It is a simple app that any one can create songs in a rock style. Built-in drumbeats, and chord progressions are excellent to make music with any level of students. Electronic guitar sound adds an instant rock feeling into the song.
You can record notes and audio synced with this app. It might be great to assign homework or explain concepts or parents meeting or interviews, and send the file to your students and parents. Students can review the lesson contents or lecture at home with audio!
It has quizzes for intervals and a simple lesson about intervals. It only uses treble clef as its title, and only covers intervals in a limited range. But it could be used as a reinforcement tool for reviewing the concept.
It is a great collection and reference of all the scales, chords and harmonization. It is more for advanced musicians/teachers/adults. It shows notes on English letter names, solfege, German notation, or even French notation. Some of listening samples, conventional chord notations were reported wrong pitch from reviewers. Accuracy is important for the reference tool! It does have a potential to be the excellent app, if those mistakes were fixed.
It is a note review app for young beginners. It has a cute monkey image throughout, which is an age appropriate. Multiple choice questions make for children to get the answer right easily and its simplicity is great for the very early stage of music studies. However, the content is quite limited.
It is a highly customizable flash card app for piano teachers. It can be modified in any setting. It is on the grand staff and flexible to drill in letter names or solfege or piano keyboard. Reviewing incorrect notes afterwards is great to reinforce students' weak notes.
This is a great lesson supplement for young beginners. Whether you use this method or not, it is a great way to reinforce and review the basic concept.
This is a piano teacher's blog. The article listed apps that she wish she had. It also has great links to other piano teacher related blogs and websites. It seems like lots of piano teachers are following her blog.