Learning and Curriculum Design
Are you…
Looking for someone to develop an inclusive, creative, music history curriculum for your university or organization?
Looking for someone to teach a full course or a single lecture?
Hoping to expand the diversity of your current course offerings?
University Teaching
I have taught music history courses for undergraduate and graduate students at a number of universities, conservatories, and schools of music in the mid-Atlantic region. I have both developed courses from scratch and revamped existing courses, always striving to increase diversity, inclusion, and accessibility through the course material and mode of instruction.
Public Lecturing
I am an engaging and dynamic public speaker. I value the opportunity to speak to concert- and opera-goers about old and new repertoire, giving context and suggesting new ways of listening to the music and considering the subject-matter.
Curriculum Consulting
I have a student-centered approach to teaching influenced by best practices in trauma-informed teaching and universal design for learning. I am happy to work with you to think through how to respectfully and collaboratively reach out to your audience or student community and create content that will provide enrichment and opportunities for growth.
Recent Courses Taught:
Courses for Undergraduate Music Majors
History of Music I and II (Peabody Institute)
I taught History of Music II, Classical and Romantic Music (Spring 2022), and History of Music I, Medieval and Renaissance Music (Fall 2022 and Spring 2023). These are fundamental courses in the music history sequence for conservatory students, and I adapted them to emphasize skill-building. Students learned to: analyze primary source documents; describe their personal listening practices in detail using shared terminology; understand how history gets written, by whom, and for what purpose; analyze the complex relationships between music and text in texted vocal music.
Music in History 1750-present (Temple University)
I taught this course online in Spring of 2021 and was given permission to make changes to the existing course to make it more diverse and inclusive. Throughout the semester, students reflected on the act of creating music history, and especially about who is included and who is excluded from traditional narratives. Students were asked to co-create the syllabus, giving feedback on what was taught and how it was being taught. I strategically placed students into groups based on their self-reported skills and interests, and each group worked on a final presentation making a case for why a particular figure in music history had not historically been represented in textbooks and other narratives of music history and why they should be represented in such narratives in the future.
Music in History: Marian Anderson in Philadelphia and Beyond (Temple University)
In this course, we will examine the life and legacy of Philadelphia’s own Marian Anderson, a singer who broke boundaries and built community through her music-making. We will explore the repertoire Anderson sang, how her iconic voice was received by audiences, and how her activism contributed to the Civil Rights Movement. In addition to this content, we will learn how to be public musicologists. We will apply our research, writing, and presentation skills in the service of the Marian Anderson Museum and Historical Society, an organization which expands the reach of Marian Anderson’s legacy in our local community through programming that promotes diversity, equity, and inclusion within the field of Classical Music.'
Courses for Undergraduate and Graduate Student Music Majors
History of Opera (West Chester University, Temple University)
I have had the opportunity to serve as a semester-long replacement for professors of Opera History at West Chester University and Temple University. In my syllabi, I worked to include a mixture of well-known, standard repertoire that have been traditionally studied in the field and that students might be expected to know in the future, along with lesser-known works that serve to diversify the syllabus and showcase different aspects of opera as an art form. I supplemented the textbook (Parakilas’s The Story of Opera at West Chester and Abbate and Parker’s A History of Opera at Temple) with additional readings from scholarly publications, newspapers and magazines, and websites and social media. In addition, I crafted assignments that tap into student’s creativity and have them think about opera from different points of view. For example, students wrote their directorial vision for an opera scene, reviewed a live performance of an opera, and analyzed how an operatic aria is used in a televised commercial for a product.
Electives for Undergraduate Students
First Year Seminar: Shakespeare and Music (Johns Hopkins University)
The plays of William Shakespeare contain many musical cues. In Hamlet, Ophelia expresses herself through song when she is unable to through speech. In The Tempest, the spirit Ariel lures the shipwrecked Ferdinand to the shore by singing a song. In this course, we will think through the role of music in Shakespeare’s plays, reading The Tempest, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Romeo and Juliet, and Othello, with attention to the sonic worlds they create. In addition, we will explore the various musical works that these plays have inspired, from film to stage, opera to musical theater.
Music in Movie Epics (Temple University)
This course is an introduction to the art of film music through the lens of movie epics. At its inception, the course centered around three major movie franchises: Harry Potter, Star Wars, and The Lord of the Rings. I built a syllabus that still included films from these franchises but also represents different kinds of movie epics, from animated movies such as Disney’s Coco to superhero movies such as Black Panther and martial arts movies such as Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. Adding variety to the films on the syllabus meant that students are exposed to more diverse ways that soundtracks can manipulate audience expectations and reactions.
