for Distinguished Service in Arts and Disabilities
and one for the Kansas Educator of the Year in Arts and Disabilities. On March
9th, 2005, in a ceremony at the Kansas State School for the Blind, the following
individuals were honored for demonstrating excellence in service (through the
arts) to children with and without disabilities.
Anne
Meeker Miller, Ph.D. was selected as the 2004 Educator of the Year.
Dr. Miller, is a music therapist for the early childhood special education program
of the Blue Valley School District in Overland Park, Kansas. During her career,
she has taught music to students from preschool through college levels. She
utilizes the intrinsically motivating power of music to engage students in their
gross and fine motor development, pre-academic skills, socialization, and attention
to task. Her preschool students were the inspiration for her work with sign
language and music. She is also interested in fostering a love for books, and
uses picture books in musical ways to help children with phonemic awareness,
letter recognition, anticipating events, and looking for picture clues.
Through
her company, Love Language LLC, Miller shows parents and caregivers how
to encourage language development of young children by using music, play-based
activities and picture books to teach baby sign language. She teaches Baby Sing
& Sign classes at Shawnee Mission Medical Center, and the second edition
of her book and music CD, Baby Sing & Sign: A Play-filled Language
Development Program for Hearing Infants and Toddlers, will be available in April
from local booksellers and from her website, www.babysingandsign.com.
Miller
piloted the music therapy program for the Olathe School District in 1980, and
has advocated for the inclusion of special needs students in public school music
programs throughout her career. She wrote and directed a musical revue called
"Magic to Do" which integrated junior high students with disabilities
and their peers, and she includes exceptional children in all of her ensembles.
Dr.
Alice-Ann Darrow, Miller's former professor wrote, "Anne is an exceptional
academic in the fields of music therapy and music education
.Anne is probably
THE most exceptional educator I know - in any discipline
. in her college
teaching practicum
.Her course preparations put some faculty to shame
.what
was most appealing was her generosity in sharing her materials with other [graduate
students] and faculty without claiming ownership."
From
the University of Kansas, Miller earned her Bachelor of Music Education and
Music Therapy degrees, Master of Music Education degree with honors, and Doctorate
of Philosophy in Music Education degree with honors. She received the Excellence
in Teaching Award given by the Learning Exchange, Kansas City Chamber of Commerce
and The Kansas City Star. She was also a commission member of the Housewright
Symposium on the Future of Music Education sponsored by the Music Educators
National Conference.
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The
2004 Distinguished Service Award was presented to Barry Bernstein. What
started with pots and pans in the family kitchen has evolved into a passion
for "Bongo" Barry Bernstein, MT-BC.
A registered music therapist, Bernstein is a wealth of knowledge about the healing
and motivational power of rhythm. As a music therapist he has developed programs
and presented papers on the use of music therapy to treat mental and physical
disorders including Alzheimer's & Parkin-son's Disease, Attention Deficit
Disorders, Autism, William's Syndrome and Stroke Rehabilitation.
A
graduate of the University of Kansas in Lawrence, Kansas, Bernstein was affiliated
with Geriatric Services in San Francisco, California, and Colmery O'Neill Veterans
Affairs Medical Center in Topeka, Kansas prior to relocating in his hometown
of Kansas City. He is the founder of Healthy Sounds, a consulting service dedicated
to spreading the word about the power of music and rhythm. For the past ten
years he has served as Music Therapy consultant for the Blue Valley School District
in Overland Park, Kansas. Other involvement with youth includes: an interactive
school assembly, Unity With A Beat!, which has been featured in elementary schools
from coast to coast, and at-risk youth projects through Accessible Arts and
the Jackson County, Missouri Family Court.
Bernstein
has also developed corporate wellness drumming programs for companies such as
Sprint, Shell Oil, Bayer Agricultural, Novus and Monsanto.
In addition to his active international workshop schedule, Bernstein has released
several recordings, including Spirals, Unwinding For Vitality and Health, (Relaxation
Company), and Songs of the Spirit, Drone Tones and Remember Any Night, (Healthy
Sounds).
Bernstein's
work has been featured in many national publications including, Oprah, The New
Your Times, U.S. New & World Report, Better Homes and Gardens, and Shape
Magazine.
In 2003 he was the recipient of Drum Magazines "Drummie" for best
national drum circle facilitator.
When
he is not traveling around the world with his five trunks of percussion instruments,
Bernstein enjoys a quiet family life with his wife, Laura, and their two young
daughters, Leah and Sydney, who are beginning their musical careers in the very
same place Bernstein began his - in the kitchen!