What are your favorite ways to show students the joy of musicking in all its forms? I'd love to hear your favorites in the comments below!
Tuesday, March 28, 2023
Lessons to Celebrate the Joy of Music
What are your favorite ways to show students the joy of musicking in all its forms? I'd love to hear your favorites in the comments below!
Tuesday, March 21, 2023
Lessons to Celebrate Listening
Tuesday, March 14, 2023
Lessons to Celebrate Dancing
- Keep it moving! Switch leaders every couple of measures and go around the room quickly. At these younger ages we all know their attention spans are short anyway, but I've found if I let any one student lead for too long things tend to get out of hand!
- For shy students who freeze when it's their turn, I don't let them off the hook but I do give them suggestions. I try to wait a minute and prompt them again to pick something to do, and sometimes that's enough. If not, I ask them to pick from a few super easy options I suggest, like clapping, patting their heads, or patting their shoulders.
These are the rules I give my students when we play: wait until I call one of your names to go, keep the street wide, only do things your partner can physically do, and if you can physically do something you should go for it. I remind them that we don't want any traffic jams, so I make sure the next pair doesn't start going until the previous one has gotten to the end of the row. Often the people waiting get busy watching the others walking past them and they start to move in, making the space too small. To avoid injuries, make sure the space stays wide! For the person picking the movement, I give the example of someone who can do back flips and another cannot. If the leader chooses something that their partner can't do, they are disqualified from the game. If the person copying can do something (like maybe a somersault) and chooses not to, they are disqualified. Obviously you as the teacher will have to be the judge of whether something is truly too difficult or not, or if someone is trying to embarrass someone out of spite rather than fun (I've never had that happen, even in my most challenging groups, but it is theoretically something that I am prepared for).
Tuesday, March 7, 2023
Lessons to Celebrate Instruments
For Music In Our Schools Month (MIOSM®), I thought I would share some of my favorite lessons for celebrating different forms of musicking. These are the lessons where we just bask in the joy of music-making- what's better than that? And (because I can never help myself) there are always musical skills and concepts students get more practice with in the process. Today I'm sharing some of my favorite lessons that celebrate instruments!
1. Instrument Merry-Go-Round
I've shared this activity several times before but it's just that good! And I use it with every age group: it's easy enough for the Kindergartners and it never seems to get old, even in 6th grade. The basic idea is to have everyone sit in a circle, and give each person 1 instrument (either everyone having a different one or at least have a few different ones that you alternate around the circle). Then in some way, shape, or form they rotate around the circle to play different instruments.
The variations on this activity are endless. For the process of rotating instruments I use 3 variations:
- Verbally tell students to put down their instrument, scoot around the circle to the next spot, and pick up the new instrument
- Use silent hand gestures to signal students putting down their instrument, scooting around the circle, picking up the new instrument, playing, and stopping (this is a great way to introduce following conductor cues)
- Use a chant similar to the one used in "Mallet Madness": 1 2 3 4, put your instruments on the floor, 5 6 7 8, hurry don't be late (they should be holding the new instrument by the time they get to the number 8)
- Have students play on the steady beat with a recording or with a song you're singing
- Have students stop/ start playing on your cue (another opportunity to practice following conductor cues)
- Have students play different ways (fast/ slow, piano/ forte, etc) when you say the words (great way to practice vocabulary) or show a corresponding conducting gesture
- Have students echo your rhythm patterns
- Have students take turns improvising a 4-beat pattern, taking turns around the circle
- Assign a different ostinato to each instrument and layer each one in
- Call out instrument names or instrument groups (pitched/ unpitched, metals/ scrapers/ etc) and only those instruments play
Apparently a lot of my favorite instrument lessons involve sitting in circles?!? There are so many fun lesson activities I love to do with drum circles, but for my upper elementary / middle school students in particular I have 2 favorite activities that truly give students a chance to bask in the joy of drumming together: Improv Circle and Groove Pass. Rather than try to explain them, here are videos of each one: