Friday, November 27, 2015

Inventing Songs

Children create songs naturally, and should be encouraged to share them in class.  This is a common procedure for creating songs:

  1. Choose a topic, maybe create a word bank or poem of words generated by the students.
  2. When the poem is created, the teacher should have them chant it together so they get the rhythm and flow.  The teacher can play a tonic chord and have them sing different melodies for the first line.
  3. After some trial and error, the children can select their favorite melody and sing it together.
  4. The teacher can provide the underlying chords to support the melody that the children are singing.
  5. After recording, the children can listen to the entire song and suggest changes.  The finished song can be recorded again, and the teacher could notate it later, then share it with the class.
This procedure reflects the process that many professional song writers go through, first creating lyrics, then melody and accompaniment.

Aural Plans and Notational Systems

The first stage of formal composition involves forming an aural plan for the piece.  They will work together to refine, select, or reject different ideas until they finally reach a consensus on the end product.  No graphing or notation will be used to record their work.  Aural plans are almost improvisational because even though children may rehearse their piece many times, the unexpected still happens often.

Children grow gradually when it comes to notation.  They generally move from pictorial or iconic representations to symbolic mans of notating pitch and rhythm, using numbers and letters.  It isn't until the next stage that they use actual or discrete notation.  Children as young as three years old have been known to represent music visually.  Notation can be introduced after the aural plan, and children should be free to create their own systems of notation.  The initial system should represent a piece they have already created with an aural plan.  The systems should be able to be understood by other people, so they should share their notation with other children to see if they can interpret it.  As children experience standard notation through reading music, they will incorporate it more into their own compositions.

Composition

Composition is a more planned implementation of the creative process.  It is similar to improvisation, except it can be crafted, reflected on, and then revised, and is not instantaneous.  Composing and arranging is the focus of National Standard 4.  Though composition contributes greatly to a child's cognitive and musical growth, not enough teachers spend as much time on composing in the classroom as they should.  A teacher should set parameters and a good environment for composing.
This includes:

  1. Creating a space in the room or adjoining rooms for groups and/or individuals to work.
  2. Deciding which sound sources will be available and how they should be distributed.
  3. Deciding whether students will word individually or in small groups (if groups, preferably groups of four or five).
  4. Decide the amount of time the students should have to complete their assignments.  They assignment might have to span several days.
  5. Decide the limits of the composition, and give them a problem to solve.  More freedom comes when the students are more confident composers.
  6. Establish a means of getting the class's attention quickly. Example: clap a rhythm for the class to clap back.
  7. Tell the students that you will answer questions and help, but won't interfere with the composition process.  The teacher should not impose their own musical ideas on the students, though they do help the students evaluate their work.
For younger ages, the teacher may participate more in the process, pulling ideas from the group and helping students refine their thinking.  Around first grade though, the children can usually work in groups to solve the composition problem.

Improvisation

Improvisation should occur often throughout development.  Improvisation should be spontaneous, not formalized, refined, or repeated.  At a beginning level, it should allow children to play with sounds and with musical syntax.   National Standard 3 is dedicated to improvisation and should ideally be included in every class.

There are two types of improvisation: free and structured.  Free improvisation encourages children to experiment with the sounds of different instruments or their voices.  It goes beyond exploration because they are actually improvising a piece from beginning to end.  They are making clear music, not just exploring sounds.

Structured improvisation involves prompting the students in some way.  There are many different ways of doing structured improvisation.  Orff-Schulwerk, Kodaly, and Dalcroze all have different methods of improvisation.  With Orff-Schulwerk, the children might improvise in an ABA ternary form.  They would listen to the A section, then improvise a B section.  They could be asked to invent a melody on a C major scale using a xylophone or another orff instrument.  For Kodaly, children will first invent a steady four beat rhythm either by clapping or singing syllables like sol, mi, and la.  Once they build an internal collections of rhythm and pitch patterns, they can improvise a longer pitch or rhythm pattern over it.  Dalcroze is similar to Orff-Schulwerk in the way that they listen to something, then improvise a continuation to it.  In this case, the teacher improvises on the piano, then the children are expected to improvise with the same style.  They can respond rhythmically, with drums or movement, or with pitch, using the piano or voice.  Kodaly differs from Orff-Schulwerk and Dalcroze a bit because the students are creating from scratch, versus building from a model.

