Skip to main content

Home/ CI579Sp2011/ Group items tagged instruments

Rss Feed Group items tagged

janie reneau

» Harrington Elementary Music - 0 views

    • janie reneau
       
      The word technoholic is new to me. Music teachers can be demanding and overinvolved in trying tools to inspire music learning. This is a nice site for sharing music ideas and blogging.
  • Free Piano Lessons online!- Click here to get 10 free piano lessons. You will need access to YouTube and FlashPlayer to view some of the website. A Simple Synthesizer – Click on the boxes! Play a Virtual Piano!(Must have Java Script installed) Famous Pianist Word Search (Choose “Print” from the File Menu too print a hard copy) Strange and Unusual Pianos Music/Piano Jokes and Funnies Test out some Virtual Drum Machines! 120 Years of Electronic InstrumentsStarts with the Musical Telegraph (1876) of Elisha Gray, who got to the patent office with his telephone patent one hour later than Alexander Graham Bell. Virtual Piano/OscilloscopeAs you play, you’ll see and hear the wave forms! Playing Fraction Pies - Phil Tulga site Music Activities and Classroom Integration (math, science, language arts, homemade instruments) Progressive and excellent site by Phil Tulga. Definitely take a look.
  •  
    Sarah Johnston's blogsite is excellent. It is written for the music educator professional and music students.It has Websites, technology information, suggestions, and general music technology integration. It provides examples of student technology/music projects.The students do film scoring, podcasts, composer reports, and GarageBand (software) compositions.It's philosophy is music is a major component of lifelong learning. It is designed on experience and first hand projects.It doesn't offer conclusions but leaves the viewer with the options of using what is on this site for further study and enjoyment.What I liked best about this site was the interactive music activities that allowed instant music playing.
janie reneau

Opportunity to Learn Standards for Music Technology - 0 views

    • janie reneau
       
      It is imperative that integrating technology into the music classroom be aligned with the MENC Standards.
  • Immediately following the release of the National Standards for Music Education in 1994, MENC--The National Association for Music Education released Opportunity-to-Learn Standards for Music Instruction as a guide to what schools should provide to help students achieve both the National Standards for Music Education in grades K-12 and the MENC prekindergarten music education standards. MENC recommends that states either adopt these opportunity-to-learn standards or use them as a basis for developing their own. The standards challenge all who are committed to high-quality music instruction to work together to improve the teaching and learning of music in the nation's schools. The writers of the opportunity-to-learn standards were well aware that new technologies have an impact on the ways schools deliver music instruction. Throughout the text of those standards, there are references to computers, software, MIDI equipment, CD-ROMs, and other resources that are important to the world of the music teacher, as well as essential to the world of music outside the classroom. In the years since the publication of the opportunity-to-learn standards, technologies useful for music education (as for all education) have grown more capable, more varied, simpler to use, and certainly more ubiquitous.
  •  
    The MENC Task Force on Music Technology prepared this MENC article to report on the alignment of National Music Standards with technology integrationin schools.The audience for this site would be professional music educators.The rationaleprovides specific challenges for using technnology to aid in improving music instruction in schools. This site provides guidelines for technology integration for minimal and optimalalignment. It provides the lists for equipment, facilities, materials and equipment, curriculum and scheduling, and staffing. It doesn't give results, but provides insights and suggestions for the future.
janie reneau

Teachers invite 'Wii Music' into the classroom - Technology & science - Games - On the ... - 0 views

    • janie reneau
       
      This is a report on using the Wii music program for engaging young learners in general music classrooms to learn music theory and have fun.
  • “I’ve read a lot of reviews about ‘Wii Music,’ and I think there’s a lot more depth to this program than people have initially given it credit for,” he says. “Wii Music” doesn’t ask players to match beats, like “Guitar Hero” or “Rock Band.” Using the Wii Remote and Nunchuk controller, players can experiment with more than 60 different virtual instruments ranging from bagpipes to ukulele. They can play mini-games such as "Handbell Harmony" and "Pitch Perfect." And they can jam or improvise as part of an ensemble. That’s the one feature that really hooked Krofchick, who says that younger kids can often be reluctant to improvise musically. “Children spend a lot of their classroom time following specific directions — what to read, what to do — and very little time … actually expressing themselves in the arts,” she says. “Some can be shy to come forward and actually sort of jump in and try something. “But if anything is presented to a child in the form of a game, it’s going to be much more student-friendly or kid-friendly,” she says. “For some reason, there doesn’t seem to be a fear there.”
  •  
    Author Kristin Kalning uses this site to report how teachers like Eileen Jahn use Wii to teach general music effectively. The audience for this site would be professional general music teachers and parents of school age children.She specifically studied how Jahn introduced and reinforced material which led to improvisation and rhythm skills.She interviewed a smll group of teachers using the Wii music application which MENC is studying for use in classrooms.Wii music is not like Guitar Hero" or "Rock Band.The Web article didn't leave any conclusions and left the future for this product open. Teachers should be cautious but open minded in using Wii music to motivate students for further music study.
1 - 3 of 3
Showing 20 items per page