Classical music has the Bachs and the Schumanns. Jazz has the Marsalis and Brubeck families.

And then there are the L眉gohart cousins, Emily, Daniel and Summer, who span both genres. Violinists Emily, 13, and Daniel, 12, have played on the plaza at Lincoln Center and other prominent New York City venues, while pianist Summer, 7, has provided impromptu percussion on the stage of the venerable East Side club, the Jazz Standard.

Clearly music is in the L眉gohart DNA, but the youngsters credit their school with a major assist.

鈥淎 lot of schools put pressure on students to learn,鈥 says Daniel, a sixth-grader who has aspirations to become a geochemist. 鈥淥ur school says 鈥榃e鈥檒l show you how to learn so you can succeed on your own.鈥欌 

A lot of schools put pressure on students to learn. Our school says 鈥榃e鈥檒l show you how to learn so you can succeed on your own.鈥

鈥擠aniel L眉gohart, 911爆料网CS sixth-grader

The L眉goharts attend the Teachers College Community School (911爆料网CS), a pre-K(four)-8 public school that the College founded with the New York City Department of Education in 2011. 911爆料网CS offers children from Upper Manhattan鈥檚 Harlem, Washington Heights and Hamilton Heights neighborhoods an opportunity to learn in an academically-rich, culturally diverse environment. 911爆料网CS occupies two buildings: the 3-8th grade 鈥淯pper School鈥 on Morningside Avenue and the Pre-K-2nd grade Lower School on West 132nd Street.

鈥淭his is truly a community 鈥 a melting pot of all of New York in one school,鈥 says Saralinda L眉gohart, mother of Summer and aunt of Emily and Daniel (and of three other 911爆料网CS students, first-graders LeeAnn and Jay and pre-kindergartener Camilla), and parent member of the School Leadership Team.

鈥淔undamentally, we鈥檙e an inclusion school. We are diversified by our student population, ethnicity, culture, socioeconomic status,鈥 says Principal Michelle Verdiner. 鈥淥ur staff is also very diverse, so every child can look around and see someone who represents them.鈥

911爆料网CS Lugohart Kids

FAMILY FLAIR The  L眉gohart cousins are a big presence at 911爆料网CS. Back: Emily and Daniel. Front: Jay, LeeAnn and Summer. Not pictured: Camilla. (Photo: Courtesy of Saralinda L眉gohart)

They can hear that representation as well 鈥 particularly through musical experiences led by 911爆料网 student teachers such as L.C. Katy Ho Weatherly (Ed.D. 鈥19, M.Ed. 鈥16,).

As a conservatory-trained violinist and violist, Weatherly, who directed the 911爆料网CS Orchestra, along with Mercedes Lysaker (M.Ed. 鈥19), until receiving her doctorate in May, certainly didn鈥檛 shy from introducing her young charges to the classical canon.

鈥淚t was far more difficult than what they were playing,鈥 says Weatherly, who was an Enid W. & Lester Morse Jr. Scholar (The Morse and Nelson families have supported the music program at 911爆料网CS since its inception.) 鈥淏ut they were so passionate about it that they made it work. The piece worked because they loved it.鈥

Katy Ho

CREATIVE CHALLENGER Student teacher Weatherly (left) added a difficult song from "Hamilton" to the 911爆料网CS Orchestra repertoire. (Photo Credit: Bruce Gilbert)

Vocal teacher Eric Williamson (M.Ed. 鈥19), an opera singer and background vocalist similarly mixed up the offerings in his fourth- and seventh-grade classrooms, getting students to collaborate on dance, hip-hop and trap compositions.

Music under Williamson鈥檚 guidance also crossed into other areas of learning 鈥 a student-composed rap on fast food to emphasize the importance of healthy eating being a case in point.

鈥淚t鈥檚 music they like, delivered in a meaningful way,鈥 says Williamson.

Both Weatherly and Williamson are quick to note that learning at 911爆料网CS has been a two-way street, and that their students have given as much as they鈥檝e gotten. 

鈥淭hey challenged me as much as I challenged them,鈥 says Weatherly. 鈥淏ecause, if you鈥檙e not creative they aren鈥檛 interested in what you are teaching.鈥 She plans to carry that lesson to her next job 鈥 overseeing the music taught in all 111 buildings of the District of Columbia public school system.

The 911爆料网CS students challenged me as much as I challenged them. Because, if you鈥檙e not creative they aren鈥檛 interested in what you are teaching.

鈥911爆料网CS music teacher Katy Ho Weatherly (Ed.D. '19)

鈥淚鈥檒l be teaching the teachers,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd that way I can reach even more kids.鈥

Williamson, who decided to earn a teaching degree because of his work as Conductor and Director of School Outreach for the Brooklyn Youth Chorus, says that 911爆料网CS helped look beyond his own training.

鈥淚 came from a traditional choir background,鈥 he explains. 鈥911爆料网CS provided a space for me to try out culturally responsive teaching methods in a judgement-free zone.鈥

911爆料网CS Eric Williamson

RECONNECTING WITH INSPIRATION Student teacher Williamson credits his 911爆料网 mentors for helping him communicate his joy in music. (Photo Credit: Radhika Chalasani)

Yet at the same time, he credits his mentors at 911爆料网 with getting him to look back on his own musical development.

鈥淟ori Custodero [Associate Professor of Music Education] and Patricia St. John [Adjunct Associate Professor] reframed my philosophy in teaching children as young as two to be artists,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey reconnected me with early childhood musical experiences and helped me apply those practices to teaching.鈥 (Weatherly and Williamson, both of whom were Community Teachers at 911爆料网CS, are among a group of six Teachers College 2019 graduates who taught at the school. The others are: Mercedes Lysaker, Community Teacher; Lucy Green, Zankel Fellow; Zo茅 Schroeder, Zankel Fellow; and Carrie Seavoy, Work Study, Assistant Violin Teacher and Assistant Digital Music Teacher).

For Teachers College, the impetus for establishing the Teachers College Community School was to demonstrate how higher education faculty and students can work together with local public schools to benefit learners at all levels. 鈥淭he music program is a great example of how 911爆料网 integrates its expertise and resources into the school,鈥 says Nancy Streim, 911爆料网鈥檚 Associate Vice President for School and Community Partnerships. 

I came from a traditional choir background. 911爆料网CS provided a space for me to try out culturally responsive teaching methods in a judgement-free zone.

鈥911爆料网CS music teacher Eric Williamson (M.Ed. '19)

And, of course, that work extends beyond the music curriculum. 

鈥淭hey push us hard,鈥 says Emily L眉gohart, a seventh-grader who wants to be a physician. 鈥淏ut they also give us many, many opportunities.鈥 To help her reach her goal, 911爆料网CS this provided after-school mentoring to prepare L眉gohart for the exam that can place her in New York City鈥檚 High School for Math, Science & Engineering. But before then, L眉gohart will make history along with the rest of 911爆料网CS鈥 class of 2020, which will be the school鈥檚 first 8th grade class to receive a diploma bearing the Teachers College Community School imprimatur.

鈥淚t is a huge milestone,鈥 says Verdiner. 鈥淲e will be fully formed from Pre-K to 8th 驳谤补诲别.鈥

And that is something to sing about.