Adapted by Denise Cummings-Clay
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Chapters derived from:
https://milnepublishing.geneseo.edu/music-and-the-child
by Natalie Sarrazin
Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 4.0 License.
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Chapter Summary: This chapter looks at creative ideas for approaching and planning a successful music lesson, including a guided outline, models of full lessons, and classroom management tips.
At some point or other, students in education programs are required to write lesson plans.Often, however, the meaning of writing a lesson plan becomes lost in the academic process, and the lesson’s grade becomes the goal rather than the meaningful construction of the lesson and learning the technique of organizing your thoughts. Often students believe that writing a lesson plan is only used in a classroom setting. The reality is, however, that all professions require the organization of a plan of action to be carried out, including an articulation of goals and objectives to reach them, followed by a reflection or assessment of the effectiveness. In other professions, you might be asked for a plan of action composed of three inherent questions: 1) What are you going to do? 2) How are you going to do it? and 3) How will you assess what you’ve done? In education, a lesson plan is nothing more than a plan of action with the same three questions: 1) What are you going to teach? 2) How are you going to teach it? and 3) How will you assess what you have taught?
Much of the time as a teacher, you will be required to teach a certain set curriculum in the classroom that conforms to the Common Core State Standards (see Chapter 3). However, this doesn’t mean that the lesson has to be devoid of inspiration. Whatever your content area, there is probably an arts-related activity that can be applied or integrated (see Chapter 12 for Arts Integration information). It is much easier to create a good lesson plan if you are inspired. Your inspiration for a music or integrated lesson plan can be a song, an instrument, timbre, vocal sound, poem, story, rhythm, speech pattern, etc.
Creative problem solving requires that you be able to see and manipulate your lesson material in unique ways to reach all types of student learners. The music education methods of Orff, Dalcroze, Kodály, etc., offer easily implemented solutions to add layers of cognitively challenging musical activities to something as simple as a song. When developing your lesson, start by thinking outside of the box.
Activity 6A Try this How can I make the lesson interesting? Challenging? What might I be able to add to a lesson to increase its effectiveness for the learner—e.g., movement? rhythm? instruments? Below are a few ways to challenge students physically, cognitively, and multi-modally just with a simple song. The first rule is not to be afraid of experimenting with sound, using either your own voice, various instruments, or maybe even the walls, doors, floors, chairs, and surroundings, all of which have their own unique timbres to explore! |
Musically Creative Lesson Planning |
Begin with the list of music elements and vocabulary from Chapter 2. Select a song, then brainstorm different ways of performing the song using what you’ve learned. For example: |
Vocal |
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Dynamics, Tempo, Form |
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Body Percussion |
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Instruments |
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Conclusion |
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Inspiration can come from anywhere, including the arsenal of classroom and children’s instruments available. Classroom instruments are much more than noisemakers to accompany songs. There are many creative ways to use these inexpensive instruments to help and inspire you, and which will fire up a child’s imagination. Here are a few instruments typically found in classrooms, or that can be purchased inexpensively at a music store or online. This list is by no means exhaustive, but it does provide a wide range of commonly used instruments from Western and world cultures.
Xylophones |
Metallophones |
Glockenspiels |
Boomwhackers |
Recorders |
Slide whistles |
Jingle bells |
Kokoriko |
Castanets |
Bells |
Agogo bells (African double bell) |
Shekere (African gourd shaker) |
Maracas |
Triangle |
Cymbals (finger, crash, suspended) |
Tambourines |
Timpani |
Gongs |
Bongos |
Temple blocks |
Steel drum |
Hand drum |
Conga drums |
Claves |
Cowbell |
Djembe |
Rainmaker |
Rhythm blocks |
Sand blocks |
Panpipes |
Ocarina |
Piano |
Mbira (thumb piano) |
Guiro |
Tick tock |
Tone block |
Vibra slap |
Wood block |
Guitar |
Violin |
Chimes |
Thinking about the source of sound production and materials will lead you to the field of organology, or the classification of musical instruments. Instruments all over the world can be grouped into five categories based on the Sachs-Hornbostel instrument classification system. This system groups the instruments by the way in which sound is produced. They are:
Aerophones: Instruments that produce sound by using air as the primary vibrating means. (e.g., flutes, horns, whistles).
