General Information
Eligibility
Students in grades 9 through 12 may apply for admission; 2022 graduates are included. Enrollment decisions are based on a recorded audition and music teacher endorsement letters.
Application
The application deadline is May 1. Applications will continue to be accepted if vacancies exist. Candidates must submit a completed application, music teacher endorsement letter, $100 deposit (which does apply to the total tuition due), and a recorded audition. See additional details below on the Apply Page. Acceptance letters and scholarship offers will be mailed later in May.
Tuition
$1,925 Resident (live on campus)
$1,725 Commuter (live off campus)
Program Content and Instruction
Most students are involved in six class experiences daily. Chamber music making and private lessons for each instrumentalist are seminar features. Most rehearsals and classes are conducted by faculty members and teaching assistants from the School of Music 51¸£ÀûÉç Michigan University. Course descriptions, sample schedules and a list of the faculty (as appointments are finalized) are included on the sample class schedules page.
Housing and meals
Students are housed in 51¸£ÀûÉç residence hall facilities and have access to many University services including libraries, health service and the student center. The residence hall is supervised by a carefully selected counseling staff of 51¸£ÀûÉç music students. Meals are served cafeteria style. Summer dining hours can be found on the 51¸£ÀûÉç dining services page.
Commuting option
Candidates may enroll as commuting students. They enjoy all program privileges (classes and activities), but do not sleep in the residence hall. Cafeteria meals and a parking permit are included.
Evening activities
Students benefit from a variety of evening activities designed to create a cultural, social and recreational balance to the daily schedule of classes. The recreational and social schedule includes swimming, ice skating, dances, parties, off-campus movie night, beach trip to Lake Michigan, open mic night, etc.
Evening events which are cultural are usually required, while social and recreational events are optional. Residence hall activities and practice room facilities are available on nights when no evening event is required. Discretionary free time is part of the Seminar experience.
"This is a must for any student interested in pursuing music as a career. There were scholarships available that helped defray some of the costs. If you haven't let you child try this out yet please reconsider. My son is now doing jazz, classical, and made awesome friends. I saw kids emerge from their cocoons as the most beautiful confident musicians." – Jacki R., parent of 2016 Seminar student