What families need to know about band.
This handbook summary keeps the public, evergreen parts of the Fort Nelson Music Department handbook in one place: expectations, equipment, practice, performances, uniforms, travel, fundraising, and communication.
What students learn
Students learn instrumental technique, ensemble skills, creativity, cooperation, discipline, listening, performance confidence, and how to reflect on their own growth.
How students grow
Students work toward stronger tone, posture, breath control, rhythm, reading, expressive playing, correct fingerings or slide positions, and instrument care.
What families can expect
Band is fun and challenging. Students are expected to come prepared, practice regularly, attend performances, and support the people around them.
Learning Areas
Performance
Posture, breath support, characteristic tone, expressive markings, technique, ensemble balance, and instrument maintenance.
Understanding
Notes on the staff, rhythms, musical terms and symbols, theory concepts, listening skills, pitch, balance, and musical awareness.
Creativity
Composing, improvising, interpreting music in different styles, making artistic choices, and trying new musical ideas.
Explore and Reflect
Learning about composers and genres, reflecting on performances, and connecting music to personal experience.
Prepared For Rehearsal
Students should arrive with the supplies they need and be ready to use rehearsal time well. Repeated missing supplies usually means a family check-in and a plan to help the student get back on track.
- Instrument, or stick bag for percussionists.
- Music, method book when assigned, and a pencil.
- Reeds for clarinet and saxophone players.
- Valve oil or slide oil for brass players.
- Chromebook and headphones when required for FNSS work.
The 5 P's
The band room is meant to be a safe and supportive place to work hard, have fun, and make music. Students are expected to be:
Practice At Home
Students who practice usually enjoy band more. A strong target is about 100 minutes per week, divided into short sessions. Regular practice helps students feel confident instead of rushed before concerts or assessments.
- Find a place with limited distractions.
- Make practice part of a routine.
- Warm up gently with long tones.
- Work on the hard sections first, then end with something fun.
- Start slowly and only speed up once the music is secure.
Performances And Uniforms
Performances are part of the learning experience. Students are expected to attend concerts unless there is a medical or other emergency, because every part matters to the full ensemble.
Concerts
RLA students usually perform in winter, spring, and year-end concerts. FNSS students may also have fall performance opportunities. Current dates belong in Music Notes.
RLA Uniform
RLA students generally wear the band t-shirt with clean pants and shoes for performances.
FNSS / Tour Band Uniform
FNSS students and RLA Tour Band students use the formal band uniform with black dress pants, black dress shoes, and black socks when required.
Public Performances
Most performances are open to the public and free of charge. Locations may include the Phoenix Theatre or school gyms.
Travel And Festivals
RLA bands may have opportunities to attend regional festivals, while Tour Band and Sr. Jazz may travel for larger performance opportunities. Trips help students perform for new audiences, hear other groups, and receive feedback.
Band Accounts And Fundraising
Band account and fundraising systems help track money earned or deposited for band-related expenses such as trips, supplies, rental fees, and clothing. Specific account login details should come through the portal, Music Notes, or direct family communication rather than the public website.
Where current details live
Schedules, concert dates, trip forms, fundraising signups, and account instructions can change from year to year. Use Music Notes, the parent/student portal, Facebook, and Instagram for current information.
