Once students returned in person, a new challenge arose. Elementary schoolers had to be masked and weren’t initially allowed to play any instruments. Rather than teach theory and air fingering, Rosner pivoted her approach. “No kid wants to be theoretical about it. They want to make music,” she said.
Rosner purchased ukuleles and electric basses— instruments her students would be able to play under the new restrictions—and re outfitted the program using a community donation. The band was so successful that the school district designed the teacher appreciation video to feature it. For Rosner, it represented “a picture of a reinvented program.”
Rosner, who hails from Rockville, Maryland, started learning trumpet in fourth grade. When she arrived on South Hill as a euphonium player, she felt she was strong on musicality but lacked in technical skills relative to her peers. She credits the patience of her professors with enabling her to thrive.
After getting her undergraduate degree, Rosner stayed in the Ithaca area, landing a position as a music teacher for two years at a children’s treatment facility in Seneca County, where she developed an instrumental music program for youth with developmental delay, emotional disturbance, and behavioral challenges.
Her passion for bringing music to underserved youth as an undergraduate student continued in her graduate degree through a connection initiated by composition professor Dana Wilson (now emeritus), and supported by many of her IC professors when she volunteered at several juvenile court–ordered facilities. She also taught music to incarcerated youth, often bringing other IC students to assist for independent study credit.
“The School of Music was incredibly supportive if I needed materials, books, or instruments,” she said.
Rosner currently teaches weekly classes in the Northern Virginia Juvenile Detention Center in a program she developed while continuing to rack up accolades for the impact she has on her students.
In June 2022, Alexandria Chamber of Commerce included her in their 40 under 40 list, and in September, she made the finalist list for Northern Virginia Magazine’s Teacher of the Year. Her nomination cited glowing praise from students’ families. “My son told me one time, ‘Do you think Ms. Rosner knows that she changed my life?’” said parent Anne Reynolds. “Heather Rosner is the type of teacher that goes above and beyond for her students every day.”