Skip to main content

Home/ Digital Musicking/ Group items tagged musicgames

Rss Feed Group items tagged

anonymous

The Ultimate List of Online Music Education Activities - Cornerstone Confessions - 0 views

  • Creating Music Block Game–create a 3-note pattern and then listen to a variety of patterns to choose the one you created Creating Music Comparing Game–listen to two melodies and determine if they are the same or different Creating Music Block Game with Rhythm–list the block game above only with an 8-note melodic and rhythmic pattern Creating Music About Pitch–listen to classical music excerpts demonstrating rising and lowering pitch
  • 12 Steps–Select the sound heard to help Alice (in Wonderland) up the stairs Orchestra Game–listen and identify the instrument played
  • BBC Seaside Activity—match sounds with descriptions BBC Mood Music—listen to music selections and match with a mood BBC Instrument Matchup—match sounds with instrument BBC Quiz—review of aural rhythm, style, and instrument recognition Carnegie Hall Listening Adventures:  Symphony No. 9 “From the New World” –Interactive Listening Map
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • PBS Toopy and Binoo Bubbles—musical memory game DJ Games Music Matching–imitate melodies played on a solfege ladder Sousa Palooza–an interactive music map of a famous Sousa march turned into an asteroid-like game Note Pair–aural concentration game
  • Theta Music Trainer–many aural training games for everything from scales, intervals, chord progressions, rhythms, and more Music Memory–aural solfege training Music Teacher Games–many games for staff, piano key, rhythm, and aural recognition
  • Melody Mayhem 1–recognize a melody Storm Chasers–recognize melodic direction Catch the Coconut–aural interval recognition Good Ear–ear training exercises for intervals, chords, scales, cadences and more Echo Time with Annie–aural concentration game
  •  
    Games for children in music
lcm09c

MusicLearningCommunity.com - Welcome - 0 views

  •  
    Music Learning Community is a site for music educators and music students that includes a great deal of information on computer-based learning. Included are games and activities that teach theory and build aural skills. There is a free trial but the site requires a membership fee.
  • ...1 more comment...
  •  
    Free website that provides games and reinforcement activities for music theory, ear training, and other concepts.
  •  
    This website offers hundreds of interactive games to teach students music theory, rhythms, ear-training, sight-reading, and notation analysis. Designed to make learning musical concepts and take-home assignments more fun and engaging, these games are broken down into various levels for students. Lower levels can be effective for early elementary students, and higher levels can be effective for students in high school. Games are colorful and entertaining, and they list certain scores that students should strive to achieve. Most games have a lesson version, a practice version, and a quiz version. Teachers can track scores and data of individual students to see strengths and weaknesses.
  •  
    This website has many games that can be used to learn various musical concepts. Some games are free, but there are more games with the paid subscription. You can pay monthly or yearly and it can be used for 5 to 50 people.
lcm09c

Creating Music - 0 views

  •  
    Morton Subotnick's Creating Music has a variety of music games and activities that would be suited for an elementary curriculum. I would like to use this website as a center in my classroom, to allow students to explore simple music creation and music listening.
  • ...2 more comments...
  •  
    This is a great website that allows students to learn a variety of music concepts from hearing music, playing music, to pitches. There are free programs available with this website.
  •  
    This is a great website that allows students to learn a variety of music concepts from hearing music, playing music, to pitches. There are free programs available with this website.
  •  
    Creating music is a site preferably for younger learners. It provides practice on pitches, timbres, ear training, and memorization.
  •  
    Younger musicians can use this website to understand pitch, hearing music and create basic compositions. There is an iPad application that goes along with it and it is completely free and a great educational tool for younger children.
lcm09c

Orchestra - 0 views

  •  
    This game goes through The Magic Flute, and gives students examples of instruments as they appear in the music.
  •  
    This website offers one interactive game, using The Magic Flute, where students guess the instrument sound, as it appears in the music. I would definitely use this in my beginning band classes, so that students can remember instrument sounds in an interactive way.
crmtbear

Musication - YouTube Channel - 0 views

  •  
    Musication is a YouTube channel that offers boomwhacker, body percussion and handbell play-longs for students. The site is intended for elementary music, but can be used with any age. There is a wide variety of songs on the site and he has a facebook page as well. The site is based out of the Netherlands
crmtbear

Kahoot! | Learning Games | Make Learning Awesome! - 0 views

  •  
    Kahoot! is an online/cloud-based program that allows users to create multiple-choice quizzes that are played on electronic devices (cell phones, iPads, etc.).
  • ...1 more comment...
  •  
    If you're not using Kahoot yet, you're missing out! It's a great place to find and create review quizzes that students can interact with using their iPads (or even their own phones for older kids). They absolutely love when we play Kahoot in our classroom!
  •  
    Kahoot is an awesome website where you can create quizzes for your students. You can also access kahoot quizzes made by others. Students can login from their device and play the game/quiz in your classroom. They can also login at home for practice/homework.
  •  
    This is a great site for making games for students. The games can be of anything you want. I have used it to reinforce rhythms, theory, and notation. It can be used for so much more.
crmtbear

Kodály Center - The American Folk Song Collection - 0 views

  •  
    Folk Song Collection that may be used to help find songs for teaching almost any musical concept. Primary and Secondary Sources with authentic notation and referenced material.
  •  
    The American Folk Song Collection is a website that music educators can use to search for hundreds of folk songs. Each song includes a PDF of lyrics, melody, game/dance directions, song analysis, rhythms, and original source (some also include recordings). The website also includes basic information about the Kodaly approach.
  •  
    The Kodaly Center website is a valuable resource for all music teachers and especially those teaching elementary general music. The website contains videos about the history and philosophy of Kodaly, as well as recent news and upcoming events being held at the center. The most impressive feature of this site is the pubic domain library of songs and the precise ways they are categorized. Songs can be searched and categorized by: Origin, region, state, subject, song type, grade level, tonal center, scale, tone set, melodic range, melodic element, melodic motive, rhythmic element, meter, form, formal analysis and game type. Once you find a song you can see all of this detailed information as well as (in most cases) listen to the song, often sung by a child or group of children.
joemarino

Flying Instruments Tetris Game - 0 views

  •  
    This is a fun listening game in the form of Tetris. This game is designed to enhance the audiation skills in students by helping them identify instruments based on their unique sounds. There are three levels of difficulty for students to play. Each instrument that descends is accompanied by its innate musical sound. In the first level, students must match instruments according to their family. In the second level, students must match instruments with identical instruments. On the third level, the most challenging level, students must match instruments with identical instruments, but the icon of each instrument is blacked out. In other words, students must rely solely on their ears to hear and categorize each instrument's unique sound.
1 - 9 of 9
Showing 20 items per page