<p>The Quality of the Vocal Instruction - The MT Section in the School of Theater Arts at the UArts has its own Vocal instructors, separate than those in the School of Music. As of right now, there are four instructors:
- Patricia Raine
- Therese Greenland
- Mary Ellen Grant-Kennedy
- Dr. Neal Tracy</p>
<p>All are highly qualified in what they teach, though they teach in very different ways, of course. Patty also teaches a Voice for Musical Theater class for freshmen, so she will get to know all of the incoming students--this is helpful because she usually directs either the fall or spring musical. Neal teaches a Voice for Musical Theater class for seniors. You are placed with your voice teacher based on your audition for the school, so you don't get to choose who your teacher is, but most people get placed appropriately.</p>
<p>The even-handedness in casting shows is based on which director is casting. In any situation (in the real world, but ESPECIALLY in a school-based setting where you have a limited casting pool), a director is going to have some things pre-cast. Most of the directors work directly at the university and know the students that are auditioning for them. One can't really call it unfair, because if you know somebody's going to work well, there's no reason not to cast them.</p>
<p>Also UArts has a policy called "casting restriction" which means if a person has received a grade of, I believe, B- or lower in one of their core classes (for MTs that would be their Acting Studio, Voice for MT class or their voice lesson), then they are not allowed to be cast for the upcoming semester, though they must still audition. It can also occur if one's GPA is too low, though I don't remember the exact number. </p>
<p>UArts doesn't look for a specific type of student, I don't think. Transfers are very welcome. We tend to have at least one or two transfers a year, and some people are older but don't give in their transfer credits or don't have transfer credits. Basically, we love transfers!</p>
<p>I'm not really sure how the academics are working with the incoming students. They're no longer required to take an allotted amount of elective liberal arts credits (2 classes of Social Science credits, one class of Science/Math, etc.) but I think they can choose whichever electives they want to take. They have to take a class called First-Year Writing and two semesters of various SIFT classes. I don't remember what it stands for, but they seem interesting, ranging in classes from Texts & Contexts to Human Observance, and Love & Death. While the academics are not the focal point of your studies, they stress making a well-rounded person. A person with slightly worse grades and better talent is more likely to get in than a person with better grades and slightly worse talent. </p>
<p>Hope I helped, and apologies for my long-windedness!</p>