Can I be in band and participate in sports?
Learn more about balancing time between athletics and band
See how rewarding and fun band can be.
We come together every day to create new music, and explore new musical styles. In band, students have the opportunity to learn about themselves and discover how they learn best.
If you were in band in middle school, continuing band in high school builds on the skills you’ve already developed, and allows you to continue being around people who appreciate your musical skills.
Outside of academics, band affords students the opportunity to have some amazing experiences like Spring Trip, and expsure to prominent colleges and universities like James Madison, George Mason, Virginia Tech, University of Maryland, UVA, Delaware, and many more.
Band allows you to meet new people, and builds a strong support system as upperclassmen look out for their underclassmen peers.
Nothing beats being part of the “band family” and the band room is a safe place to hang out with great people!
College admissions officers continue to cite participation in music as an important factor in making admissions decisions. They claim that music participation demonstrates time management, creativity, expression, and open-mindedness.
— Carl Hartman, Arts May Improve Students’ Grades, The Associated Press, October, 1999
The U.S. department of education recommends that high school students take courses in the arts, stating:
Many colleges view participation in the arts and music as a valuable experience that broadens students’ understanding and appreciation of the world around them. It is well known and widely recognized that the arts contribute significantly to children’s intellectual development.
— Getting ready for College dearly: A Handbook for Parents of Students in the Middle and Junior High School Years, U.S. Department of Education, 1997
The nation’s top business executives agree that arts education programs can help repair weaknesses in American education and better prepare workers for the 21st Century.
— The Changing Workplace is Changing Our View of education, Business Week, October 1996
A research team exploring the link between music and intelligence reports that music training is far superior to computer instruction in dramatically enhancing children’s abstract reasoning skills necessary for learning math and science.
— Frances Rauscher and Gordon Shaw, Neurological Research, University of California at Irvine, February, 1997
When researchers analyzed the NEL: 88 database of the U.S. Department of Education, which tracked 25,000 students over a ten-year period, they discovered that students who were involved in music scored higher on standardized tests than students not taking music courses. This finding was consistent for students of all socioeconomic backgrounds.
— James Catterall, UCLA, 1997
A majority of the engineers and technical designers in Silicon Valley are also practicing musicians.
— The Case for Sequential Music Education in the Core Curriculum of Public Schools, Center for the Arts in the Basic Curriculum,
Learn more about balancing time between athletics and band
See whether students can perform in concert ensembles without participating in marching band.
See an example of how band would fit among your other studies at different grade levels.
Learn how band fits with students in the Academies.