Granby Community Arts Hub sets the tone for social cohesion in Toxteth

by Angela Johnson. Published Sat 16 Jul 2011 16:18, Last updated: 2011-07-15

Liverpool Music Support Service (LMSS) is piloting an eight-week community project that is bringing together Granby Care Home, Princes Primary School, Kingsley Community School and Smithdown Junior School in the Toxteth area for an innovative communication project.

The unique initiative has created group sessions for the elder residents in the re-enablement unit and adults with learning disabilities at Granby Care Home along with children with complex learning disabilities from Princes Primary School and mainstream schoolchildren who speak English as an additional language from both Kingsley Community and Smithdown Junior Schools. The inter-generational project uses music, singing and Matakon signing to break down the barriers between these groups and encourage vocalisation and non-verbal communication skills through fun learning and interaction with others.

Jonathan Dickson, Head of Service at Liverpool Music Support Service said: “We first came across the Hub in May and although the different groups were already working together, we could really sense the scope for something more.

"Utilising the skills and expertise of the LMSS, we have been able to offer community music sessions to the groups and have shaped the future of these intergenerational gatherings through the promotion of communication and the use of specialist music education techniques.

“The project enables adults and children, many of whom face real challenges with communication, to come together and create friendships while building upon so many important skills. I went along to the first session and I was blown away by what I saw. Music is such a powerful tool and we’re able to use it as a mechanism, along with the Matakon signing, to visibly improve the group’s communication skills, both verbal and non-verbal.

“Whilst LMSS more commonly work with schoolchildren, the Granby Community Arts Hub was a new direction for us but one that we were more than happy to support.”

Granby Care Home and Princes Primary School have been working together throughout the academic year on a variety of artistic projects including a beautiful mural, which takes pride of place in the reception at Granby Care Home. With the vision of Liverpool Music Support Service, the Hub has been able to incorporate musical activities into their weekly sessions, run by an experienced music therapist and a singing tutor. LMSS’s capability in musical education has opened the project up to the benefits of musical learning such as boosting confidence, increasing concentration, focus and memory while improving interaction with others.

With Department of Education figures showing that 957,490 schoolchildren in England speak English as an additional language, the potential reach of LMSS’s pilot programme is broader than ever.

The singing and signing sessions are run by Lynne Newton and Georgina Roberts who have experience working with the Liverpool Music Support Service in the past and utilise instruments, live music, singing and Matakon signing actions to encourage learning skills within the group. In addition to these vocal and non-verbal communication techniques, the therapists use question slips to prompt the children to interact with each other and their older friends by asking simple questions and trading answers around the room.

Kate Maher, Manager at Granby Care Home said: “The LMSS have been amazing. The quality of the input from Lynne and Georgina is just outstanding and you can really see the elders and adults getting involved and enjoying themselves.

"It can be more difficult to measure the impact of the programme in adults than in children but the impact of the ‘feelgood factor’ is evident in all those who get involved.”

Matakon signing is often used with children and adults with learning disabilities to enable new communication techniques and aid the process of learning and speaking over time. The sign language allows those participating to break down the barriers that struggling with communication puts up and ensures that everybody involved can communicate to each other in the same way. The new techniques, driven forward by the collaboration with LMSS, have taken the project to another level, using music as a method for the individuals to build up social interaction.

The sessions have provided the pathway to friendship between the children and adults involved, free from the preconceptions and misunderstanding that can occur in everyday life. They accept each other, exactly how they are and without passing judgement or even acknowledging any differences at all, an unfortunately rare thing even now.

Juliette Gelling, Deputy Head at Princes Primary School said: “The children from Princes and the adult users of Granby Care Home have enjoyed working together on several arts projects over the academic year and now the music sessions have begun.

"The children love meeting different people and engaging with them and you only have to be at the music therapy sessions for a short time to see how responsive the adults are to the children.

"The children call the adults over in the Hub their friends and that is exactly what they have become.”





Comments about Granby Community Arts Hub sets the tone for social cohesion in Toxteth

Great news, especially linking old and young people. I hope this gets as much notice as all of the usual negative publicity about Granby.
Jack Coutts, Liverpool around 10 months, 1 week ago


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