Creative Thinking

When students are asked a question with one specific answer, they must think convergently.  When children are performing a piece, they have to play the correct pitches and rhythms written on the page, which is also convergent thinking.  Creative thinking is divergent thinking.  Divergent thinking is when there are many possible answers.  For example, a child could be asked to find different as many different sounds as possible that they can make with a drum.  Webster's theory of creative thinking outlines three qualities of divergent thinking:

  1. Musical extensiveness- how many ideas are generated
  2. Flexibility- the ease of shifting within parameters such as high and low or loud and soft
  3. Originality- how unique the musical ideas are
The goal of the teacher should be to facilitate the development of these various skills and understandings.

Thursday, November 26, 2015

Listening Sequence

A listening sequence contains several steps, and can be completed in one day, or across several days.


  1. Prepare: Always prepare children for the listening.  The purpose dictates what kind of preparation is required.  The teacher could first give the cultural background of the piece, tell the story behind it, show the region on a map in which the piece was composed, give some history about that region, show a piece of art that reflects the mood of the style, tell the background of the composer, etc.  The important thing is to give the children something to listen for and give them a way to show that they hear it, preferably a quiet response such as raising a hand or pointing.
  2. Listen: Play the recording and note the students' responses through class discussion.
  3. Activate and Participate:  Play the piece again, while actively involving the students in performing or moving to the music in some way.  This helps build a work into children's internal repertoire.
  4. Question and Discuss:  Discussion should take place throughout the sequence, and can cover the music, portions of the music, the activities the students are doing, and emotional responses.
  5. Listen Again: Listen quietly, notice familiar points, expand insight, and reestablish the work.
  6. Extend the Listening; The listening can be used to inspire the children to compose music in similar forms, listen to other music by the same composer with similar or contrasting styles, listen to music by other composers with similar or contrasting styles.

Deep Listening

Deep listening requires teachers to use their abilities in analytical listening, conducting, performing, arranging, and communication to engage students in understanding music on a more in depth level.  Whatever music is used should be played in its cultural and historical context for students to get the most out of it.

There are three phases of deep listening:


  1. Attentive Listening- The teacher uses diagrams that highlight points of interest in a piece to focus the students' listening.  With each listening, the students should be prompted to note something new, like themes or motives, melodic shape, dynamic changes, timbral changes, or sectional forms.
  2. Engaged Listening- The listener participates by tapping the beat, playing an ostinato, singing a melody, or performing a groove.  The students have to listen to the piece carefully, multiple times, to discover patterns in order for this to work.
  3. Enactive Listening- Involves the students in deeper levels, for example, learning and performing pieces in the style of a work of music.  It takes repeated focused listening in order for this to be successful, and because of the sophistication, it is most appropriate for middle school to adulthood.

Teaching to Actively Listen

Teachers cannot guarantee that students will enjoy a piece, though there is evidence that as humans, we:
  • Are drawn to complexity
  • Tend to prefer the familiar and feel uncomfortable with the unfamiliar
  • Can learn to focus their perception of subtle changes
  • Can change their attitudes through learning, despite enculturated preferences

This evidence helps teachers develop an approach to active listening during which students:

  1. Regularly listen to music that is more complex and challenging than the music they usually listen to
  2. Listen to pieces enough to know them and be familiar with them
  3. Gain the conceptual tools to analyze, discuss and respond to the music
  4. Discuss their preferences and attitudes without being told they're wrong
  5. Engage in listening activities that allow them to reflect and document their feelings and perceptions about a piece

When a student expresses an opinion about a piece, whether negative or positive, they must be encouraged to go further and explain why.  The teacher should play the piece again, asking the students to think about what makes them like or dislike the piece.  This way, the students will be actively listening to the piece, searching for specific things to describe.

Developing Attitudes Toward Music

Sometimes, in an effort to get students to love music, teachers will play pieces that they know the children will like, but doesn't really teach them anything in the long run.  There are many factors that contribute to the development of attitudes toward music, many of which are out of the teacher's control.  Anything from gender, ethnic background, age, personality, socioeconomic status, and the resulting beliefs, feelings and values that emerge contribute to a child's attitudes toward music.  Other strong influences include teachers, families, peer groups, the media, and adult authority figures.  
From preschool to age eight, children are very open to different kinds of music. During this time, it is a good idea to introduce them to as many different types of music as possible.  Around the ages of nine and ten, being cool becomes very important to children, and peer influence and the media tend to dictate what children want to listen to.  Studies show that children of this age are generally drawn more toward loud and fast music rather than soft or slow.  Regardless, teachers need to encourage children to be receptive to music they don't necessarily prefer, and help them understand and appreciate it. 

