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Music

Summer Music Intensive Week

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This summer, we are launching our very first Summer Music Intensive at Mason’s School of Music. From July 25-29, high school musicians will be immersed in rehearsals, master classes, college discussions, and performances!

The following programs are included in the Intensive week:

 

 

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Activities include rehearsals and instrument coaching led by Mason professors and guest artists, lectures and discussions, master class demonstrations, insights into college preparation and auditions, and more. The week ends with a final performance concert for family and friends that showcases what the students have learned. Music Recording Camp even has its own “Release Party”! On top of that, students have the option of choosing the Summer Residential Housing plan (for an extra fee, deadline extended to May 1st) for an even fuller university experience, complete with evening activities, concerts and on-campus lodging.

“Mason Summer Percussion Academy is a comprehensive program designed to offer students a chance to explore their full potential as percussionists,” says Percussion Academy director John Kilkenny. “From drumset classes to world percussion clinics, from college audition prep to sightreading seminars, this is the PLACE to be this summer!”

 

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“This program offers a focused week of practice, learning, and – most importantly – making music with your fellow performers,” says Brass Academy director Adam Stokes. “We hope you can join us!”

“I am particularly excited about Dr. Marie Ross coming from Germany” says Clarinet Academy director Catina Sweedy. “In her workshops, Marie demonstrates historical clarinets from all eras, from the beginnings of the instrument in the Baroque period through the late Romantic. She plays well-known repertoire on each instrument to demonstrate the original sound, how the sound and technique of the clarinet evolved, and how it is different from the sound of the modern instruments we are used to today.” Dr. Ross will bring eight period clarinets that the students will be able to try.

 

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Composition students get the unique privilege of studying with well-known composer-conductor Professor Mark Camphouse, and Music Recording students get the opportunity to work in Mason’s new recording studio.

Auditions are not required to get in to these programs, and spaces are filled on a first-come, first-serve basis. Sign up today!

SEE ALL SUMMER MUSIC PROGRAMS

 

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Uncategorized

Exciting Game & Technology News

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The Mason Game & Technology Academy (MGTA) is excited to tell you about some new developments, including a visiting Fullbright Scholar in the Spring and updates on our summer camps.


 

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MGTA Summer Camps in Loudoun

For the second year, a selection of MGTA Summer Prep courses will be held in Loudoun county, at the Mason in Loudoun location (next to the NoVA campus).

SEE LIST OF LOUDOUN COURSES


 

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Fullbright Scholar Visits MGTA Classes

MGTA welcomes a visiting Fulbright scholar Tania from Spain to our Spring 2016 weekend classes, giving our students the opportunity to learn about her research study: using serious games as educational tools in the classroom. Several MGTA students will be participating in her research and their ideas will be a part of her research!

“I am doing research on the potential of digital games to engage youth in environmental issues,” said Tania.  “The Mason Game & Technology Program at GMU targeting youth is a wonderful initiative, and I would like to take this chance to conduct a short group discussion with students. I would like to put them in the role of game designers and researchers who have been asked to develop an environmental game. They will brainstorm on how we can learn from successful games and how we can apply their characteristics for educational purposes.”


 

 

Javascript and C++ Summer Programs – Student Driven Experiences

“The Java and C++ classes offered by the Mason Game and Technology Academy focus largely on learning to code through the creation of a series of programming challenges, tailored to each student’s learning pace and experience,” said course instructor Kevin Pfeifle. “Students work in small teams and learn what it is like to work on a group programming project, providing them real world experience. The teams work on text-based ASCII challenges of their choosing, which allows for a unique student driven experience where the student’s learning is paced by their ability to problem solve. This also creates a dynamic learning experience where the students can learn beyond the curriculum, based entirely on their drive to learn more and create a more complex game.”

Impressive ASCII Project’s that students have done in past classes:

  • Battleship
  • Chess
  • Recursive Random Maze Generator
  • Rogue
  • 2048
  • Text-Adventure Games

Core Concepts Covered in the Java/C++ classes:

  • Input/Output
  • Boolen Logic/Conditional Statements
  • Looping (For and While)
  • Functions/Methods (Static and Dynamic)
  • Arrays
  • Try/Catch
  • Classes/Objects (Static and Dynamic)

SEE SUMMER CAMP INFO


 

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Personal Cyber Security Summer Program

MGTA is pleased to offer a new course in Cyber Security, Personal Cyber Defense, which helps students to protect themselves in the ever-growing on-line world we live in.

“There are basic things that I believe every person should know to be able to protect themselves, their families, and their friends from various cyber attacks, which is the main goal of this course,” said course instructor Yusif Atayev. “The class will cover a variety of topics ranging from the basics of security to applying security measures to various devices in order to help students develop skills that they can apply in their personal lives.”

