Whimsical artwork, shelves of student keepsakes, a six-foot furry orange monster staring inquisitively from a corner â collectively, the memorabilia in Scott Durbinâs ÎÚŃť´ŤĂ˝ office illustrate his journey as an educator and music industry professional.
This December, Durbin can add another signpost to his collection: Master of Education in Curriculum and Instruction.
Durbin planned to earn his masterâs degree immediately following his undergraduate studies in the early â90s, but, with a wedding on the horizon, instead he earned an alternative teaching certification and began working in New Orleans schools.
Although music had long been part of his life, Durbin says he largely put it aside until he began having children.
âWhen you have children, youâre born into that world of childrenâs programming â TV, music, and movies that youâre evaluating. For me, the lack of real people in childrenâs programming was obvious,â he says.
Durbinâs response was to gather a group of friends â Rich Collins, Dave Poche and Scott âSmittyâ Smith â and to make a music-based television show with real people and real music.
In 2002, the were born.
âOf course, my experience as an educator informed what the Movers were,â Durbin says. âIâd done a lot of research-based best practices to create an educational philosophy for that program. And we just had an idea that we knew would work.â
They were right.
The group signed a contract with Disney in 2007 and ultimately filmed 75 episodes, winning an Emmy along the way. This year, the Movers released their , which includes a track featuring Lisa Loeb.
During the last 17 years, Durbin amassed some serious credibility and experience in the music entertainment industry. When the UL Lafayette School of Music & Performing Arts began piecing together its music business major, Durbin was a great fit.
But to continue in academia, Durbin needed one more credential â he needed to finish his masterâs.
âSo here I was juggling three balls: creating a curriculum for a program that really didnât have it, earning my masters, and continuing my work with the Imagination Movers,â he says. âThe online masterâs program was really the only way I couldâve accomplished it.â
Specifically, Durbin wanted to complete his masterâs in curriculum and instruction, which built on his early experience as a technology and then writing specialist and would inform his new role.
âI had a lot of real-world experience but it was a matter of taking my experience and creating an instructional scope and sequence that made sense for the music business program and would lead the program in the future,â he says.
âAll that knowledge with regards to curriculum and instruction, I could apply to my present situation here at UL Lafayette and really strengthen the program because of it.â
UL Lafayetteâs online M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction prepares teachers to reform, refine, and develop curricula and instruction techniques primarily at the elementary, middle, and high school levels.
Durbin says as a University instructor, he was an âanomalyâ within the curriculum and instruction program but was able to work with professors to apply coursework to his subject matter at the university level.
And heâs already begun applying those lessons directly to the classroom. By learning about active-learning instructional formats, Durbin says heâs been able to transition his instruction from a lecture-model to a more student-based model.
âIn the music business program, itâs really about how they can apply what theyâre learning once they leave here. I felt student-centered instruction and active learning was a really helpful way to facilitate that,â he says. âMoving away from lecture-based instruction is not something I would have done if not for the online learning experience.â
Becoming a student again shaped Durbinâs perspective in other ways, too, from engaging with other educators to using tools in different ways.
âBeing a student allows me to see things from a studentâs perspective, which further informs my point of view,â he said. âWe had a lot of online discussions so you were interacting with other professionals regarding the course material so it wasnât just my point of view; I could see other peopleâs points of view and how they experienced the content, which I think rounded it out.
âItâs been a great experience, quite honestly, to do the online masterâs.â
Durbin said he planned to take two courses each semester but had to adjust his plan. The online Master of Education program gave him the flexibility to set his pace.
Even when the Imagination Movers had a tour in Asia, Durbin was still enrolled in one course. And when his mother became ill, he was able to take a semester off.
âObviously, those types of situations impact where you are in life,â Durbin says. âFortunately, when youâre doing an online learning situation it allows you to manage your time. I could still get it done, even if I had to take care of the things life threw at me.â
Whatâs next for Durbin? More juggling.
The Movers have more tour dates scheduled for the spring, and in March all of the episodes produced with Disney will be available on the new Disney+ service. Meanwhile, Durbin will continue sharing his expertise with future music industry professionals at UL Lafayette.
âWe always have an iron in the fire. It definitely gives the program extra validation that Iâm still a practicing professional member of the industry, whether Iâm writing or publishing,â Durbin says. âIâm still doing a lot of the things Iâm teaching about in the program. I can talk to students about how to face these issues when they leave here with their degree.â