Skip to main content

Home/ Teaching Music/ Group items tagged learning

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Brian W

How Much Of Me Is Owned By The Institution? | Graham Wegner - Open Educator - 0 views

  • In the words of my principal, I am a user (of technology for learning!). When I go online and read blogs, leave comments, publish posts, respond in forums, create and share resources, I do so for my own learning first, and as an extension of my profession second. I want to be a better educator so naturally the lines between when I am doing something for my own personal betterment and when it can be beneficial for those who work alongside of me within my institution become somewhat hazy. I use tools that I sometimes bring back into my classroom. But I always start with the selfish premise of how can this tool / community / node / resource benefit me? In my mind, I strongly feel that this is my own stuff. My blog is my own content. My presentations that I develop for the audience reading here is my own content that I believe that I can share as I see fit. But it isn’t totally clear cut. Because on that Slideshare account mixed in with my Blogging As Professional Learning and my OpenEducatorPLE, content created for an audience beyond my institution, are slideshows like iwb+literacy and my Blogging@School which were developed as part of my paid employment. Who owns what there?
  •  
    Interesting thoughts on personal vs. professional learning and sharing
Yoon Soo Lim

Professional Learning Networks for Music Teachers - 3 views

  •  
    by @Katiesw
Yoon Soo Lim

Hansel and Gretel: Learning about Opera! [KUSC Kids] - 2 views

  •  
    Great site to teach kids about opera, design, and music!
anonymous

Music Racer - 5 views

  •  
    Fun learning tool for younger students to learn & review note names, basic music terms, and fingerings. Students compete to earn the best time!
Laura Scola

Songs Infantil i Cicle Inicial - 1 views

  •  
    All kinds of songs for kids with English subtitles from a website full of resources for students learning English as a second language.
Yoon Soo Lim

Art for our sake - The Boston Globe - 2 views

  • we found that arts programs teach a specific set of thinking skills rarely addressed elsewhere in the curriculum - and that far from being irrelevant in a test-driven education system, arts education is becoming even more important as standardized tests like the MCAS exert a narrowing influence over what schools teach.
  •  
    "we found that arts programs teach a specific set of thinking skills rarely addressed elsewhere in the curriculum - and that far from being irrelevant in a test-driven education system, arts education is becoming even more important as standardized tests like the MCAS exert a narrowing influence over what schools teach."
Yoon Soo Lim

Resuscitating Art Music - 8 views

  •  
    "This essay is a collection of ideas about how art music could do its job better. "
Brian W

The Knowledge in Knowledge Management (KM) - 0 views

  • if "knowledge management" is to have any meaning and any credence at all, we must say what we mean by knowledge – in all its variations and permutations – and we must do so in ways that are as free of conflict and overlap as we can make them. Otherwise, we run the distinct risk of appearing to not know what we are talking about.
  • Tacit to tacit. Acquiring someone else’s tacit knowledge through observation, imitation and practice. The example Nonaka uses is that of a product developer, Ikuro Tanaka, who apprentices herself to a hotel chef famous for the quality of his bread. She learns how to make bread his way, including an unusual kneading technique.
  • Explicit to tacit. Internalizing explicit knowledge. HereHere, Nonaka indicates that the product development team acquired new tacit knowledge; specifically, they came to understand in an intuitive way, that products like the home bread-making machine can provide quality, that is, they can produce bread as good as that made by a professional baker. That Nonaka (or anyone else) knows of this suggests that whatever knowledge was acquired has been made explicit and that means it might have been implicit knowledge at one point but was never truly tacit knowledge because that cannot be articulated.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Developing Procedural Knowledge We are talking here of skill development, specifically, the acquisition of explicit, declarative knowledge as the basis for skill development. Often this works as follows: We are presented with a description of a way to perform a task. We practice it, perhaps haltingly at first but our proficiency improves with continued practice and it benefits from feedback. Finally, we reach the point at which our ability to perform the task is automatic, we no longer have to think about it. Over time, we might even forget the original task descriptions that enabled enabled our early attempts to perform the task.
  • Procedural knowledgeknowledge
Kyle Freesen

Conductors Retreat at Medomak - 0 views

  •  
    This unique summer program offers a safe, non-competitive environment for both novice and veteran conductors to learn skills and techniques that will influence them throughout their musical lives.
Kyle Freesen

Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra - 1 views

  •  
    Carnegiehall.org a neat game for young students learning the instruments!
  •  
    This is my favorite site for teaching 2nd graders about instrument families! They absolutely LOVE it!
Laura Scola

Songs - British Council - LearnEnglish Kids - 0 views

  •  
    Songs for learning English. Great in any music or regular ed classroom too!
Neal Smith

Sibelius1 - 1 views

  •  
    A series a video tutorials for learning Sibelius.
Kyle Freesen

Prezi - The zooming presentation editor - 2 views

  •  
    Prezi is the zooming presentation editor...what that seems to mean is it's a site to create cool presentations.
  •  
    It's an awesome alternative to PowerPoint, more dynamic and fluid. You start by constructing a "mind map," and then instruct the software to zoom into various parts as needed. Topics may be sized to show their relative significance. Once you try it, you'll be hooked! They offer free educators' licenses, which give you vastly more features and space than the free-to-anyone license. (No, I am not on Prezi's payroll!)
  •  
    Check out ahead.com too. Powerful but steep learning curve.
1 - 20 of 21 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page