SEE CYBER SECURITY COURSE DETAILS


 

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SCRIYB Online Learning Coming Soon

Back by popular demand – MGTA Scriyb on-line classes will be offered this summer and fall! Classes are taught in real time, and students will be able to engage directly with the instructor, and with each other. MGTA-Scriyb courses capture the energy and magic of a live classroom, along with the peer-to-peer social learning that makes online learning like playing a game, and so much fun! More information coming soon…


 

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READ MORE ABOUT MASON GAME & TECHNOLOGY ACADEMY

 

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Music

Faculty Feature: Kanako Chikami

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Kanako Chikami is a Percussion Instructor at Potomac Arts Academy and is a current candidate for her Doctor of Musical Arts degree at George Mason University. She has been on faculty at Potomac Arts Academy for a year and has taught as part of our summer camps as well as private lessons. Enjoy this YouTube video of Kanako performing and learn more about her in the interview below:

PAA: How did you first fall in love with music?

KC: According to my mom, I started singing when I was two years old in front of TV. She thought that I might like music, and she signed me up to learn marimba, piano, and chorus in my kindergarten.  I think I loved playing marimba and singing the most.

PAA: Tell us about a teaching experience you had that was especially memorable.

KC: I had a chance to teach a percussion ensemble for middle-high and high school students at Sumer Camp of Potomac 2015 Summer at GMU. I picked a piece, Fanfare for Tambourines for 5 percussionists, for them. They only had 3 or 4 rehearsals until a final concert. My concern was that some of them never touched tambourines before. However, each student had tremendously high motivation and concentration, so it was easy for me to coach them at every single rehearsal. In the final concert, they did a great job and seemed that they had a great time.  I was very grateful to teach them.  

PAA: What are some unique things you do when you teach?

KC: Whenever I teach a piece of percussion music to my students, I let them sing rhythms with metronome first and don’t let them play with real instruments. This is because I want them to get used to rhythms on the page without worrying about technique.

PAA: Do you have any pets? If so, tell us about them. If not, tell us the type of pet you would like to have.

KC: No, but I would like to have a dog or cat in the future. I like Shiba-Inu and Rossian Blue.

 

If you’re interested in signing up for lessons with Kanako, simply go to our Private Music Instruction page to get started!

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Community Outreach Instruments in the Attic Music Publicity

Outreach Program Featured in Paper

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Our Instruments in the Attic outreach program was recently featured in an article in the Lifestyle section of the April 4th edition of Fourth Estate, the student newspaper at Mason.

The article titled “Instruments in the Attic gives old instruments new life”, written by Basma Humadi, describes the it as “A new outreach program …. spreading tunes in a new way by collecting used musical instruments for children and students to give them a second life.”

 

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Jeremy Cochran, Mason Doctoral student and current intern for the Instruments in the Attic, assists with the day-to-day work of the program. “It’s almost like a library, you can come in and check [an instrument] out if you want,” Cochran said. “The purpose of it is to serve Mason music students who might need it for playing a second instrument or for one of their methods courses… [also] there are a lot of needs out there for kids who want to play in band or orchestra and aren’t able to get an instrument.” Through a growing network of collaborations with local and regional schools, IiA is helping to get instruments to those kids.

“This really is recycling on steroids,” Libby Curtis, Director of Potomac Arts Academy, was quoted as saying when describing the program. “We want nothing to go to the landfill.” Besides donating usable instruments to musicians, Instruments in the Attic turns instruments that are past their prime into art projects.

 

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To read the full article, please pick up a hard copy of the April 4th edition of Fourth Estate. Thanks to Basma and the Fourth Estate for choosing to write this story and spotlight this wonderful outreach program.

 

LEARN MORE ABOUT INSTRUMENTS IN THE ATTIC

 

 

 

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Events

Everybody Loves Clifford

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Clifford The Big Red Dog is coming to the Hylton Center on April 30th. Share in the timeless values of Clifford’s BIG Ideas with this interactive musical experience the whole family will love!

 

 

This enormous and playful red pooch has delighted youngsters for over 50 years with his heartwarming storybooks and his award-winning animated series on PBS Kids. Now, Clifford, Emily Elizabeth, and all their friends from Birdwell Island join together for an afternoon of singing, dancing, and lots of interactive fun, while they share a few BIG ideas for children about being kind and respectful toward others, sharing, and believing in oneself. Join us for this imaginative and charming performance that is sure to enchant readers of all ages — and all sizes!

 

GET MORE INFORMATION/ GET TICKETS