Mozart Operas (Peabody at Homewood Program at Johns Hopkins University)
This writing-intensive course aims to introduce students to Mozart Operas while reframing the common narrative of Mozart as a stand-alone musical genius. The course curriculum focuses on the collaborative nature of Mozart’s operas: his work alongside librettists, singers, and impresarios, and the support he gained from his family and friends. The course also addresses head-on the fact that many Mozart operas have misogyny, violence against women, and racism embedded into their plots and even their music. We think deeply about these subjects and the ethics of presenting Mozart’s operas today.
Powerful Women in Opera (Peabody at Homewood Program at Johns Hopkins University)
This course, cross-listed with Women and Gender Studies, seeks to counteract prevailing narratives of women as victims in opera. We explore together the different ways female characters, from queens to serving girls, exert their power with their voices and actions in operatic narratives. As we study repertoire from the 17th century through the present, we notice ways in which the representation of women in opera has stayed the same over time and ways in which they have changed. In addition, we think about the role of women in the opera industry and how female singers, composers, librettists, directors, and administrators have shaped and continue to shape opera.
Graduate-Level Seminars
The Business of Opera in 21st-Century America (Peabody Institute)
I developed this asynchronous, online course in partnership with Peabody’s Learning Innovation team, and it launched in Spring of 2023. For this course, I interviewed singer Davóne Tines, composer Lembit Beecher, dramaturge Cori Ellison, conductor Sean Kelly, Lee Anne Myslewski (Vice President of Opera and Classical Programming at Wolf Trap Foundation for the Performing Arts), Kristina Murti (Director of Marketing and Communications at Seattle Opera), and Veronica Chapman-Smith (Vice President of Community Initiatives at Opera Philadelphia) about their views on the state of opera in America today. These interviews formed part of the original course content that I developed with modules on the Operatic Canon, Updated Stagings, Alternate Venues for Opera, Composing New Repertoire, Recruiting Audiences, and Education and Community Engagement.
Exoticism on the Musical Stage (Peabody Institute)
This course focuses on musical works for the stage that contain representations of the “other,” examining how text, music, and staging all work in different ways to exoticize certain characters. Creators of musical works have been continually drawn towards the idea of the “other,” wanting to represent on the stage characters that they perceive as culturally different or outside the norms of their own society. Works discussed will include Rameau’s Les Indes galantes (1735), Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte (1791), Bizet’s Carmen (1875), Sullivan’s The Mikado (1885), and Bernstein’s West Side Story (1957), as well as more recent adaptations of these works such as Carmen Jones (1943), Carmen: A Hip Hopera (2001), and the upcoming new West Side Story film (2021). We address the historical contexts of these works, not to excuse them for their stereotyping practices, but to learn the social, economic, and aesthetic contexts that contributed to their original receptions. In addition, we examine our own responses to these pieces and discuss the ethics of performing these works today.
Reenacting Orpheus (Peabody Institute)
This course focuses on Orpheus operas: from Claudio Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo of 1607, considered one of the first true operas ever written, to Anaïs Mitchell’s 2010 folk opera Hadestown, currently playing on Broadway. We develop analytical tools for exploring operas, learning how text, music, and production elements such as costumes and scenery interact to tell the story of Orpheus. Through the course of the semester, students become experts not only in the Orpheus myth, but also in issues of translation, adaptation, and reenactment. We consider how different Orpheus operas present the same story to different audiences, changing the myth in various ways to make Orpheus continue to appeal to listeners around the world and throughout the centuries.
Research in Music (Temple University)
Survey of research methods for musicology. Students self-assessed their research competencies, and I created course materials to build up their confidence in research tasks including finding and analyzing primary and secondary sources; writing an annotated bibliography; writing an abstract; skimming large quantities of material; writing for different audiences; time management; basic archival work; and peer review.
Performance Ensembles
Rodin Opera Scenes Ensemble (University of Pennsylvania)
This ensemble, which was in existence from 2014-2018, was a training and performance program for University of Pennsylvania undergraduate and graduate students. The program’s mission was to serve all students, regardless of their previous experience with opera or classical singing, and repertoire was chosen to best suit individual singers’ voices and levels of experience. A performance was held at operations as well as its artistic vision. I auditioned singers, coached singers musically, staged scenes, and put together the performance program, working collaboratively with the program’s mix of paid and volunteer staff.
