The post Teaching Concert Music or the Method Book appeared first on MakeMusic.
]]>Below are some scenarios for you to consider:
Consider this exercise: if you selected one of your concert pieces that your students know fluently, chose eight measures, and then mixed up the notes and rhythms in each measure so it didn’t sound the same and didn’t tell them, how would your kids do?
Mixing it up is important, because not all concert pieces are written equally. If you plan on using concert music to teach your curriculum, try and aim to make sure the parts are balanced and that you have a way to measure their understanding. Did you select that piece to teach hooked bows? Perfect. Then any piece or exercise within their playing level using hooked bows should be accessible to them. If it’s not, then perhaps their exposure to it in the concert music wasn’t enough for them to fully understand it.
My advice is to have some unison exercises printed on the back of each part that highlight your focus goals. You can warm up on these before rehearsing and they can be rhythmically or tonally centered (or both). You might even consider writing out the main melody (or all the melodies) for each part and have everyone learn them all.
For those of you that are more daring and have some extra time, rewrite each part for every section in the orchestra. This means your cellos can get a chance to play the first violin part, violas can play second violin, basses can play viola, first violins play bass, second violins play cello….it’s actually a lot of fun and will keep your kids on edge. You can do this as a fun challenge after they’ve mastered their concert music.
Consider this exercise: if you created a bunch of short playing pieces based on the page(s) and exercises you covered in your method book, how would your kids do?
Once again, mixing it up is important, because not all method books are written equally. If you plan on using the method book as the sole method to deliver your curriculum, select a good one (or a mixture of your favorites). Did exercises 30 through 40 focus on reading the notes D, E, and F#? Perfect. Then any piece or exercise within their playing level using those notes should be accessible to them. If they’re still having trouble differentiating between Ds and F#s, then maybe they haven’t seen or played those notes enough.
The method book approach or utilizing supplemental materials from a variety of books and resources helps build confident musicians and fluent readers that learn to produce a strong and nice tone on their instrument. This approach can be used in large ensemble settings as warm-ups that are tied into the students’ concert music and they can also be used in small lesson groups if your program has them.
This is easier said than done, but selecting a quality method book is essential to unifying your instrumental program and to ensure your students are learning what they need to in order to be successful. Meet with your fellow colleagues and discuss what everyone likes to use. We all have our go-tos, so conversations like these can get pretty passionate amongst seasoned instrumental teachers. The important thing is to demonstrate what a chosen book brings to your students and to be open minded.
Issues that educators often face when finding high-quality methodologies include: books introducing too many notes on one page; having letter names written in the noteheads; the print going from large to small too quickly; progression between different techniques moves too quickly; outdated pictures and exercises; boring or not colorful and exciting; too colorful with too much going on; not being tied to state standards; and not aligned with your current curriculum (if you have one).
Another consideration is what supplemental resources each book might come with. Is the book available on online platforms like MakeMusic Cloud? Connecting your physical method book with online resources can help make practice more accessible to students and open opportunities for deeper learning.
Whichever way your department chooses to go, it’s important that all students are getting the same experience. If your district has ten elementary schools, it’s helpful knowing your colleagues across town are using the same book and that you can collaborate. As long as we meet all of our students at their individual levels, they will all move through the book sequentially which makes teaching easier. This is especially important for elementary school teachers since they are setting up the foundation of the instrumental program. Even if the book isn’t your dream book, use it when possible, stay aligned with your colleagues, and supplement when needed.
Be sure when you choose a method book that it aligns with your district’s curriculum (if you utilize one). If it doesn’t align you may need to update the curriculum, which is fine since districts tend to do curriculum audits every five years or so. This is an opportunity to see how your program can be updated and how your chosen methodology complements and elevates it. We are the custodians of our instrumental programs and over time, the changes we implement make our programs stronger.
In some districts, instrumental programs are extra/co-curricular and might not have a curriculum. This places teachers on a little island in their individual programs where their goal is to survive. But this doesn’t mean you don’t have to have some sort of guide. If the district uses a common method book, collaboration with your colleagues can break you from feeling isolated. You can then create common yearly goals, monthly pacing guides, assessments, and even concert pieces that all students should be exposed to.
I am grateful that I have a yearly budget that will not only sustain my program but ensure that it grows. My students can afford good-quality rental instruments and buy books.
If you don’t have a large budget (or any at all) or the district you teach in is in a lower socioeconomic class, purchasing books and instruments will be a challenge. Try doing the following:
By far, the approach that I prefer utilizes a mixture of what I have outlined above. I have my students purchase a book of solos and a method book. We practice concert music during our large orchestra rehearsals and use lessons to work on technique and solo repertoire. This doesn’t mean I’ll never work on concert music in lessons, but I’ll limit myself to eight measures and won’t start doing this until I get closer to concert time. The concert music I choose also correlates with the book. In other words, it’s not like I’m not working on the concert music: I’m giving the students the skills they need to play their concert music by using a text. Always remember: the concert music should complement your book!
But this is also dependent on the structure of your program (note: the term ‘lessons’ means small heterogeneous/homogeneous group lessons). Below are some examples of how public/private school instrumental programs are structured. Consider the following:
It can be a bit challenging to let go of something that we’ve done for so long, especially since we all feel so strongly about our particular teaching approaches. The best advice I can give you is that you should use an approach that you personally enjoy but to try and incorporate some of what was suggested above. Make a solid attempt to use a method book, even if only as a warm-up or supplemental resource, and do so regularly to get your students into a routine.
If possible, keep concert music on the back-burner and make sure that the exercises you’re teaching in the book are correlated to your concert music. A simple example of this is if you’re practicing some exercises on a page that focuses on reading the first four scale degrees. If you’re spending time on that and students are achieving mastery, then the concert music should support that. But if the majority of your concert music uses scale degrees five through seven, the two don’t really work well together.
The more students read music out of context and in short achievable exercises, the more they will develop musical fluency. It’s similar to a child walking down the street and seeing a stop sign, reading the word stop out loud, and physically stopping. They are seeing the word “STOP” out of context, but it still has the same meaning and sound, so they are making that connection. When they read a full sentence that uses the word stop, they will understand it in context.
Teach your students to develop their musical language skills by pairing method book exercises and/or solos with concert music. By doing so, you are ensuring that your students are well-rounded musicians who have the necessary foundational skills to perform anything you put in front of them.
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]]>The post Student Motivation in the Music Classroom appeared first on MakeMusic.
]]>I always look at motivation as something that doesn’t necessarily stand on its own. Rather, we as educators need to look at how other factors in the classroom can complement motivation; things like the environment, engagement, rigor, and a teacher’s passion for the subject.
Motivation, environment, management, engagement, rigor, and passion are the most important ingredients in the music education classroom. They all go hand in hand with one another (e.g., if students are motivated, they are engaged in the learning process; if students are engaged in the learning process, they are motivated to continue to progress). If the classroom environment is a safe and happy one, students will trust us, make mistakes, and be motivated to improve. As we increase that challenge level, students will continue to build upon their previous successes.
Since they are all related, let’s look at each aspect and how it relates to motivation:
And finally….motivation. Ask yourself how it is you motivate your students. At the beginning of my career, I used to use sticker charts, give out prizes, send home practice records … basically everything my teachers at one point used for me. I would give assessments, quiz students, and assign homework.
I’d be remiss to say that I don’t do any of those things anymore, but I’ve changed how I use them. Sticker charts would work until students fell behind and lost motivation. Prizes were short-term, and students were only trying to complete tasks in order to get a prize. I noticed I hit a plateau when prizes were simply not motivating anymore (the kids weren’t interested in them). Practice records worked for some, but even I remember writing in minutes that I didn’t actually complete and having my parents sign off on it. And yes … I need to have some way to assess my students, but I found that traditional assessments (or calling them quizzes/tests) began to stress students out. They would aim for perfection, and when they didn’t achieve it, they harped on it and pushed themselves to the point of exhaustion in order to get it perfect (a word I tell my students does not exist). This took away from the joy of creating music and learning an instrument, and they found it too stressful.
I briefly touched on motivation in the article Build it. Sustain it. In it, I mentioned two key factors, the latter of which I want you to try and incorporate into your programs:
So stickers? I give them out randomly at the end of lessons sometimes. Not for anything in particular, but elementary kids especially can’t resist a sticker. Even older students love decorating their binders or folders with them. Prizes? Same thing. Every now and then, I’ll give them something small (like a pop-it keychain they can put on their instrument cases). The beauty of such prizes is that they’re not attached to anything: the students motivate themselves.
