Concurrent Session | Hearing Health and Hearing Loss 1108 Boylston Street, Room 205 No high school or college athlete would be allowed on the field before passing a preseason physical examination. So why do we enroll and train musicians and other performers without screening and monitoring their hearing? Performing artists must meet high practice and performance demands during their training and careers. New discoveries about noise injury raise serious concerns about the safety of the training and performance environment of these young artists. This session will present up-to-date information on normal hearing and on acoustic trauma and its newly discovered corollary. We will explore “hidden hearing loss,” and the acute and progressive loss of nerve connections to auditory hair cells that follows loud noise exposure. The presenter will describe an illustrative pilot hearing screening and conservation program for the Conservatory and discuss possible changes to the music production and engineering environment to promote hearing conservation. —Presented by: Steven Rauch —Hosted by: Michael Abraham How to Get That Grant 1108 Boylston Street, Room 217 Have you heard about a colleague, college, or nonprofit organization receiving a generous grant, and realized that you have a great idea, too? Perhaps you've wondered whether you can get a grant to support your project, but have no idea how to start. Or maybe you wrote grant proposals years ago but are rusty. Funders are getting tougher and competition is getting rougher. This session will help you learn, from the college’s official grant writer, how to get that grant, from developing the idea to completing the components of a proposal and packaging the final product. Topics include researching funders, effectively pitching your idea(s), determining the need, finding research, writing the