Courses in Development
Mental Health on the Musical Stage
Comparative Arts
Opera Translation and Adaptation
Communicating Through Music
Identity Politics on Broadway
Introduction to Public Musicology
Audience Engagement Lectures
2024 “Introduction to Madame Butterfly,” Opera Overtures Lecture
2024 “Interpreting Madame Butterfly,” Between the Notes Lecture for Donors
2023 “Introduction to Unholy Wars.” Opera Overtures Lecture
2023 “Unholy Wars: Echoes of History,” Between the Notes Lecture for Donors
2023 “Introduction to Orth’s 10 Days in a Madhouse,” Opera Overtures Lecture
2023 “Amplifying Voices: 10 Days in a Madhouse,” Between the Notes Lecture for Donors
2023 “Introduction to Verdi’s Simon Boccanegra,” Opera Overtures Lecture
2023 “Patriotism and Family in Simon Boccanegra,” Between the Notes Lecture for Donors
2023 “Introduction to Puccini’s La bohème,” Opera Overtures Lecture
2023 “La bohème and Audience Immersion,” Between the Notes Lecture for Donors
2023 “Carmina Burana and Credo: Defying Categorization,” Between the Notes Lecture for Donors
2023 “Introduction to Orff’s Carmina Burana and Bonds’ Credo,” Opera Overtures Lecture
2022 “Introduction to Rossini’s Otello,” Opera Overtures Lecture
2022 “Otello and Desdemona in Rossini’s Otello,” Between the Notes Lecture for Donors
2022 “Hosokawa’s The Raven: Inspiration, Collaboration, and Innovation,” Between the Notes Lecture for Donors
2022 “Seductive and Sinister: The Complex Characters of Rigoletto” (Also given at the Athenæum of Philadelphia)
2022 “A Biblical Opera: Rossini’s Moses in Egypt,” Hillcrest Jewish Center Sisterhood
2022 “What Can Opera Add to Shakespeare: Gounod’s Roméo et Juliette,” Opera Philadelphia, Lifelong Learning at Waverley Heights
2022 “Shakespeare Two Ways: The Otellos of Rossini and Verdi,” Opera Philadelphia, Lifelong Learning at Waverley Heights
2022 “Music, Magic, and Merriment: Britten’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” Opera Philadelphia, Lifelong Learning and Waverley Heights
2022 “Seductive and Sinister: The Complex Characters of Rigoletto,” Opera Philadelphia, Between the Notes Lecture for Donors
(Also given at the Athenæum of Philadelphia)
2022 “Introduction to Rigoletto,” Opera Philadelphia, Opera Overtures Lecture
2022 “(Re-)Reading Rigoletto,” Opera Philadelphia, VIVACE Lecture
2022 “Opera Translation and Audience Engagement,” Opera NextGen Webinar
2022 “Absorption and Distance: Oedipus Rex and Lilacs,” Opera Philadelphia, Between the Notes Lecture for Donors
2022 “Introduction to Oedipus Rex and Lilacs,” Opera Philadelphia, Opera Overtures Lecture
2022 “Denial in Oedipus Rex,” Opera Philadelphia, VIVACE Lecture
2020 “Paris in the Belle Époque,” Philadelphia Chamber Music Society, Pre-performance Lecture for General Audience
2020 “The New European Map,” Philadelphia Chamber Music Society, Pre-performance Lecture for General Audience
2017 “Die Zauberflöte, Gender Dynamics, and Silent Film,” Opera Philadelphia, Between the Notes Lecture for Donors
2017 “Social Hierarchies in Disguise in Le nozze di Figaro,” Opera Philadelphia, Between the Notes Lecture for Donors
2017 “Introduction to Le nozze di Figaro,” Opera Philadelphia, Opera Overtures Lecture for General Audience
2011 “Zoom in on Zefferelli with La bohème,” Metropolitan Opera Guild, Pre-screening Lecture for General Audience
2011 “Putting New Magic in The Magic Flute,” Metropolitan Opera Guild, Pre-screening Lecture for General Audience
Curriculum Consulting
2022 Curriculum Consultant, Opera Philadelphia, Student Guide for Verdi’s Rigoletto
2022 Curriculum Consultant, Opera Philadelphia, Student Guide for Stravinsky’s Oedipus Rex
2021 Curriculum Consultant, Opera Philadelphia, Sounds of Learning Workbook for Verdi’s La Traviata
2021 Curriculum Consultant, Opera Philadelphia, Sounds of Learning Workbook for Henze’s El Cimarrón
2020 Curriculum Consultant, Opera Philadelphia, Sounds of Learning Workbook for Puccini’s Madama Butterfly
2020 Curriculum Consultant, Opera Philadelphia, Sounds of Learning Workbook for Verdi’s Requiem
2017 Curriculum Consultant, Opera Philadelphia, Sounds of Learning Workbook for Written on Skin
2016 Course Developer, Opera Philadelphia, Massive Open Online Course for Cold Mountain
2011 Curriculum Consultant, Metropolitan Opera Guild, Pathways for Understanding Study Guides