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cheyroseb

Sally's Sea of Songs: Using Movies as Teaching Tools in Elementary Music - 0 views

    • cheyroseb
       
      Check for understanding. Check for understanding. Check for understanding. Check for understanding. Check for understanding. Check for understanding. Check for understanding. Check for understanding. Check for understanding. Check for understanding. Check for understanding. Check for understanding.
  • Always plan before, during, and after activities to solidify the learning impact.
  • Consider segmenting longer videos to allow students to engage with smaller chunks of information
    • cheyroseb
       
      Consider attention spans for age groups as well
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  • Be certain to confirm administration and district policies on using movies in the classroom.
    • cheyroseb
       
      Always important to seek approval from administrators before implementing media in the classroom
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    Tips and tricks for utilizing movies for content reinforcement or introduction.
rebeccasteinke

Understanding by Design® framework - Videos, Articles, Resources, Experts - 0 views

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    This website is a resource page for Understanding by Design, by Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe. Backward design aligns desired outcomes, assessments and planning to lead to student understanding.
patiencetez

Creating Music for Children - 0 views

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    Children like games. They find it easy to play with toys, building blocks, and puppets. Children require an experience of creative play with music to enhance their understanding of musical concepts. This website's sketch pad and rhythm band games foster children's understanding of pitch, rhythm, and melody. Aural listening is a good tool for children to understand music. By listening, they get an experience of how an instrument sounds, what pitch sounds high or low, and how a melody sounds. This enhances their musicianship before they get into the details of these aspects of music.
anonymous

Start Here - thegaragebandguide.com - 0 views

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    Everything you need to know to create incredible Garageband projects on Mac and iOS, without boring you to tears with a ton of  hard to understand technical jargon.
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    The Garageband Guide is a great resource for everything Garageband! It is simple and easy to understand. The Garageband Guide eliminates the technical jargon. This website provides easy to follow tutorials and resources to use to further understand all of the capabilities of Garageband.
lcm09c

BBC NI - Schools - Musical Mysteries - Home Page - 0 views

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    This website has a series of games meant for younger children to understand sound, rhythm, mood, and sounds of the orchestra. I would use this in my beginning band classes, even though it's middle school, just to ensure that they understand instrument sounds.
anonymous

The Improving Musician, a resource for musicians and music teachers. - 1 views

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    Andy Mullen's website is a gold mine for Music Learning Theory teachers. The Audiation Station provides video lessons to improve audiation tonally and rhythmically. He provides examples of each tonality with theoretical understanding as well as music videos. His explanations of MLT and audiation are straightforward and easy to understand.
anonymous

Music and the Child | Open SUNY Textbooks OER Services - 0 views

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    This book looks at a holistic, artistic, and integrated approach to understanding the connections between music and children. The book discusses developmentally appropriate methods to understand the role of music in children's lives including play, games, creativity, and movement. The book also explores ways of applying music-making to benefit the whole child, by looking at multiple domains that the child can benefit from with music (social, emotional, physical, cognitive, and linguistic).
Sean Hedding

"I don't get it!" Helping those who can't help themselves - musically. « Musi... - 0 views

  • This is good of course, in that it means that music can take flight easily in those who have an ear for it and they can move on quickly to the joy of music-making, both on their own and with others. But this same skill can become a disadvantage when those same students want to move into more complicated repertoire or advanced improvisational music-making. Here, their lack of foundation in the theoretical language of music will impede their progress, and it will be frustrating for already advanced players to stop and ‘go back to the beginning’ to pick up the language and basic theoretical concepts they need in order to move forward with their playing.
  • nd it’s also why it is so important to teach instrumentalists to sing the melodies they play as part of their learning process. This connects their physical response at the instrument and their technical understanding to their innately human ability to express themselves with their singing voice.
  • eep theoretical ideas tied very tightly to some kind of practical knowledge.
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  • he First Principle of my Solfa choir workshops is to ‘Use the Ear to Train the Eye’: we
  • never separate the look of something on the page or on the blackboard from the sound of something they already know how to do.
  • After this happens, I then am very strict in applying the Second Principle of my Solfa choir workshops: ‘Stop While You Are Ahead’.
  • Adding one more concept on top of this one – for example modulation to the relative minor, or even to the (!warning!) so-called ‘flat keys’ can immediately burst the delicate bubble of achievement and understanding.
  • Third Principal: ‘Be Kind, but Apply the Second Principle’. While it can be difficult to curb my own enthusiasm for my subject and my happiness at having conveyed something that leads to interesting questions, I do try to restrict myself to giving only very brief answers to further theoretical questions before closing these conversations and moving on to something else that is practical and that I know my students can do.
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    This blog discuss ways teachers can help students understand material that they man not comprehend during a lesson. This is extremely helpful when your are not getting the necessary feedback from students.
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    An article that discusses finer points in the "Art" of teaching; when students don't grasp a concept. Is it always the teachers fault? Can the student be doing anything differently to help on their end? This article has possible solutions!
caseymbaker

