Betty Haag
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Betty Haag received Bachelor and Master of Music degrees from Indiana University where she was the recipient of the Goodbody Fellowship and the coveted Performer's Certificate. Upon graduation, she concertized under the auspices of the Federated Music Clubs while playing professionally with the Atlanta Symphony.
Haag introduced the Suzuki method to the Arlington Heights Public Schools, and worked directly with Shinichi Suzuki in Matsumoto, Japan. While in Japan, she supervised the recordings for "Suzuki in the String Class" by Zahitilla (which were completed in Chicago). She has since taught Suzuki Pedagogy at De Paul University, Stanford University, and Northwestern University and presented workshop demonstrations in Germany, China, Portugal, Australia and throughout the United States.
She was named 1994 Illinois String Teachers Association Outstanding Studio Teacher of the Year and has been recognized by the National Foundation for the Advancement of the Arts. As recipient of the John F. Kennedy Center Award for Programs for Children and Youth, she was honored by having her students appear at the 37th Annual Kennedy Center Achievement Awards presentation. She has been featured in Strad Magazine as well as listed in the International Biography of Who's Who in Music, the American edition of Who's Who in Music, Who's Who among American Executives, the 1993 International Woman of the Year, and the Who's Who 2002 Registry in the Library of Congress.
In addition to her work as director of the Betty Haag Academy of Violin Studies, Haag serves as a faculty member at the Porto International Festival in Portugal and the Music Academy at Schloss Ort-Gmunden, Austria.