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SoundstageEDU: Building Better Theater Tech

Podcast de SoundstageEDU

inglés

Tecnología y ciencia

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🎭 SoundstageEDU began backstage — among the headsets, cables, and quiet heroes who make the magic happen. Today, it’s a movement for every parent, student, and educator fighting for the heart of fine arts. From burnout to booster culture, we’re rebuilding what support really means. Because what happens behind the curtain matters just as much as what happens under the lights. ✨ Subscribe for bonus training + extended episodes: https://creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/soundstageedu/subscribe

Todos los episodios

206 episodios

episode Your Booster Problem Isn’t Fundraising artwork

Your Booster Problem Isn’t Fundraising

Everywhere I look right now, I see the same conversations happening inside booster organizations across the country. “We need more fundraising.” “We can’t get volunteers.” “The boosters and director are fighting.” “The school won’t fund us.” “The same parents do everything.” “We’re exhausted.” But what if fundraising isn’t actually the real problem? In this episode, we unpack the deeper issue quietly affecting fine arts booster organizations nationwide: the complete lack of governance literacy, long-term structure, operational clarity, and sustainability planning inside many volunteer-run organizations. We dive deep into: * booster vs district responsibility, * governance breakdowns, * financial transparency, * accountability, * director/booster tension, * volunteer burnout, * asset ownership, * reimbursement concerns, * private benefit and nonprofit risk, * personality-driven organizations, * and why so many groups are operating in constant survival mode. This episode is not anti-director. It is not anti-booster. It is not anti-fundraising. It is a wake-up call. Because healthy organizations are not built on vibes, panic fundraising, emotional pressure, and institutional exhaustion. They are built on structure. If your booster organization feels overwhelmed, chaotic, emotionally tense, financially unclear, or constantly one fundraiser away from collapse… this episode is for you. Join the SoundstageEDU community for governance resources, leadership development, booster support, consulting, and real conversations about the future of arts education support organizations.

19 de may de 2026 - 34 min
episode Selective Outrage: The Art We Protect vs. The Art We Fear artwork

Selective Outrage: The Art We Protect vs. The Art We Fear

If controversy is the standard, then why are only certain stories considered dangerous? A Wisconsin school board removed a student concert piece because of the historical figure it honored. That decision sparked a much larger question: Why are some controversial artists, composers, and historical narratives accepted in arts education… while others suddenly become unacceptable? In this episode, Mike DeJohn takes a deep dive into the Watertown controversy surrounding Omar Thomas’s A Mother of a Revolution! and asks the uncomfortable question many people are avoiding: If educational institutions are going to scrutinize art based on identity, politics, morality, historical violence, or controversy… then why are those standards applied so selectively? This episode explores: * the inconsistency of controversy standards in arts education * composers like Tchaikovsky, Copland, Bernstein, and Wagner * protest music, political theater, and historical art movements * the role of discomfort in education * the difference between education and endorsement * why students are paying attention to how adults handle these moments * how fear quietly reshapes educational culture This is not an episode about political tribalism. It is an episode about honesty. Because once you start banning art based on controversial history, identity, or association, the entire history of performance art becomes far more complicated than many communities are prepared to admit. And students are watching how adults respond.

16 de may de 2026 - 29 min
episode When a School Board Is Afraid of a Piece of Music artwork

When a School Board Is Afraid of a Piece of Music

What happens when a school board removes a piece of instrumental music from a student concert because of the historical figure it honors? In this episode, we unpack the controversy surrounding the removal of Omar Thomas’s A Mother of a Revolution! from a Wisconsin high school concert program after months of student preparation. The work, inspired by the legacy of Marsha P. Johnson and the Stonewall uprising, became the center of a heated school board debate about politics, education, visibility, and fear. But this episode is about far more than one composition. It is about what happens when educational institutions begin treating certain histories as too dangerous to acknowledge through art. It is about the growing tension between community discomfort and artistic education. It is about whether music programs are still allowed to challenge students intellectually and emotionally, or whether fear now dictates what can safely exist on stage. We also explore the deeper implications for directors, students, booster organizations, and school communities when politics enters the rehearsal hall. If art connected to difficult history is unacceptable, where does that line end? And what message does it send to students when adults erase a performance after months of work? This is one of the most important conversations we have had on the podcast. Not because it is easy. Because it matters.

14 de may de 2026 - 17 min
episode You Cannot Build a Healthy Program on Burnt-Out Parents artwork

You Cannot Build a Healthy Program on Burnt-Out Parents

Every year, the same exhausted handful of parents quietly carry entire fine arts programs on their backs… until they can’t anymore. In this episode of the SoundstageEDU Podcast, Mike DeJohn dives deep into the real volunteer crisis happening inside marching bands, theater boosters, choir programs, and arts organizations across the country. This is not an episode about blaming parents. It is about understanding why burnout happens, why new families often feel intimidated or disconnected, and how healthier systems can completely transform booster culture. We talk about: • volunteer burnout • why parents stop helping • micro-volunteering • leadership culture • freshman parent onboarding • organizational sustainability • continuity planning • why “nobody helps anymore” is usually a systems problem If you are a booster leader, band parent, theater parent, director, or incoming freshman family trying to navigate this world for the first time… this episode is for you. The kids deserve healthy programs. The adults deserve healthy systems. Join the free SoundstageEDU community and explore additional governance resources, leadership tools, and support: https://www.soundstageedu.com [https://www.soundstageedu.com/]

12 de may de 2026 - 24 min
episode When Music Becomes Dangerous: The Wisconsin Band Controversy Nobody Wants to Talk About artwork

When Music Becomes Dangerous: The Wisconsin Band Controversy Nobody Wants to Talk About

A Wisconsin school board is considering pulling a wind ensemble piece from a spring concert just days before performance because of its ties to LGBTQ+ history. No lyrics. No explicit content. Just instrumental music. But the controversy surrounding “A Mother of a Revolution” raises much bigger questions about arts education, fear, politics, trust, and what happens when communities begin demanding that art only exist if it never makes anyone uncomfortable. In this episode, Mike DeJohn breaks down the deeper issue underneath the headlines: What is the actual purpose of art in education? Should music only be uplifting and celebratory? Can schools responsibly explore difficult human themes without it becoming political warfare? What happens to students when months of preparation are suddenly threatened by adult fear and outrage? This is not a partisan episode. It is a conversation about education, governance, emotional maturity, artistic freedom, and the growing collapse of trust between schools, parents, boards, and communities. If you care about music education, fine arts culture, student growth, or the future of arts programs in America… this conversation matters.

7 de may de 2026 - 26 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Fantástica aplicación. Yo solo uso los podcast. Por un precio módico los tienes variados y cada vez más.
Me encanta la app, concentra los mejores podcast y bueno ya era ora de pagarles a todos estos creadores de contenido

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