Development of Perceptive Listening

The auditory sense develops remarkably early in children.  Infants can differentiate pitches and identify their mother's voice at birth.  During the babbling phase, babies demonstrate their ability to hear pitches by matching them to a certain extent.  Children as young as three months can match and sustain pitches, and gain a sense of musical phrase as young as six or seven months.  By eight months, they generally have the sense of a melody.  By preschool ages, children have a vocabulary to describe what they hear.  The concepts that develop early include tone color, dynamics, tempo, and style, and later comes pitch, rhythm, and form around the age of four.  

Anyone can identify hundreds of pieces and describe details about them, even attaching personal meaning to them.  Our task as music educators is to help students understand and appreciate what they are hearing.

Friday, November 6, 2015

Barred Orff Instruments

Barred Orff Instruments are wooden xylophones or metal metallophones and glockenspiels with bars of different lengths that produce different pitches when struck with mallets.  The bars can be removed by a teacher so that children don't play the wrong pitches by accident during the lesson.  They are placed in front of the player with the larger bars to the left and the smaller bars to the right, with the player sitting cross-legged or on their knees.  The mallets are held comfortably, like a toothbrush.  Hand-eye coordination is critical, and children should be encouraged to pull out the sound as opposed to hammering it in to get the best resonance.  A lesson with these instruments could include having the children play a simple drone on two notes, probably the tonic and dominant, and then having them play different rhythms with those pitches.  They can play an ostinato with one hand, them eventually two hands.  A combination of ostinati can create colorful textures that engage children and work on their listening skills by playing in an ensemble.


Non-Pitched Instruments Continued- Skins and Metals

Skins

Hand Drum-  Held at the rim and struck on the head with the other hand or a mallet.  This is useful for keeping pulse while playing rhythm patterns.
Bongo Drums-  A pair of drums, usually connected by a piece of wood, and played with the fingertips, the palms, and the thumbs to produce different timbres and volumes.


Conga Drum- A long upright drum, shaped like a barrel.  A wide range of timbres can be produced by striking the center, edge, or even the sides with either the palm, fingertips, or even sticks.

Djembe Drum- An instrument found in Ghana, this drum has a wide head and a narrow base.  It is played with the fingers and palms, often in groups.

Goblet Drum- Middle Eastern instrument with a wide head and narrow base, about eighteen inches high, played with the fingertips or palm.


Timpani- Similar to a symphonic timpani, and is usually tuned to tonic, dominant, or subdominant.  They come in various sizes.  


Metals

Cymbals- Two concave metal disks, played by striking or rubbing together.  Children enjoy the crashing sound they can make.
Finger Cymbals- Smaller cymbals that can be attached to the middle finger and thumb, they can produce either muted or resonant sounds.


Triangle- Held by a string and struck with a metal or wooden stick, it makes a "dinner bell" sound.

Tambourine- Drum head with metal disks attached to the rim.  Can be struck or shook.

Jingle Bells- Small bells on a plastic ring that can be played by shaking.  Children enjoy the joyful, Christmas like sound they produce.


Gong- Flat brass instrument that is struck with a mallet to create a big resonating sound that children enjoy.


Cowbell- Produces open, lower sounds when struck with a mallet near its opening, and higher sounds with struck by the handle.

Double Iron Agogo Bells- Two different sized iron bells which sound at two different pitches when struck with a mallet.  They are good for working with polyrhythms.

Non-Pitched Instruments

Non-pitched instruments are rhythm instruments and they are generally the first instruments a child will play.  They are easy for them to pick up quickly because they usually only involve a striking or a shaking motion, which they have been able to do since their first stage of development.  These instruments provide a wide range of timbres that are perfect for improvisation with young children. These are the families of non-pitched percussion instruments.

Gourds

Maracas- From Latin America, these are dried gourds with seeds inside, played by shaking.

Woods

Sticks- Played by striking one stick against the other.  Rhythm sticks with ridges can be rubbed together to produce a different sound.  Young children can use them to play accurate rhythms.


Claves- Thicker sticks, played by cupping one in the hand to make a resonating chamber in the hand and striking it with the other.  This playing position could take some development to master.  They are typically used in Latin rhythms.



Woodblock- Partially hallowed block of wood that produces a resonant sound when stuck with a mallet.  If it has ridges, it can also be rubbed with a mallet.

Sandblocks- Two blocks of wood covered in sandpaper that make a swishing sound when rubbed together.  They are good for feeling the pulse of a meter, and appeal to children because of their unique timbre.


Slit Long Drum- A box shaped drum with slits in it producing lower and higher sounds depending on the length of the slits.  Children are intrigued by the resonant quality.