Making Music with Your iPad - ISTE 2013 - Google Docs - 0 views

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    Another document from Dr. William Bauer about making music with an iPad created by Dr. William Bauer for the International Society for Technology in Education on June 24, 2013. A tremendous resource for creating performing, understanding and responding to music with an iPad. Also, there are links for general administrative and productivity apps which are useful for other academic disciplines.  Additionally, there is a lot of information that is useful about hardware and connecting the iPhone/iPod touch/iPad. Great resource for using iPads in the music classroom, which is what is needed for me personally. 
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    This document comes from a Learning Station Session presented by Dr. William Bauer for the International Society for Technology in Education. The session centered around apps and tools that can be used on the iPad that match the music standards of creating, responding, and performing. The site contains a full list of apps and tools available for the iPad and they help make the iPad a music learning tool. 
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    Dr. Bauer provides a comprehensive list of programs and apps for the Ipad that can be used in the music classroom. These apps can provide ways to create music and transform the Ipad into an actual musical instrument. Dr. Bauer creates lists separated into apps that will create music, perform music, help with understanding music, ease administration, and other resources. This list cannot only help integrate technology into the classroom, but also show music in a different light.
jcstoutufmme

Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra - 2 views

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    This website is a game designed to introduce instruments to students (K-5) in a fun and interactive way.  Benjamin Britten's composition "A Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra" is used as the basis for this adventure.
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    This website is a game designed to introduce instruments to students (K-5) in a fun and interactive way.  Benjamin Britten's composition "A Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra" is used as the basis for this adventure.
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    Interactive program for my students to learn about the set up and instruments of the orchestra!
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    Interactive program for my students to learn about the set up and instruments of the orchestra!
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    This site is a great way to introduce the instruments of the orchestra.  It can be used individually to play the games or with the whole class to introduce instruments.  
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    This is a great website to pair with the piece, "Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra" by Benjamin Britten. This interactive game describes all of the instruments in detail, offering relative outside information about each instrument. Students can play along either in a group setting or at home.
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    A great resource for general music classes. Great guide to the orchestra for kids.
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    This website is fantastic for students as individuals or as a full class activity! Step by step it takes them on a safari to learn about each instrument of the orchestra using Benjamin Britten's "A Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra". It is kid-friendly and would be great for students in 2nd and 3rd grade. It tests their listening skills using games deciphering things like notes in a sequence, or high and low.
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    Incredible multimedia, interactive version of Benjamin Britten's famous work. Produced by The Weill Music Institute at Carnegie Hall. Students log in or free play a safari adventure to save an orchestra. Instrument families are explored in detail with listening examples in a leveled gaming experience. Interdisciplinary connections to safari excursion, story telling, sound properties, animals and travel. Teachers can create an account to track student progress and/or assessment. Works well with an IWB.
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    I found this site while discovering music technology for Module 5. This is a great interactive game for elementary age children who are or have studied instruments, instrument families, and the orchestra. It teaches the player new information, assesses their understanding of that information, and has opportunities for further study.
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    This is an interactive way to explore and discover instruments of the orchestra. Students will locate and learn about instruments on a "safari type" adventure. This is great for younger students.
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    I use this composition to discuss instruments and instrument families with 3rd grade. Unfortunately, I haven't found something to really engage the students. I think this website might actually intrigue students into learning about the instrument.s 
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    I use this composition to discuss instruments and instrument families with 3rd grade. Unfortunately, I haven't found something to really engage the students. I think this website might actually intrigue students into learning about the instrument.s 
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    The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra allows students to learn all about the different instruments in the orchestra, as well as listening examples of classical pieces of music. The games provide a brief lesson, and then students can participate through interactive games. I find this site very informative and the kids love the story line that goes along with the game sequence. Great resource in preparation for our annual Young People's Concert at the Bob Carr in Orlando.
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    Great site for teaching and learning about the instruments of the orchestra. It also has games students can interact with as a group or by themselves.
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    This is a fun, interactive website that helps students get to know the instruments, the set up of a professional ensemble, different genres, and musical roles.
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    This website is a game developed by Carnegie Hall that helps younger students learn the instruments of the orchestra. The game uses Benjamin Britten's Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra. This interactive game helps students understand the layout of an orchestra, the ranges of the individual instruments, and how they sound individually and together in an ensemble. This is an excellent tool for elementary music!
anonymous

