For the first class, the room had no central open space, and the only significant open space had no board nearby; for that class, I had the students seated at their normal desks, facing the front of the room. For the second class, there was a carpeted open space near the front, and so the students (who serenaded me with Tommy Tinker and Down The Line as I entered) were seated nicely there.
| Teaching Peace | Review song, have students sing 2nd stanza |
I had printed the lyrics to Teaching Peace, one measure per sheet, and connected the lyric sheets with tape so that the song could be read horizontally. With the lyrics attached to the magnetic whiteboard, I first reviewed the song by echo, and then we sang the chorus together. Before continuing, we reviewed the terms "chorus" and "stanza", and then we went right into the stanza. Students remembered the partial echo well, but only a few remembered the "1, 2, 3, 4" that we chanted at the end of the 1st stanza. And so, I had the students re-practice the 1,2,3,4, along with the stanza, before proceeding back to the chorus. Next, I informed the students that while the lyrics of a chorus may not change, the words to a stanza often does, although musically the pattern is usually the same. And so, I started singign the 2nd stanza, and they did well with the first two echos. I had to walk them through the partial echo of this second stanza, and then when I got to the end of the stanza, I cued in the class to chant 1,2,3,4 again, and some (but not all) did. We ended with singing the chorus one more time. I forgot to ask the students what the form was. But, I did note that for a song like this, we could do something different at the end, and we reviewed what a "coda" meant, along with the hand symbol that I've been using for coda. I then took a market and marked the last two lines (sheets of paper) of the printed chorus to mark lines that we'd be repeating as part of the coda. We practiced this once. | |
| Rhythm charts, measures | Dive right into reading kodaly rhythms |
I started off with asking the class what the most important number in music was (4). Then, I drew out the four familiar vertical bars, representing 4 beats. I then introduced the concept of a "measure", which was (for our purposes) just a grouping of 4 beats, and the amount of time required to play those four beats. Measures can be concatenated to make long sequences, some as a long as a song, and so I added another set of 4 beats to the left of the first ones that I drew, and we all clapped all 8 together, while I counted only to 4 twice. I then pointed out that each clap or line represented one quarter of a measure, and so it was a quarter note. I then pointed to the lyrics for Teaching Peace, and noted that each piece of paper represented a measure from the song; the chorus had 8 measures. I then pointed out that the number of syllables changed for each measure, and none had exactly 4, which meant that the rhythm was more complex than 4 identical notes. I took the third measure, and I had the class try to sing it while I counted 4 steady beats; I then had the class try to figure out where/when the extra syllable showed up. I then went back to the drawn measure of 4 identical beats, and then replaced one quarter with a pair of eighths, although I didn't call them that quite yet. We tried clapping the rhythm a few times, and then I asked, if one of the standard beat notes was called a "quarter", what should we call the smaller ones that took half the time (and went twice as fast)? No one really figured out the question, and so we had to organically find the answer. In the first class, I wrote out a series of eight eighth notes, and it was easy to point out that one of these faster notes was an eighth of a measure and therefore called an eighth note. For the second class, I asked them "what is a half of a quarter?" I think one or two students were able to do the math and came up with 1/8, but I still ended up writing out the large measure of eighth notes. At this point, I started flipping through a series of pages, each containing one measure's worth of quarter and eighth notes (no rests). The slides went something like: QQQQ (what we started with) EEEEEEEE QQEEQ QQQEE EEQEEQ QEEEEQ The possibilities are (almost) endless. But after that set of slides, I could tell that the students were getting tired with clapping. Some students in the first class resorted to tapping their desk tops. Only in the 2nd class did I alter the names of the quarter and eighth notes with "slow" and "fast", and eventually "ta" and "ti". Unlike last year, I didn't want to get so hung up on the Kodaly names, and so at times I continued to talk in terms of quarters and eighths. | |
| Seasons/Winter | Sing, record a round |
I did this only with the first class, but I wanted to attempt to record the students singing the Seasons song in a round. I had the lyrics pre-printed on 5 sheets, connected vertically, and as a review, I simply showed the lyrics, one sheet at a time to the class, and the students responded by singing the song. I asked if someone could sing the song as a solo, and one person volunteered. I then split the class, half at the back facing the student, and the other half facing me. I then had the back half try singing with the student leading her half of the class. I then instructed my side of the room to try singing only after I cued them in. We first practiced by having the back half sing the song entirely while I led my half only after all 4 bars had been sung by the other half. Next, I repeated the exercise, but I had my side of the class come in at measure 3. We tried this one more time before I recorded the attempt. I don't have an external or moveable microphone for my laptop, and so I'm limited as to where I can place the laptop without risking it getting handled by curious kids. With the split at the "horizon" so that I had a back and front half of the class, having the laptop with me at the front really meant that my side, including myself, was drowning out the back half. During the last recording, you can tell that the song starts ok, then gets really loud, and then drops a bit when my side of the class sang measure 3. However, it was impossible to hear the back half's words clearly when everyone was singing. I told the students that we'd try again later, and they were excited by that prospect. | |
| A Capella Exploration | Listen to samples of a capella music |
I did something similar to this with the second class a few months ago during a make-up class, but that class still got a lot out of this exercise, as none remembered the term "a capella." I played a number of songs, asking the students to describe the non-vocal things that they were hearing. For some personal fun, I got to play "The Longest Time" by Billy Joel for a bit -- no student knew the song, but they had fun singing along with it. I ended the exercise playing Flight of the Bumblebee by Yo Yo Ma and Bobby McFerrin - not an a capella song, but one that shows the power of a voice imitating an instrument, or nature. | |
| More Rhythm charts | Introduce a rest |
One of the songs that I played was Ladysmith Black Mambazo's rendition of Old MacDonald Had A Farm, partially in Zulu. I asked the students what the rhythm to the first measure of the song was - EEEEEEQ(nothing)! What was that nothing - why, it's a rest! It was a rest that took the same time as a quarter note, and thus it had to be a quarter rest. At this point, I started singing short/long or ti/ta to the tune of Old MacDonald, up to the EIEIO, thus blending pitch with rhythm. I then started flipping through rhythms on paper, this time with those that had a combination of quarter notes and quarter rests: QQRQ QRQR RQRQ That last rhythm, with a rest on the 1st beat, turned out to be pretty hard for the students to get used to. I also started adding eighth notes: EEEEREE EEREER QEERQ EEQREE EEEEQR Going back to the notion that each paper was a measure, I had a 2-measure pattern prepared for them: QEEQQRQQR I had the students try it out a few times, and a few eventually realized that it was a pattern for Shave and a Haircut. | |
Today's class was quite wonderful - both classes were well behaved, and although there was some adjustment for all of us, I think the classes went well. When I'm teaching in the classroom, I don't have all of the instruments at my disposal, and so I have to be more selective as to what equipment to bring. But, this was indeed a really fun experience, and if construction continues to be loud after lunch, I'll likely find myself over by the classrooms again.
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