Guiro- Ridged instrument played by rubbing with a wooden stick.  It helps develop rhythm and physical coordination in children.



Body Percussion

Body percussion can be viewed as a musical instrument, and used as a precursor to other musical instruments.  It involves clapping, slapping, tapping, snapping, stamping, and patting.  It is very fun for the children and gets them up and moving during the lesson.  It also has the advantage of producing different timbres, allowing for more creativity.  It improves rhythm skills as it is so good for internalizing rhythms.  This makes it a good tool for preparing children to play both non pitched rhythm and barred instruments.  If a child learns a rhythm through body percussion, they have the feeling of the rhythm inside them before they even start playing, which makes it easier to concentrate on things like pitch and technique.  A child can pat the rhythm on their legs, then when they play it on the xylophone, they can much more easily figure out the notes because they don't have to think as hard about the rhythm.

Development in Ability to Play Instruments

A child's ability to play instruments is closely related to their physical development.  While rhythmic skills develop as early as the first year of life, the muscle coordination required for playing an instrument doesn't come till much later.  Something as simple as playing a short melody on the piano requires enough motor skills and coordination to use the eyes, ears, and muscles in the fingers, hands, and forearms, all in tandem. 

This is the developmental sequence for Playing instruments:

Children of less than two years can rock, nod, and sway to a beat.  They have the ability to grasp objects, making them able to play rattles and jingle bells.

From ages two to three, children start having short periods of rhythmic regularity.  This gives them the ability to play the hand drum and rhythm sticks.

From three to four, children have longer periods of rhythmic regularity, a sensitivity to pulse, and can sway their arms.  They can now play the claves, woodblock, tambourine, guiro, maracas, gong, cowbell, and play the rhythm sticks by rubbing them.

From five to six, children start to be able to maintain a pulse, alternate their hands, and have basic eye-hand coordination.  This allows them to play the finger cymbals, bongo drums, timpani, cymbals, triangle, and even the keyboard with one hand.

From seven to nine, children have developed eye-hand coordination.  This allows them to play a wide range of things, including different pitched instruments such as the xylophone, the keyboard with both hands, the recorder, and the autoharp.

From age ten to twelve, eye-hand coordination has become much easier, as well as finger flexibility and control of the breathing apparatus.  They can now play melodies on the xylophone and keyboard, more notes on the recorder, chords on the guitar, and even orchestral winds and brass.

Thursday, November 5, 2015

Teaching Notation for Reading and Writing Rhythms

Sound before symbol is always how rhythm should be taught, but eventually there needs to be a connection to notation.

Dalcroze uses "dash-a-note" to begin to introduce rhythm notation.  Children can draw horizontal dashes demonstrating what they hear and feel.  The longer the dash, the longer the sound.  These dashes are eventually converted into notes.

Kodaly starts notation by only writing stems instead of the stem with the head.  This allows for quick notation because the students don't have to take time to fill in the head, so more rhythms can be taught in a class period.  Teachers can use popsicle sticks, rhythm sticks, or wooden dowels to demonstrate these stems as well.

During kindergarten, rhythm notation should be mainly experimental.  However, by 1st grade, students should be able to match rhythms to different representations of the notation.

Rhythm Mnemonics

Mnemonics are rhythm syllables with no semantic meaning that are used to teach children rhythms and help them internalize them.  They are associated with specific rhythmic durations, and are similar to speech so they are easy for children to remember.  One frequently used system is word-chant, which uses words that the children already use in everyday speech.  In this case, different fruit names are assigned to different durations.  For instance, pear would be a quarter note, apple would be two eighth notes, boysenberry would be four sixteenth notes, and so on.  These are very effective because it uses the natural rhythm of the English language, which children are already accustomed to.  Two other common systems are the Kodaly and Gordon method.  These both use syllables that aren’t real words, but are good for solidifying rhythms.  The Kodaly method uses the syllable “t” mainly, because of it’s crisp, decisive sound, proving helpful for internalizing clear rhythms.  Similarly, the Gordon method uses a crisp “d” sound for the same purpose.  While these methods don’t use real words that children already know, syllables like “du-ta-de-ta” (Gordon sixteenth notes), are easy to spit out quickly and remember.

Detecting and Understanding Meter

A meter can be detected by listening for a strong pulse followed by weaker pulses.  The understanding of meter enables the listener to perceive the flow of musical ideas.  Some children respond naturally by rocking, swaying, singing, and chanting rhymes but most need a model to help them sense the loud vs. soft pulses.

