Thursday, January 31, 2013

Featuring Mr. Viselli's 2nd Grade

Second grade is working on learning the instrument families! Did you know there are 4 families of instruments?


Each month between now and April second grade is learning about a different family. In the month of January they learned about the Percussion family! All instruments have to VIBRATE in order to make sound, but HOW they vibrate is the way we can tell what family those instruments are in.

In the percussion family the instrument has to be hit, or shaken in order to VIBRATE to make sound. This week students are working on playing instruments to a PowerPoint I made (Love Somebody, Yes I Do!)




The second graders first learn the song by rote, then keep a steady beat by use of rhythm sticks, and finally we break up the class into three groups. each group has a different percussion instrument, and each group plays on a different part of the song.

The Rhythm sticks are our "heartbeat" and keep the steady beat, the finger cymbals are the pretty flourish that plays whenever we sing "Yes I Do!" and the hand drums have the important part of accenting the beginning of each line. They play every time we sing "Love".


Featuring Mr. Viselli's second grade class you will hear the students perform "Love Somebody, Yes I Do!" in all three parts! The song is first sung AND played, then the students demonstrate how they can work together and keep the same steady beat by playing without singing! Finally, we end with the students singing the song without playing so they can concentrate on using their best singing voices possible!







Monday, January 28, 2013

Love Somebody Yes I Do!



One of the big concepts I'm working on for my students is Curriculum Mapping throughout the grades that I teach (k-6).  What things do I want them to learn each year, and what things should they know based on the national standards for music education.  Although this is an ongoing project, and this is my first year in this position, I feel like I am getting a pretty good idea of how I want the students overall music curriculum to look like throughout their time here at Snyder Elementary. 

When developing the curriculum a few questions came to me that I needed to answer.

1.) What are the most important aspects of music I want them to learn? With there being an infinite amount of music out there it is important to figure out the most important things for the students to take with them. They can then use those skills to go more in depth with their knowledge of music, if they want to. 

2.) What are the most important life lessons I want to help them learn?  In other words, how will the way I run my class, classroom management, help to shape these students into productive citizens? For starters giving 3rd-6th grade journals that they have to maintain, and take care of makes them responsible for something when they walk through my door. By giving them goals, and guidelines to work through, such as my noteworthy news (Noteworthy News review) this will help the students be held accountable for their actions in the classroom. 

3.) How do I get the students to retain the information that I am trying to get across? Repetition, repetition, repetition! In a class where I go 7 days without seeing kids (and that's if there are no holidays, breaks, or snow days) it is key to review information every single class! This is done through learning focus strategies such as the use of Bell Ringers, Essential Questions, and Review at the end of class. It amazes me every day to see how much the students remember just by doing these simple things. 

4.) How can I make that information become transferable to their other classes? Sometimes the students don't realize what they're doing when they're doing it! However, 3rd-6th grade have journals that I grade, so they're working on their writing skills, critical thinking, spelling etc. And the younger kids we do different things, like letter recognition with kindergarten, or simple math (1+1 quarter note + quarter note), singing songs about frogs, and talking about the life cycle of the frog. These are all things that, hopefully, will transfer into their other classes as well. 

 And finally, 5.) How does learning my subject pertain to the students in their everyday lives? This is the great part! Music is EVERYWHERE! No matter where you go in all aspects of life there is music. I challenge you to find one day when you hear no music! Music is on the tv, on the radio in the car or on the school bus, in movies, commercials, walking around the mall, grocery shopping, music is truly everywhere! It's time to celebrate the fact that we hear music all the time, and that we can all learn some truly great lessons from music. Lessons such as working together in a team, if one person plays a wrong note, or sings a wrong word it throws the whole group off. If one person can't keep a steady beat then the whole group may fail. The important lesson of working in a team is easily learned in music, and that is a lesson that students will take with them one day when they enter a workforce, military, or have a family.  

  

The following slides are examples of a PowerPoint that I have created for use at Valentines day that will grow with the students based on their learning ability in music. I'm currently in the middle of making different PowerPoint's that will grow with the students as they go through the Elementary school. Most of which will be in this style.


Here are some examples of the different levels:


 Kindergarten- Part of their curriculum is to learn songs by rote. This helps to full fill national standard #1 (for a list of the national music standards please go to National Standards)
 First Grade- Part of their curriculum is to get them starting to read notation and playing instruments (National Standards #2, #5). In this slide students use rhythm instruments, such as tambourines  hand drums, and rhythm sticks, and keep a steady beat while reading the beginning notation (hearts)
By Second grade it is important to get the students to not only continue with reading beginning notation, but for the students to start to understand the different lengths of the notes.
In third grade stick notation comes into play. This is the first step to getting the students to read the true rhythms of the music! An extension idea is to give the students popsicle sticks and allow them to make their own rhythms and clap them along with the song.  They can make simple ostinato patterns to play while the rest of the class is singing "Love Somebody" this is beginning of composing music as well with encompasses National Standard #4
Fourth grade students are reading real notes and learning to count those notes as well.  Basic music notation is taken a step further and builds the students vocabulary by adding things such as time signatures.
By 5th grade students will be learning to solfege the notes on the staff. Starting with a 3 line staff and working up to the 5 line staff.  Accompanying the slides will be the use of the solfege hand symbols as well.


Finally by 6th grade the students should be able to build upon all of these skills and play the notes on a 5 line staff by use of bell sets, or other pitched percussion instruments.








These are only part of the 19 slides that accompany the full powerpoint.  If you are interested in using the whole PowerPoint please visit my site at teacherspayteachers 

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Newsletter #1

Here's an update on what's going to be going on this second half of the year in music class! There will be some great concerts to attend, including 2 very fabulous children's musicals!

I hope to see everybody there!


~Mrs. G



Monday, January 7, 2013

Where in the World is Mr. Maraca?

BROADWAY

Mr. Maraca is on another great adventure! This time he's exploring the great  New York City.



The students in 4-6 are learning about the history of Broadway this month. The evolution of the American musical as well as examples of how our country changed during those times.  










Thursday, December 13, 2012

Holiday Tree

5th and 6th grade are learning to read actual notes! No longer will they be working with ti's and ta's! In order to get them ready for this next step we learned about what the notes are, and how they go together.

Each student created their own holiday tree! The tree had to be made up of notes, but they could decorate the rest of the page however they wanted.

Working from the top of the tree down we see at the very top of our tree is a whole note which equals 4 beats.  Coming off the whole note are two tree branches, each branch receives one half note (1/2 + 1/2 = 1). This process is similar until we are at the bottom of the tree where all the students have 1/8th notes on the bottom.  The tree can be used to remind the students as we go forward 2 different pieces of information. 1.) How many beats each note receives. 2.) What 2 notes equal each other (1/4+1/4=1/2).

This is also a great cross-curriculum lesson with Math. As we are learning about what notes equal each other we have to practice adding our fractions!

For Example:

1/8 note + 1/8 note= 1/4 note
1/4 note + 1/4 note= 1/2 note
1/2 note + 1/2 note= 1 whole note


1, 2, 3 compose with me!

2nd grade is starting to become young composers! As part of their music curriculum each month there is a composer that they learn about.  This month happens to be Ludwig Von Beethoven.  In the spirit of learning about composers, the students have started writing their own compositions as well!

Ludwig Van Beethoven was born in Germany and started composing his own music at the age of 7! Beethoven's Dad, Leopold, was his first teacher who started Beethoven out learning the piano and violin.
To get the students use to reading music, and introduce them to the instruments they are doing picture compositions.  Each block of the composition the students have to draw one of the instruments that they are learning about that week.  Then they work with a partner (each with their own instrument) and they create their own composition that they then will give a title.  After every student has written their own composition they have 5 minutes to practice and then we have they're own mini concert in class. 





As an add on extension plan, the class following their compositions the students go to the computer lab and create their own music compositions on a website called musicgames.co  Here they can layer instruments on top of each other and hear their own compositions come alive! 

Friday, November 2, 2012

Aiken Drum

Mr. Maraca is a big hit with my older kids (4th-6th).  I show the powerpoint of where he is and they all guess and it's a lot of fun, and a lot of learning.  With my younger kids though I can't have them sit through a powerpoint! So Mr. Maraca is more of a class mascot and we learn songs appropriate for where Mr. Maraca is "Vacationing"

Right now Mr. Maraca is in Scotland checking out castles, and going to visit Nessy, the Loch Ness Monster.  Kindergarten through 3rd grade are learning traditional Scottish Folk Songs.  In class we started learning about the Scottish folk song Aiken Drum.










As the Scottish Folk song tells us Aiken Drum is a man that lives in the Moon.  As every good Scotsmen knows, if you live on the moon your clothes are made of food! The students had a chance to compose their own lyrics to "Aiken Drum", sing through the song together and draw their own pictures of what Mr. Aiken Drum looks like to them.

I like to play multiple versions of songs for the students to compare and contrast different styles. We sang our Aiken Drum version with piano accompaniment.  I also showed them this video with guitar and drum playing:


Finally I chose a few of their pictures to display, and one class has been recorded as well! I think Mr. Maraca would be very proud of all the Scottish Folk Song singing we did in class this week!

To hear Mr. Patterson's 2nd grade class sing their version of Aiken Drum click the link below: