We organize accessibility workshops for all audiences from young students to professional artists. We also give talks and presentations. Don’t hesitate to ask for more details.
Disability is too rarely considered in music education today. ArtsAbly proposes projects that include more accessibility conversations in the classroom, with children from several age groups. This page presents examples of workshops that are organized in music classrooms, working collaboratively with the teachers, the students, the school staff, and if needed, the parents.
Example 1: Braille music discovery workshop
Did you ever wonder how a person with low vision or who is blind reads music? This workshop explores Braille music with students who are used to read traditional music notation. With the help of CNIB (the Canadian National Institute for the Blind), who helped providing the printed scores, the students were able to dive into the tactile experience of reading music differently.
Workshop held at Community Music Schools of Toronto in January 2023.
Example 2: American Sign Language (ASL) Music singing workshop
Music signing is poetry and dance put together. When a Sign Language Musician signs a song, they do not translate the lyrics literally, they perform the words. It is called Vernacular Sign Language. Partnering with a sign language performer, this workshop teaches the students how to sign a song and how to perform it, first by understanding the concept of vernacular sign language, and then… to have fun signing the words! Facial expressions and body language are as important as the words themselves.
The following pictures were taken during a workshop with the ASL performer Gaitrie Persaud in Toronto.
Workshop held at Community Music Schools of Toronto in January 2023.
The song was performed at the final recital of the music school in June 2023.
Example 3: New technology and adaptive instruments workshop
Some musicians with reduced mobility or lacking parts of their body change their music practices to be able to perform. Many possibilities exist, from using other parts of their bodies to new technology and adaptive or adapted instruments (an adaptive instrument is an instrument that can be modified regardless of the person who is using it; an adapted instrument is an instrument built for the person who is using it). Sometimes it is as simple as using a software on a tablet. For this workshop, we have used the Adaptive Use Musical Instruments (AUMI) on tablets for the technological part. We have also looked at other ways to perform, for example playing drums, piano or guitar with feet or with the Yamaha Tenori-on (great for younger children). We also tried wearable devices connected to a smartphone controlling music patterns.
Workshops held at Community Music Schools of Toronto in April and May 2023, with different age groups of students.
The group of younger students performed a composition on Tenori-on at the final recital of the music school in June 2023.
Other workshops exist. Don’t hesitate to contact us for more information. We are constantly looking for new partnerships so if you have an idea of someone you would like to recommend, send us a message!