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Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Contemporary Palestinian Musicians

I'm always on the lookout for contemporary musicians from different cultures to share with my students, and I recently found myself down an online rabbit hole discovering several contemporary Palestinian musicians that are not only cool enough for my oldest students but have music videos and songs that are completely appropriate for elementary school and (obviously) musically interesting, creative, and well-executed. If you're looking for some new music, artists, or music-related videos to share with your students in elementary music class (or, honestly, with middle school or high school students as well), I highly recommend checking these out!


Zeyne (go to 1:56 for the song): 

Dana Salah: 

Noel Kharman: 

Walaa Sbait: 

Anees Mokhiber: 

Almultahiat: 

There are so many more wonderful contemporary artists, and of course many more older ones, but for this post I wanted to stick with songs with themes that aren't too heavy and artists who are current so they are sure to spark elementary students' interest without necessarily triggering a conversation you may not be equipped to handle appropriately in the context of the classroom. But I'm sure there are many more songs and musicians we can add to the list! If you have more names or titles you think should be on the list please leave a comment. 

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Tuesday, January 7, 2025

Music Teacher Planner

I love looking back through my planner over winter break before I take out the old weekly pages and add in the new ones starting in January, and as a music teacher who has found the perfect paper planner that works for me and uses it daily, I thought other teachers might like to see what it looks like when you truly use it for everything, every day! So here is my actual planner and what my monthly and weekly pages looked like so far this school year.

If you want to use the same printables I use for my planner, you can get them here (and keep in mind there are 6 other weekly planning templates to choose from depending on your class schedule)!


If you have any questions about anything you see, or about how I use my planner, please leave a comment or send me an email. I love talking planners any day! 

Friday, December 27, 2024

Top 10 Posts from 2024

I am so grateful for the opportunity to connect with other music teachers around the globe through my little corner of the internet, and it is such a good feeling when readers connect with something I've written. Each time a new calendar year rolls around, it's so fun to look back and see which of the posts I wrote the past year have been read the most! So we're looking back on 2024 today to see which posts made the top 10 list- have you seen them all?


10. Rhythm Theme Elementary Choral Program


9. Co-creating Success Criteria with Students


8. Elementary Music Classroom Student Jobs


7. 
آ شتا تاتا تاتا (Achtatata) :Moroccan Rain Song


6. Dance Playlist 2024


5. Learning Targets in the Music Room


4. Japanese Rain Song: あめふり (Amefuri, Ame Ame)


3. Instrument Examples to Counter Stereotypes


2. Teaching Major and Minor


1. 
Music In Our Schools Month® 2024: "I See Me in Music Education" Song Bracket


Thank you all for reading, interacting with, and supporting this page. Having the opportunity to interact with other music teachers, and the platform to share my thoughts and ideas, has been such an amazing creative outlet and source of encouragement for me! I can't wait to see what 2025 brings us. Happy New Year!

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Effective Lesson Plans for Difficult Days

Whether it's a specific class that is always challenging, or it's a time of year that is particularly difficult, finding lesson plans that will work for those challenging days can be a struggle. The specifics will vary depending on the exact situation and group of students, but here's what I look for when I'm planning for a lesson that I know is going to be difficult for one reason or another.

1. Less talking, more doing

The less time you're spending trying to get students to listen to you the better! Two decades in and I can still use the reminder every now and then that we DO NOT have to verbally explain nearly as much as we usually do- just jump into a song and they will follow. I look for lesson activities that don't require much explanation, whether that's something they can learn by following my movements, echoing my singing/ playing, or putting up notation on the board, pointing to the notes, and saying 1, 2, ready, go! 

2. Get out of the way

This is similar to my first point, but I try to look for activities that involve as little "follow the teacher's directions" as possible. Maybe they are following directions from a video, having a student(s) lead the activity, or working in small groups or independently. 

3. Lean into the right brain

This is especially for those times of year when everyone is a little more drained, like right before a break: I want to engage students, but not expect a lot of critical thinking. I've found that engaging their creative ideas, not their analytical thoughts, works best in those moments. It gets them cognitively engaged with a part of their brain we don't ask them to use as much at school, which feels exciting and fun.

4. One thing, a hundred ways

The most successful lesson plans in particularly challenging situations are the ones where I can read the room and instantly shift gears. If I have a group or a situation where I'm not exactly sure how they'll respond to an activity, or how quickly they will grasp a new concept, I plan several different activities to address the same concept or skill and have all of them ready. If the first one I try starts to feel like I'm pulling teeth, I can move on to something different knowing they'll still learn the same thing. It also focuses students' mental energy on one thing, so even if I do end up doing all the activities I planned it feels more manageable for students and they're more likely to be successful.

5. Play to their strengths

If I know a particular group is most successful at, or most interested in, a specific type of activity, I incorporate it as much as I can. Sometimes I have a group of students that loves to just sing. Often it's playing instruments, or especially with younger grades, it's dancing and movement. Sometimes if the group dynamics are challenging, they do best with small group and independent work. I certainly don't abandon other forms of music-making but especially if I know a new concept is going to be difficult, or I know a specific day is going to be challenging, I'll try to incorporate the ones that they're most successful with and use them to teach whatever it is I want them to learn.

I hope this helps give you some ideas of what to look for when you're dreading a particularly difficult day or specific group of students. It can make such a huge difference for both the students and for ourselves as teachers when more students are excited about the lesson and walk away feeling successful!