Guest post: Dr. Yeou-Cheng Ma was born in Paris, France, and is a graduate of Radcliffe College and Harvard Medical School. She started studying the violin and piano at an early age, and is continuing the work of her father: Dr. H. T. Ma, Executive Director of the Children’s Orchestra Society, who teaches violin, viola, and chamber music, and works as a Developmental Pediatrician at the Rose F. Kennedy Center of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
Editor’s note: Dr. Yeou-Cheng Ma’s Holiday Wish has been one of our top Wishes over the past several days. Create your own Holiday Wish to support your favorite Cause.
I was a home-schooled child, and spent a lot of time practicing by myself, and only later in life found out what fun it is to get together to play with other musicians. This sense of community is empowering, and through the Children’s Orchestra, each child is encouraged to find his or her own voice, and to make a place for themselves now, as well, as in the future. Children nowadays have many opportunities to engage in many activities. We find that the friendships that our students make through their chamber music groups last for a lifetime. We have expanded on the “tailor-made” parts my father used to write so that each child could take part in the group experience, despite differing levels of competence, and make room for children with special needs to participate in our programs, thus integrating my experience with Developmental Pediatrics with my music teaching.
The Children’s Orchestra Society (COS), founded in 1962 by Dr. H. T. Ma, is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to “teaching children the language of music,” and to presenting these young musicians in orchestra and chamber music concerts with their peers and well-established artists.
Under the leadership of Executive Director Dr. Yeou-Cheng Ma and Music Director Michael Dadap since 1984, COS has held a firm belief in a child’s innate capability to learn and develop musical talent of the highest level when nurtured in a supportive environment. With this vision, enormous support of its board members, and the hard work of its talented faculty and staff, COS has grown from an 18-member ensemble to more than 125 members comprising of four orchestras, a chamber music department, and musicianship classes.
The Children’s Orchestra Society’s most advanced orchestra, the Young Symphonic Ensemble, has presented annual concerts at Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall and Carnegie Hall, since the establishment of the Discovery Concert Series in 1994. COS has also toured numerous North American cities as well as the Far East and the United Kingdom.
About Dr. H. T. Ma:
My father had a simple dream. He believed that music is a language, which is best learned from early childhood, and is accessible to any child. He founded the Children’s Orchestra in 1962, so that children could not only learn their instrument, but also grow in community, and speak to each other and their audience through the language of music.
He instilled his children, and students with a sense of urgency to value our time, and to make sure that each day, we make some progress. When I was about 4 years old, he pointed to a plant, and said to me: “Do you see this plant? It grows everyday. If you do not progress each day, then you are less than a plant!”
The secret to his method is simple. He, like the French, thought that nothing is impossible. “Whatever seems difficult, chop it up into smaller pieces. Work on each segment, until it is perfect, before going on”. For instance, if you were asked to learn everything on a large newspaper page, that would be overwhelming. However, it you cut it in 1/2, and again in 1/2, and again in 1/2, etc. … eventually you would find a “bite size” of information that even the smallest child could digest. This is how he was able to teach my brother to learn an entire Bach Suite on the Cello at the age of four, 2 measures per day.
In 1964, the Children’s Orchestra shared the Carnegie stage with Isaac Stern on parents’ night for the École Française. This year, our 42nd performing year, we are performing at Alice Tully Hall, a very exciting program on May 26, 2011, featuring our Young Symphonic Ensemble, with conductor Michael Dadap, this year’s Discovery Winner, Hinano Ishii, flutist, and guest artists Eliot Fisk and Zaira Meneses, guitarists. We invite you to join us at Lincoln Center, and to visit our website, for more information about our educational programs, and concerts.
Money raised through this Holiday Wish will be used to fund scholarships for children with financial need, as well as for the Dr. H. T. Ma Memorial Scholarship, awarded each year to the student(s) who best represented his ideals, first to be a good citizen, and second, to be an all-round excellent musician.

2 Responses to Whatever seems difficult, chop it up into smaller pieces
What a fabulous organization! I need to share this info. with my nephew who is a violinist.
As a young person unable to take private lessons, I was very fortunate to take part in a good instrumental music program in the small local school system. In Junior high, we played the Bach B minor Suite and both GM Brandenburgs, a number of the Corelli Opus 1 Concerti Grossi, the second movement of Beethoven’s First Symphony, and lots of other baroque music to acclaim at home and at festivals. In high school we kept up the Baroque, but also took on whole symphonies and won an all-state sweepstakes competition playing Mendellsohn. This was out of a town of 12,000 people, playing against schools from Los Angeles and San Diego! All this to say, a little help every day, a little belief and an attitude that you not only can but will do a terrific job can take ordinary people to extraordinary and life-changing places.