Performing at Adjudicated Festivals While Traveling
How to prepare your students to perform confidently in front of judges — even when they’re far from home and full of nerves.
Traveling to perform at an adjudicated festival is a huge milestone for school music programs. It pushes students beyond their usual concert routine, placing them in unfamiliar spaces, under pressure, in front of expert judges — often after long travel days and limited warm-up time.
It’s exciting. It’s stressful. And it’s one of the most powerful learning experiences your ensemble will ever have.
Here’s how to prepare your students emotionally, musically, and mentally for success.
🎯 Step 1: Set the Right Mindset Early
Weeks before the trip, start shaping student expectations:
- Reinforce that adjudicated festivals are about learning and growth — not just scores
- Talk about the value of professional feedback and how to accept critique constructively
- Normalize the nerves that come with judging — and how to channel them into focus
Help students understand that their goal isn’t perfection. It’s delivering the best performance they can, together, in the moment.
🎵 Step 2: Practice Performing Under Pressure
Simulate festival conditions during rehearsals:
- Do run-throughs with limited warm-up time
- Rearrange your setup to mimic a different stage or space
- Invite guest listeners (teachers, administrators, other classes) to increase visibility
- Record rehearsals and review them together like a sports team
Every run-through becomes more than practice — it becomes preparation for the real thing.
📍 Step 3: Walk Through the Festival Process in Advance
Unknowns create anxiety. Reduce that by walking students through the full day:
- When and how they’ll warm up
- What the stage setup will feel like
- Who will greet them backstage
- How the judges will interact (or not)
- What happens after they perform (sight reading, clinic, etc.)
Bonus: Show photos or videos of the venue, if available. Familiar visuals help students feel grounded when they arrive.
✈️ Step 4: Manage Travel Fatigue and Distractions
When students are out of their comfort zone — eating differently, sharing hotel rooms, sleeping less — their focus suffers. Build routines into the trip that promote stability:
- Set lights-out and quiet hours at the hotel
- Maintain group meals and check-in times
- Keep downtime structured, not chaotic
- Designate a chaperone or student leader as a calming presence
On performance day, protect their energy. Avoid scheduling long walking tours or theme park time right before they perform. Let the focus be music first — then play.
🧠 Step 5: Talk About “Festival Mind” vs. “Theme Park Mind”
If your trip includes recreational attractions, help students compartmentalize. Use language like:
- “Festival mindset” = focus, professionalism, readiness
- “Free time mindset” = fun, social, relaxed
Let them enjoy both — but not at the same time. Make it clear that music comes first, and the reward comes after they’ve delivered their best effort.
🗣️ Step 6: Debrief the Performance Thoughtfully
After the performance, schedule time to reflect:
- What felt great? What surprised you?
- What did we learn about ourselves as a group?
- How can we grow from the feedback we received?
Even if you earned top ratings, focus on the journey. If things didn’t go perfectly, model grace, gratitude, and a forward-looking attitude.
🎓 Final Thought
Festival travel teaches students more than music. It teaches them how to rise under pressure, perform as a team, and represent their school with pride. With the right preparation and support, they’ll remember the lessons — and the performance — for the rest of their lives.
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