06/21/2026
I miss the 60s.
Patient, positive-oriented, holistic music instruction. Learn to understand the science of music. Creativity is nurtured.
Columbia University, MA: Music
Berklee College of Music, Guitar and Keyboard
06/21/2026
I miss the 60s.
06/14/2026
The research shows that nothing uses more of the brain than learning a musical instrument. The best type of training is
to learn to understand music, and it's much easier to
play what we understand.
Understanding musical theory is understanding nature, and it's easy and beautiful. We are part of nature.
Music Training, and the Ability of Musicians to Harmonize, Are Associated With Enhanced Planning and Problem-Solving Music training is associated with enhanced executive function but little is known about the extent to which harmonic aspects of musical training are associated with components of executive function. In the current study, an array of cognitive tests ...
06/04/2026
05/14/2026
Sharing my love of music at Dixon Montessori Public School.
Students of all ages are welcome.
If you are interested in individualized instruction, please message me at Robert Comarow.
05/01/2026
The Brutal Destruction of the American Student
by Bob Comarow
American public education was built in the shadow of industrialization, and you can still feel the machinery in its bones. The early system wasn’t designed around children; it was designed around the needs of factories. Schools borrowed the logic of the assembly line. They wanted punctuality, predictability, and obedience. They wanted bodies that moved on command. They wanted silence. They wanted order.
So children were placed in assigned seats, even that small choice taken away. They sat in rows facing forward, the way workers faced their stations. They lined up on command. They walked silently in hallways, often arranged by size, as if uniformity itself were a virtue. And the entire day was carved into segments by bells — the same bell‑schedule factories used to control shifts. The bell to start work. The bell to stop. The bell to move. The bell to eat. The bell to return. Children learned to respond to external signals long before they learned to trust their own curiosity. The system taught compliance first, thinking later.
But the brutality of American education did not end with industrial regimentation. For many children, school was a place of punishment and humiliation. Corporal punishment was routine. Left‑handed children were forced to write with their right hand. Students were shamed for stuttering, for speaking out of turn, for not fitting the mold. Segregated schools denied Black children resources and dignity. Disabled children were isolated, hidden away rather than taught. The message was always the same: conform or be corrected.
And for Native American children, schooling crossed into something far harsher. Education became a tool of erasure. Boarding schools tore children from their families and stripped them of their language, their culture, their identity. Tim Giago, the Oglala Lakota journalist, wrote about children having their hair cut as a symbol of forced assimilation, being punished for speaking their own language, being separated from siblings, being trained for labor instead of learning. These schools weren’t just rigid — they were designed to break the child and rebuild them into something the state preferred. That is what truly brutal education looks like.
Even as this system hardened, there were reformers who believed in something better. Horace Mann, Henry Barnard, and Catherine Beecher pushed for literacy, for public knowledge, for the idea that every child deserved schooling. Their vision expanded access, even as the daily structure remained rigid and industrial.
Later came the thinkers who tried to shift the center of gravity toward the child. Montessori built environments where children could move, explore, choose, and grow. Piaget showed that children build understanding through stages, through experience. Dewey insisted that learning should connect to real life, that children learn by doing. They all pointed toward a more humane, more natural way of learning. But their ideas never became the backbone of American public education. The industrial model was easier to manage, easier to scale, easier to control — so it stayed.
And then came the critics — the ones who looked at the system and said, plainly, that something was deeply wrong. John Holt wrote about children who learned to hide their thinking because school punished mistakes. Charles Silberman described classrooms as places of “mindlessness,” where compliance mattered more than understanding. A.S. Neill went further, arguing that freedom itself was the precondition for real learning, and that coercion destroyed the child’s spirit long before it taught anything useful. These critics weren’t proposing minor adjustments; they were exposing the emotional cost of a system built on control.
Yet even inside this machinery, there was one place that didn’t always play by the rules. This was one place where the factory logic failed, and a human step slipped through, the arts. In the music room, in the theater, in the studio, children were allowed — sometimes for the first time all day — to feel something. To create something. To take a risk. To make a sound that wasn’t sanctioned by a bell. Creativity and emotion weren’t disruptions there; they were the point. In those rooms, students rehearsed, refined, adjusted, and contributed. They learned persistence. They learned how to work with others. They learned how to solve problems together. They discovered that their ideas mattered, that their voice mattered, that they themselves mattered. The arts were not an isolated exception; they were the one place where the system’s grip loosened enough for children to become fully human.
We have come a long way, but the system’s roots remain visible. The conformity is still built into the structure. Something in me rebels every time I see children standing silently in straight lines, waiting for the next bell — a ritual inherited directly from the factory floor, a reminder of how far we still are from an education built around the child rather than the system.
When we look honestly at the origins — the industrial regimentation, the punitive discipline, the segregation, the forced assimilation of Native children, and the long line of critics who tried to warn us — it becomes clear that we still have a long way to go.
04/19/2026
One of the values of standardized testing is to ensure that
children with more assets get rewarded and more opportunities.
04/11/2026
I love teaching band at Montessori Charter Middle School,
a Public School serving all children.
04/07/2026
Check out how much this bass player contributes playing with Jon Batiste.
Nocturne No. 1 in D Minor - Jon Batiste More from this week's show: https://www.livefromhere.org/shows/2018/12/15/st-vincent-jon-batiste-jim-gaffigan
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