One way to help children find meter is to play them a piece, and ask them to pat their knees on the strong beat only.  Then, play it again, and ask them to pat their knees on the strong beats, then clap softly on the weak beats.  Then, lead them in a chant while patting the strong beats and clapping the weak beats, so they can further internalize the rhythm by putting it in the context of speech.

Rhythm in Movement

Movement is a must in all lesson plans for children, and it's only natural to use it while teaching rhythm.  Using movement internalizes rhythm and develops a deeper conceptual understanding.  Dalcroze Eurhythmics is based on this concept, and Orff uses this concept as well.  Kodaly uses popular folk dances also to solidify rhythms.  Children become familiar with quarter notes because they have walked to them.  They are familiar with eight notes because they've clapped them.  No notation or counting is needed for children to sense rhythm naturally.

Rhythm in Speech

The English language is very rhythmic, and naturally lends itself to teaching students rhythm.  There is a universal pattern of rhythmic flow and stress of language, which children are presented with every day. 

Words become musical when:

1.   They are spoken over the foundation of a set pulse.
2.   Their sounds are transformed into chants of longer and shorter musical durations.
3.   Some words in a group are emphasized over others.

Words can be associated with durations based on syllables.  One syllable words, like "blue", or "pear", can be used as quarter notes.  Two syllable words, like "yellow" or "tiger" can be used for eighth notes.  Words like "pineapple" are used as triplets, and "boysenberry" for sixteenth notes.

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Dance

Dance is an organized and planned art that connects children with music in a rewarding way.  It teaches them how to count and keep time, it makes them listen to the music to remember the steps, and it allows them to communicate what they hear in a constructive way.  Phyllis Weikert used folk dances to teach children rhythm, time, and other musical elements, and also teach them about culture.  Dancing also gives students something to show to their parents, and an opportunity to become comfortable performing in front of a crowd.

Eurhythmics

Eurhythmics is of movement with a purpose.  A teacher creates a eurhythmics exercise with certain musical elements in mind.  These could include pulse, meter, articulation, dynamics, tempo, phrase, anacrusis, sound vs. silence, melody, timbre, accent, proportional relationships.  The teacher sets rules and models the movements, and the children use their own bodies as instruments to feel the music and it's elements. Song choice is very important when deciding what you want the child to get out of the lesson.

Creative Movement

Creative movement is an interpretive and expressive way that children use their bodies to feel the music they hear.  It is not modeled, and completely generated by the student.  The teacher sets rules and boundaries first so that the children stay on task.  It helps the children actually listen to the music, predict where it's going, and coordinates what they hear with bodily movement.


Singing Games

Singing games are similar to action songs in the way that the song and rhymes are associated with the movement.  The game aspect of them is exciting for children because it's very interactive and gives them the chance to improvise.  They also encourage independence.


Action Songs

Action songs are great for putting students' energy toward something meaningful and educational.  Action songs have the the motions in the lyrics, so the don't require any prior rehearsal.  They get the children up and moving right away, and they're a lot of fun.  Action songs are important for coordination, synchronized rhythmic movement, and improving the singing voice.


Advanced Pitch Concepts

  1. Scale- the set of tones used to make up a melody.  
  2. Major and Minor Modes- Distinguished by the treatment in the third and sixth tones of the scale.  Each is used for different effects.
  3. Melodic Sequence- a short melodic pattern repeated at different pitch levels.
Some strategies for enhancing the perception of advanced pitch concepts include:

  • Learn to sing stepwise scale songs and dramatize them but also move upward and downward in small intervals to the melodic line.  Play the scale songs on bells by ear.
  • Sing songs in both minor and major modes.

Pitch Relations and Melodic Motion


  • By age 4 children develop the ability to discriminate differences and similarities in pitch
    • they might group pitches that are relatively similar together
    • point to, group together, or use an instrument to help categorize pitches
  • Use upward/downward and moving higher/moving lower to better explain the difference between pitches
    • using high/low and up/down can be confusing since these terms do not audibly relate to pitch
    • use vertical instruments, like a xylophone or keyboard, to help relate the visual terms to pitch
  • Strategies to help young students with pitch and melodic motion
    • have students walk upstairs when singing an ascending scale and downstairs when singing a descending scale
    • have students stretch and raise their arms high in reaction to wide intervals and pitches
    • physically step if the melody is stepwise motion and leap if the melody has large intervallic jumps
    • have students listen to recordings, read/play/sing the melody, and then have them identify it

Adapting Instruction in Pitch for Various Needs

Mobility Impairments
  • Children can respond to pitch motion using whatever part of their body they are able to use, such as the eyelids, mouth, tongue, head, arms, or upper torso.