Music Animation Machine - "Music Worth Watching" - 1 views

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    The Music Animation Machine offers videos that visualize pitch and rhythm in a way that is easy to understand. Voices are color coded (and arranged vertically by pitch) so that various melody and harmony lines are easy to follow. The website details the history of the project and offers several videos to watch.
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    The Music Animation Machine offers videos that visualize pitch and rhythm in a way that is easy to understand. Voices are color coded (and arranged vertically by pitch) so that various melody and harmony lines are easy to follow. The website details the history of the project and offers several videos to watch.
sthomassen2

http://www.nafme.org/wp-content/files/2014/06/Core-Music-Standards-EUs-EQs-Definitions.pdf - 0 views

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    This is a list of overarching Enduring Understandings and Essential Questions for the New National Standards. I use this as a reminder of what meaning goals I truly want my students to be learning!
Josh Cockrell

Drum Set Performance Tips -"Understanding and Executing the Tune" | The Jazz Education ... - 0 views

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    Jazzednet.org is the site for the Jazz Education Network. It offers helpful articles about properly teaching students the elements of jazz education. This particular article, although listed for drum set performance tips, is applicable for the entire rhythm section of your jazz band. It gives helpful tips on how to make your rhythm section understand the feel and flow of the chart by providing a lead sheet so that they become familiar with the melody like the horn players.
Paul Rosen

Music Matters | A blog on music cognition - 0 views

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    Henkjan Honing is a professor of Music Cognition at the University of Amsterdam. This blog presents articles on the human understanding of music. Some of the articles are in English while others are in German.
Kyle Naugle

Music Teacher's Games, Educational games for music students - 0 views

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    This website serves the purpose of giving music teachers from grades 1-12 games, music symbols, guitar chords, and rhythm exercises for teaching. It allows teachers to have something to give students when preparing for a test or the next section of a class. This website includes features such as midi pianos, ear training courses, the lines treble and bass clefs for study, and rhythm games for understanding and foundation.
Kelly Gallman

Portfolios (Authentic Assessment Toolbox) - 0 views

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    This is another site describing the content of a student portfolio.  It is easy to read and understand.  Music educators could easily integrate portfolios into the curriculum. 
Kyle Naugle

Classical Music Podcasts : San Francisco Classical Voice - 0 views

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    This SFCV site is for the arts community to read articles, listen to podcast from other orchestras, and allow users to purchase tickets to concerts. Another purpose is to allow youth to explore new music that they might not know or understand yet. This website includes upcoming events in the San Francisco area, Critic Reviews, the ability to listen to music online, and other music resources such as biographies on composers and musicians of today, and from the past.
Stephen List

Music Theory Pro - Music Theory On The Go - 0 views

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    A fun way to test your music theory knowledge. The website has great videos for teaching the basics of music theory notation. The app itself is simple to use and easy to understand. As a vocalist I especially like the ear-training section.
kendra gannaway

The Science of Memory (and 4 Uncommon Ways to Enhance It) - 0 views

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    Often I encounter students who attempt to "cram" for a performance that requires memorization of their music. This article speaks to the element of memorization that I continually speak to: the importance of sleep in the process of memory. I couldn't get the diigo toolbar to work, so I couldn't highlight the relevant section, but what happens during sleep is called "memory consolidation" and this article discusses this phenomenon in easy to understand language.
Laura Schupbach

Impro-Visor - 1 views

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    Free Improvisation software tool for beginning to intermediate jazz musicians.
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    The software has its occasional glitches (it is free after all) and does not allow for audio input like many paid doppelgangers, but this allows students to understand chord progressions, work out solo lines (and notate them using colorized notes for feedback), play along with auto-accompaniment and utilizes the brick chord layout for easy form understanding.
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