Tyler Wigglesworthâs music career has been hitting some high notes recently.
Last year, the high school choir di- rector had the privilege of leading his students to perform at one of the worldâs most famous concert venues, Carnegie Hall in New York City. The opportunity came on the heels of another unrelated honor, when Wigglesworth became one of 197 music educators in the nation to be named as quarterfinalists for the 2018 Grammy Music Educator Award, which recognizes teachers who have made a significant and lasting contribution to the field of music education.
Wigglesworth sees these achievements as Godâs blessings and says the skills he learned at Biola continue to define how he views his vocation and faith.
âI really strongly believe that in or- der to have any kind of witness or be able to even dive into what I believe, or impart wisdom to students or colleagues, I need to be an excellent choir director,â he said. âThatâs something Iâve definitely learned from the [music] education department, that being a lifelong learner is really important.â
Wigglesworth originally came to Biola to become a worship pastor, but fell in love with the beauty of choir after joining chorale to fulfill his scholar- ship requirements. Thanks to the many hours of intensive training he received in Biolaâs Conservatory of Music, he transformed from being what he described as âraw,â and âjust kind of doing it all by ear,â to a skilled vocalist, graduating with a Bachelor of Music in Music Education with an emphasis in voice and choral conducting.
Just six years after graduating from Biola, Wigglesworth had the opportunity to lead 65 students from the Wescovaires and Womenâs Chamber Choir to New York City in April 2018 after both groups had been invited to sing at Carnegie Hall. He and his students performed the East Coast premier of âJourney of Becoming,â a collaboration between award-winning musical theater actress Melanie Penn, composer AJ Harbison and Wigglesworth himself.
As the choir director â a role he de- scribes as âlike a youth pastor" â he promotes a lifestyle of holistic excellence into the musical community at West Covina High School.
âMy students will stay and kind of hang after class or in between classes or at lunch to do life and be in community with each other and with me,â Wigglesworth said.
In one of his three Grammy award application videos, a student described how Tylerâs leadership has transformed small classroom spaces into places where students gather to socialize and spend time as âa second family.â
âHe has made this place an atmosphere where we want to learn and continue to grow,â another student said.
As if teaching four periods of choir, an AP music theory class and a recording class, as well as directing music for his schoolâs theater department and leading several after-school ensembles wasnât enough of a time commitment, Wigglesworth sees these quiet moments between classes as opportunities to uplift his students in purposeful conversation to share in their lives.
âEven if itâs not directly saying âJesus says, do this,â I can share with them and do life with them,â he said.