  • If a child is in a wheelchair, still be sure to include him or her in any games. Ways can always be found to have the child move the chair appropriately or have others assist so they can be included.
Auditory Impairments
  • Invite children who have bad hearing or are deaf to touch the soundboard of a piano or a large xylophone with their hand to sense the changes in vibration of pitch patterns.  Then, ask them to recreate the shape of what they feel with their body.  Have them play patterns on keyed percussion, particularly on low sounding instruments.

  • Auditory Processing Disorder (APD)- Children with APD might not be able to perceive speech directions clearly or perceive musical patterns accurately.  Use simple, clear directions when speaking to them.  Have them sit at the front of the room and try eliminating surrounding noises as much as possible.  Use multiple modalities to help them experience pitch motion, including touch, whole body movement, and playing instruments.

Beginnings of Pitch Awareness


  • As children move through their music education, it is important for them to start to understand why two pitches or two melodies are different.
  • Approaches to kickstart discrimination and contour awareness in early childhood:
    • Use words to describe similar and contrasting melodies or intervals such as “same” or “different”
    • Shape the direction of the melody while singing and have students imitate.
    • Draw on the board or on paper the contour of the melody, and have children trace the line with their voices.
    • Dance with scarves to music, moving them up and down based on the contour of the melodies.

Understanding Linear Pitch Structure

  • When children think of pitch, they do not understand the difference of pitch being “high” and “low”.
    • They may relate this comparison to volume or visual aspects.
  • Naturally, the students can:
    • Discriminate when pitches, melodies, or phrases are similar or different.
    • Recognize the “shape” of the melody (visual representation).
  • Students then develop the ability to focus on:
    • Pitch register, pitch direction, and pitch motion.
    • Interval sizes- larger or smaller leaps?

  • As their musical development progresses, the students become able to identify tonality, melodic phrases, and scales.


 
Age
Percept & Concept
Teacher Actions
Less than 6 months
responds to differences in pitch
sing w/ words, neutral syllables, imitate sounds
6-18 months
recognizes differences between pitch contour, intervals and ends of phrases
sing simple/nursery songs that the children would know and play recorded music
18 months- 4 years
uses contour/rhythm to recognize and replicate familiar material
begin to extend vocal range, use keyboards or bodily movement to show contour and phrase
4-8 years
beings to recognize pitch and melody as high/low and upward/downward, becomes aware of intervals and tonality
encourage singing/body movement/computer programs for pitch and contour, incorporate musical vocab
8-12 years
can recognize steps, leaps, repeated tones, melodic sequences, and upward/downward patterns
use singing, instruments, and body movement to strengthen understanding and use notation for contours and patterns

Sunday, September 27, 2015

Formal

This is an example of formal song.  It is uncommon for a six year old to be in this stage, but she does meet the criteria.  She sings well, musically, on pitch, in rhythm, with dynamics, and is adding artistic choices such as vibrato and ornamentation.

Learned


This is an example of learned song.  This three year old can get through the entire song, Let It Go, and knows pretty much all the words.  There are obviously tons of inaccuracies, but she is close to being on pitch most of the time and has a clear sense of higher and lower pitch.  This is very typical for her age.

Potpourri

This is an example of potpourri.  This girl is two years old and her mother is asking her to sing songs.  She sings Row Your Boat and The ABCs successfully, but when she sings Twinkle Twinkle she morphs back into Row Your Boat half way through. I do not believe it was intentional, as the melodies of the songs are so similar, she probably got them mixed up in her head.

Spontaneous


This is an example of spontaneous song.  This six year old is making up a song on the spot.  You can tell she is making it up because you can physically see her thinking of what to sing next as she dances nervously.  She is also singing about common things like birds and flying.  The lyrics do not rhyme.

Babbling


This is a video of a 20 month old child babbling.  She is reacting to the music on the radio, and happily singing along and changing pitch, even matching the radio at times.  She is attempting to make a musical sound. This is typical for her age.

Weikert

The Phyllis Weikert method of music was originally developed for dancers to learn their steps.  The process is fairly quick and efficient.  It starts by saying the steps, then saying while doing, then whispering and doing, and finally just doing.  An example of these steps would be:

  1. Say "Step-hop, step-hop, side-close"
  2. Say and do "Step-hop, step-hop, side-close"
  3. Whisper and do "Step-hop, step-hop, side-close"
  4. Think and do "Step-hop, step-hop, side-close"

The transition from saying to doing is smooth and simple, making it an efficient method.