Membranophones: Instruments that produce sound by means of vibrating a stretched membrane (e.g., drums)
Chordophones: A term used for stringed instruments. Refers to an instrument sounded by bowing, plucking, or striking a string that is stretched between two fixed points. (e.g., violins)
Idiophones: Instruments that produce sound from the material of the instrument itself. Idiophones produce sounds from the following methods and represent the largest category of classroom instruments.
Electrophones: Refers to electronic instruments that either have their sound generated electronically or acoustic instruments that have their sounds amplified
The Sachs-Hornbostel list, however, is only one way to think about instruments. Children often come up with very imaginative ways to group instruments based on characteristics other than sound production. Children can explore the timbre, production, and material of the instruments to come up with their own ways of categorizing them. After students explore and group instruments, they can develop their own instrumentation for a piece, then vary it. Below is a list of other ways to think about instruments besides the way the sound is produced, such as its timbre or similar sound; physical attributes, etc.
Terminology |
Explanation |
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By Physical Attributes:e.g. Color, size, shape |
round, tube, big, medium, small, rectangular, long, short, hollow, solid, jingles, ridges, skin/membrane, brown, silver, red, low pitch, high pitch |
For younger children, one of the most obvious types of recognition belongs to color, shape, and size—attributes they are identifying in other subjects. They may want to group instruments by their color, how big or small, and their shape. Musically, the shape of the instrument is important since the shape is directly related to sound and sound production. The smaller the instrument, the higher the pitch, for example. |
By Material |
Metal, wood, metal and wood, plastic, wire, string, skin |
This type of grouping brings students to another level of understanding in terms of discussing the sound of the instruments. What an instrument is made of has a direct effect on its timbre. The challenge here is that some instruments, such as the tambourine, contain more than one type of material. Ask students how they might label such instruments. |
By Timbre |
Rattly-sounding, woody, metallic, jingly, high, thin, low, loud, soft, hollow, smooth, rough |
An instrument’s timbre is directly related to its size, material, and even shape. All of the above properties affect the sound production of an instrument |
Melody-Making Ability |
plays a song, doesn’t play a song; pitched, unpitched |
Children may find other unique ways of classifying instruments such as whether the instrument can play a melody. This classification concerns Pitched instruments or Unpitched instruments. |
Culture of Origin |
Sub-Saharan Africa, North America, South America |
Another way of classifying is to know the country or culture of origin for the instruments. This related to musical instruments and their community |
Multi-Purpose Use |
Used for activities other than music making |
While most classroom instruments only have one use, there are many instruments that serve other purposes such as for cooking. The cowbell, for example, is an instrument that has another purpose besides its musical one. |
Activity 6B Try this The instruments on the Typical Classroom Instrument list above are random, and not categorized purposefully in any way. See if you can develop other ways of classifying these instruments in addition to the ways listed. How could you use this classification to create a lesson on science? Physics? Math? History? Social science? World history? Start thinking scientifically and creatively about this list. How might you approach or use these instruments when creating a lesson plan? Here are a few questions that might help in thinking about the instruments. Suggested Questions
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Below are some guidelines for creating a lesson plan. Regardless of subject, method, and additional requirements, all lesson plans contain the same basic structure and four core components:
a. What types of instructional input will I use (e.g., lecture, demonstration, modeling, guided practice, independent practice)?
b. Which educational theories will I include (e.g., Bloom, Gardner, different types of learners)?
c. How will I capture learners’ attention and engage them?
d. What critical thinking will I implement?
e. Close the procedure section with a wrap-up and find ways to extend the lesson concepts in future activities
Gather your thoughts and materials on the following before beginning your lesson:
Title: Teaching “Oats, Peas, Beans, and Barley Grow” Using Rote
Grade level: Kindergarten–first grade
Length of class: 40 minutes
Type of class: Regular
Materials
Learning/Behavioral Objectives
National Common Core Arts Standards in Music
Observe students as they are performing by themselves and their ability to move to the rhythms successfully and sing the song successfully.
