Concurrent Session IV Using an Inquiry Process for Making and Observing Art 142 Massachusetts Avenue, William Davis Room This interactive session will explore an inquiry process as experiential learners and as contemplative teaching artists. An inquiry process uses questions and questioning strategies to activate learning, deepen reflection, and prompt curiosity. In this session, the inquiry process is focused on a specific work of art. Questions are used for a multitude of specific purposes, among them: to consider choices in an art-making process; to reflect upon and assess one’s learning; to help learners develop their own questions; to go deeper into a work of art under study; and to prompt contextual research. —Presented by: Joy Arcolano and Jean Taylor (Teaching Artist at Lincoln Center Institute) —Hosted by: Bridgette Hayes Three-Horn Writing and Arranging: Exploring Options and Creating Colorful Contrasts 150 Massachusetts Avenue, Room B41 In this session, the Manuel Kaufmann Sextet will actively demonstrate the creation of more effective and exciting three-horn (voice) arrangements. The concepts and techniques we will touch upon are equally effective for any application in any style, genre, or instrumental combination, although the writing and performance focuses on three horns. The session will emphasize contrasting approaches to show the full spectrum of alternative solutions. This lecture and live band performance format allows us to turn dry snippets of score samples into three-dimensional and colorful musical impressions which can be tweaked at the spur of the moment to zoom in on more creative options. Participants will reawaken the arranger within and walk away with a wider array of ideas of how to approach a given melody and turn problematic areas into opportunities for more musically satisfying solutions. —Presented by: Manuel Kaufmann, Rick DiMuzio, Fernando Huergo, Doug Johnson, Peter Kenagy, Randy Pingrey, and Mark Walker —Hosted by: Brian Curr 33