Gordon

The Gordon Method of learning music is all about audiation.  Audiation is the ability to hear music in your head without actually hearing or playing it out loud.  It includes a lot of aural perception and discriminative listening that develops the overall understanding of theory.  Here is the eight step hierarchy of his learning sequence:

  1. Aural and oral
  2. Verbal Association
  3. Partial Synthesis
  4. Symbolic association
  5. Composite synthesis
  6. Generalization
  7. Creativity and Improvisation
  8. Theoretical understanding
Through these steps, students eventually develop the ability to look at a piece of music, and sing it in their head.

Orff

The Orff Method allows children to discover music through play.  They use instruments, dancing, and movement to express themselves creatively.  This method is very big on exploration and improvisation, in addition to literacy.  The video above does a good job of demonstrating this method.

Kodály

The Kodaly Method focuses on using hand signs and solfege syllables to establish inner hearing and music literacy.  Notice how she starts with hand signs and establishing the scale degrees first, then continues with the rhythm.

Dalcroze

The Dalcroze method is all about movement.  The children move to the music and in doing that they internalize the rhythm by participating in it.  Above is a video demonstrating some exercises and games within the Dalcroze method.

Thursday, September 10, 2015

Constructivism Vs. Behaviorism

Constructivism and behaviorism are two very different approaches to teaching.

  David Jonassen's constructivism is associated with mental constructs or principles and how they are developed.  Children are an integral part in the learning process with this style.  An example of constructivism is a lesson where the students take the information presented to them and then do something creative with it in order to teach it to the rest of the class.  By contributing to the class, the children are more likely to understand the material as opposed to just remembering it.  Wrong answers are always welcome and helpful because they become memorable teaching opportunities.  The overall quality of construction depends on the range and quality of information available to the student, or constructor, and while all constructions are to be considered meaningful, not all are complete or well done.



Albert Bandura, on the other hand, believed that social learning was best done with a model of the behavior that the student would emulate.  This is called behaviorism.  The student's observations of the model are mentally organized, memorized, and recalled when similar situations arise.  This style is lecture based, and it is assumed that the teacher has all the information and the students do not contribute.  While constructivists are mainly concerned with the process, behaviorists are mainly concerned with the results.  The disadvantage to this is that sometimes the students don't quite understand the meaning or explanation behind what they are doing. 


Uri Brofenbrenner

Uri Brofenbrenner is a developmental psychologist who suggested an ecological systems theory that is a great way of understanding the social network of children's learning.  There are four types of influences in this nested system.

  1. The microsystem is comprised of the family or the classroom.  These are the people who are closest to the child, and therefore directly influence the child.
  2. The exosystem is made up of indirect, external influence such as parental occupations that include the workplace.  This can affect the background of the child and the way he or she is raised.
  3. The mesosystem is comprised of the interactions between the microsystems and the exosystems.
  4. The macrosystem is the larger sociocultural system of society as it interacts with government policy and civic institutions.  
Understanding a child's environment and background is essential to teaching them effectively.  We as teachers should always be aware of how these four types of influences affect our students.



Jerome Bruner

Jerome Bruner is a psychologist who suggested a type of stage progression that can be applied to all ages and is somewhat dependent on maturation.  He proposed three teaching and learning strategies.


  1. Enactive- learning through a set of actions.  For example, clapping out a complicated rhythm, so that you feel it in your body instead of just your ear.
  2. Iconic- learning through images and graphs.  For example, drawing out a graph or diagram to better visualize the rhythm.
  3. Symbolic- learning by going beyond what is immediately perceptible in the environment.  For example, simply reading or writing the rhythm in proper notation and being able to play it correctly.

Lev Vygotsky and the ZPD

Lev Vygotsky was a Russian social psychologist who established that the adult, usually the parent or teacher, is the main influence on the child's socialization process.  In this theory, the idea is that the child will model themselves after whatever the adult is doing, and the adult will transmit cues to the child whether it be through verbal comments, facial expressions, or gestures.  As the student continues to imitate the model, they will eventually be able to preform the task on their own.  A student's musical interactions with adults  while singing, moving, listening, and playing instruments are essential for their musical independence.




The Zone of Proximal Development is an idea based off Vygotsgy's theory, shown in the diagram below.  The green region represents what the child can do without any help from an adult.  The Orange region is what the child can do with the help of an adult.  The red area on the outside represents what the student cannot achieve, even with the help of an adult.  The orange region is what is known as the Zone of Proximal Development, because it is where the child learns, achieves their goals, and expands their ability.  The key to the ZPD is that it is constantly expanding.  As the student progresses, the level at which they can achieve things by themselves gets higher, so they are continually able to play harder music.  Depending on the child, the ZPD with expand at different rates.

The way I think about the ZPD is finding a "sweet spot" with the student so that whatever you're working on with them is neither too easy nor too hard, but just the right amount of difficulty to be in the Zone of Proximal Development.



Curriculum Suggestions from the 1960s

Musical Curriculum will always grow and evolve, however, there are some points from the 1960s that are still relevant.  The Yale Seminar, the Manhattanville Music Curriculum Project, and the Tanglewook Symposium made three main recommendations for Music Curriculum.


  1. They suggested a broader and more representative repertoire for listening and performance.  This includes Western music of all periods, music of different cultures, avante-garde, and American styles.  It is important to show students music that they may have never heard before, because not only does it help teach them about different cultures, lifestyles, and historical periods, but they might even find something they really love and want to pursue.  In high-school, I was never really exposed to anything too different or eclectic.  A big part of music education is learning to appreciate and understand styles we aren't used to.
  2. Music programs should include greater opportunities for musical expression and creativity, through composition and improvisation experiences.  This may be more true for middle and high school, but it is something that seems to be missing from the music curriculum lately. When students begin playing in ensembles in middle school, their music class experience becomes much more rigid.  Students should be encouraged to improvise and compose more, because it gives them more insight into how their instrument, and music in general, works.
  3. There should be a more extensive use of technology and the media to aid instruction.  Its amazing how much more relevant this point is now than it was in the 1960s.  We have so many different options when it comes to technology in the classroom.  Whether it's a Smart Board with Smart Music on it, a composition lab equipped with Macs and midi keyboards, or a simple microphone to record rehearsals, it all helps tremendously.  The challenge now is to start welcoming technology and using it as a tool instead of viewing it as a threat.

Jean Piaget

One of the biggest names in music education is Jean Piaget.  Piaget developed the idea that there are four stages that kids go through in the learning process.


  1. Sensorimotor- This stage occurs between the ages of one and two, and it is learning through direct sensory experience, or touching things.
  2. Preoperational- This stage is between the ages of two and seven and it is learning through the manipulation of objects, learning consequences to actions, and therefore translating stimuli into symbols.  At this point, they don't quite understand the logic behind why things happen, all they know is that certain things happen as a result of their actions.
  3. Concrete operations- From ages seven to eleven, children start viewing objects in a more concrete tangible way, but not yet abstractly.  They begin understanding systematic ways that things happen.
  4. Formal Operations- From age eleven on, children begin to learn abstractly using logic and deductive reasoning.  This final stage describes how we think today as adults as well.

These four stages are essential to teaching children and deciding what and how to teach them certain material.  For instance, when teaching music to a two year old, you just want to expose them to some form of music and get them listening in dancing.  It would be very hard to teach a child how to read music until they were at least seven, because that's when they start recognizing symbols.

John Blacking

John Blacking is an anthropologist who studied the Venda people of South Africa and came to a very important conclusion about musical ability.  What he discovered that all children have an innate sense of music in the body already.  All they need is for a competent adult to help them bring it out.  This is connects with Howard Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences, because again the main idea is that music is natural for everyone.

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Howard Gardner and the Eight Intelligences

Howard Gardner is one of the most important names when it comes to music education.  He came up with the idea that we as humans are born with multiple intelligences.  These include: Spatial, interpersonal, intrapersonal, linguistic, logical-mathematical, bodily-kinesthetic, naturalist, and music.  This suggests that we all have music inside us!  Our jobs as teachers is to help students realize their musical intelligence and help them learn to love and express it.



Sound Before Sight!

Long, long ago (between the years of 1746 and 1827), in a land far, far away (Switzerland), there lived a educational reformer and pedagogue named Heinrich Pestalozzi.  One of Pestalozzi's biggest contributions to music education is the sound before sight principle.  He believed that we should teach children a song first by listening and singing, then we can teach them the theory behind it later on.  This is very important for elementary school teaching, because they obviously haven't developed enough to understand theory.  However, they can still participate in music by playing, singing, listening, and improvising.  This sets a good foundation for the young musician, because not only are we instilling good musical instincts in them, but we are also creating an environment in which the children can have fun and grow to love music.  


Sound before sight is still important for musicians as adults as well.  I find that if I listen to a recording of a piece before I play it, I am more likely to play it the way it should sound when I'm reading the music.  Memorization is also much easier if I have a firm grasp on how a piece sounds.
"Hello, my Name is Heinrich Pestalozzi and I believe in sound before sight."