Did the lesson address different types of learning? Multiple intelligences? Common Core Standards? Learning objectives? Did it contain various modes of instructional input and modalities (e.g., lecture, demonstration, etc.)?
Title: Teaching the Song “Li’l Liza Jane” using Rote-Note Methods
Grade level: Second grade
Length of class: 40 minutes
Musical Concept(s)
Materials
Learning/Behavioral Objectives
National Standards
American folk song, late 19th century
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Come my love and go with me
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Li’l Liza Jane
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Come my love and go with me
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Li’l Liza Jane
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O Eliza
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Li’l Liza Jane
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D’ |
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O Eliza
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Li’l Liza Jane
Observe students as they are performing by themselves and their ability to clap the rhythm successfully or identify the rhythm and octave successfully.
Did the lesson address different types of learning? Multiple intelligences? National Standards? Learning objectives? Did it contain various modes of instructional input and modalities (e.g., lecture, demonstration, etc.)?
Title: Teaching the Song “Erie Canal” Using Note Method
Grade level: Fourth or fifth grade
Type of class: Regular
Materials
Learning/Behavioral Objectives (Music and Language Arts/History)
Common Core Music Standards (Fourth/Fifth)
Common English Language Arts Standards (Fourth/Fifth)
Title: Teaching the Song “Erie Canal” Using Note Method
Grade level: Fourth or fifth grade
Type of class: Regular
Materials
Learning/Behavioral Objectives (Music and Language Arts/History)
Common Core Music Standards (Fourth/Fifth)
Common English Language Arts Standards (Fourth/Fifth)
Thomas S. Allen, 1905
Observe students as they are performing by themselves and their ability to sing the song and identify the modes and binary form successfully.
Did the lesson address different types of learning? Multiple intelligences? National Standards? Learning objectives? Did it contain various modes of instructional input and modalities (e.g., lecture, demonstration, etc.)?
While lessons on paper are an integral and necessary step, the actual implementation of the lesson in front of a live class is quite another matter. Teachers all over the world have their own tips and hints as to what makes a good teacher and what makes a lesson successful, and reviewing a few ideas on classroom management is an extremely helpful first step. If the students aren’t focused on the lesson, all of your preparatory work is for naught. Below are a few basic classroom management ideas to use when teaching music.
aerophones: instruments that produce sound by using air as the primary vibrating means (flutes, horns, whistle)
chordophones: a term used for stringed instruments referring to instruments sounded by bowing, plucking, or striking a string that is stretched between two fixed points (violins)
concussion: two similar objects struck together to create sound
electrophones: electronic instruments that either have their sound generated electronically or acoustic instruments that have their sounds amplified
idiophones: instruments that produce sound from the material of the instrument itself; probably the largest category of classroom instruments; sounds produced through shaking, scraping, plucking, etc.
instrumentation: source of sound and music that a child develops from hearing rhythm and a melody
membranophones: instruments that produce sound by means of vibrating a stretched membrane (drums)
organology: the classification of musical instruments around the world
percussion: instrument caused to vibrate by striking it with a non-vibrating object such as a mallet or stick
pitched instruments: instruments capable of making distinct notes and pitch changes while simultaneously following a rhythm (e.g., a piano, clarinet)
plucked: instruments with a flexible tongue that is plucked to vibrate
scraped: sound produced by scraping the instrument with a stick across grooves
shakers: sound produced by small particles contained within the instrument
stamping: striking the object on a hard surface to vibrate the object
syncopation: to have rhythm that is “off-beat” or doesn’t fall right on the beats of a song
unpitched instruments: instruments incapable of making distinct notes and pitch changes, but have one pitch only; usually used to keep the rhythm and tempo steady (e.g., woodblock, claves)
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