Practice records? I don’t tell my students to practice anymore—seriously! Since they have so much fun playing and there’s no pressure, they go home and practice on their own. I’ll teach them fun songs by rote, which gives them instant success and pride. They’ll go home and practice it for hours until it bugs their parents, all the while not realizing they’re fine-tuning their intonation (pitch recognition and hand placement), technique (bow placement and usage, posture), and rhythmic literacy. If they need a nudge, I might hand out my famous Mix-it-up Practice Challenge, where they have to find ten bizarre (yet safe) locations to practice in. They have to keep a record of it and show it to me.
Assessments? Yes, I do assess, but I do it secretly without the students knowing. My kids beg me to play for the class, so … I let them. When they do, I sit there and discreetly use a running record to monitor which notes they’re playing accurately and what they need to work on. When I’ve compiled enough data, I use that as a teaching point. I jot down notes and then casually walk by students and help them according to their individual needs. A method of Responsive Classroom is having the kids turn and talk. I have my students turn and play. As they do this, I walk in between the rows and monitor what I’m seeing and hearing. If I see a student who’s not putting their fingers in the right spot (be it a viola or a recorder), I may interject and model on my instrument and do what they did, and never for a second do I let them know they were the ones doing it. When they catch me doing something and tell me, they immediately fix it on their own.
Try this—assess yourself! The true way of assessing if YOU as a teacher have made a positive environment conducive to learning and growing as a musician is when you’re able to ask, “Who wants to play for me?” and the kids run up to you in a line itching to play. You can easily assess them.
As I write this today, I had one of those special days where my students BEGGED me to go out on the stage and play for students in the cafeteria. We were running over our lesson time, but I could NOT for the life of me deny them that opportunity. The kids in the cafeteria are my current general music students and my future orchestra students. Some of those students were conducting as my kids played, and others were doing Curwen hand signs. THAT was the prize my orchestra students got. THAT was their motivation. They don’t need anything else. Right now, my fifth-grade general music students are asking if they can perform their recorders for the second graders. I use colored zip ties every time we complete a song and make a chain on the ends of their recorders. Again, no prizes. They just love strutting around the building, showing off their recorders, and watching their chains grow as the little ones look at them in awe.
Finally, in large group ensembles (75 students in grades 3–5), I do what’s called Mystery Musician. After explaining it to students, at the start of rehearsal, I select a name randomly from a hat, and I secretly watch them throughout the rehearsal. The students do not know if their name was the one selected, so all students must try to be role-model musicians. If they display excellent posture, participation, and behavior, they are rewarded the title of Mystery Musician. Their reward is so simple yet personally meaningful to them: a certificate to hang up at home, a beautiful email home from me, and the opportunity to be a mini Mr. G (me) and lead a rehearsal warm-up, take attendance, and be a leader.
There are SO many factors that contribute to student motivation, and motivation doesn’t have to be something you give them in the form of a physical object or reward. Let it be something your students do that they can feel inherently proud of. Work on creating a safe environment, maintaining structure and management in order for your students to learn, creating engaging lessons that are fun and challenging, and showing your passion. Oh, and if your students ask you to play one of their favorite tunes… you better break out your instrument and do it! Always take those special opportunities to inspire them.
As always, I hope you find success!
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]]>The post Classroom Management Part 2: Large Ensemble Classrooms appeared first on MakeMusic.
]]>But seriously, that phrase says so much because it’s true! I’ve had the pleasure of experiencing both the general music classroom setting and large ensemble/small lesson group settings, and this year especially, I’m experiencing both realms and seeing how they relate to one another.
If you read my article called Build it. Sustain it. and tried some new recruitment strategies, well then chances are your program is either starting to build up or perhaps bursting at the seams with a huge number of students! Awesome, right?
Of course it’s awesome, but now it gets tricky: how does one person manage something like this? Those half-hours go by so quickly, but in our minds, they are long and exhausting. We need to keep the momentum going and have every minute planned.
In part 2 of this blog series, we’ll tackle classroom management in the large ensemble setting.
For classroom management tips in the general music classroom, read part 1.
Having taught and utilized such strategies at the elementary and middle school levels, I can assure you that such approaches do work. In fact, I’ll bypass many of the obvious ones because if you refer back to Classroom Management in General Music Settings, nearly ALL of them can be utilized in large ensembles. Again, remember that such strategies can be applied to the middle and high school levels. You just need to fine-tune (pun intended) how you use it.
I love what I do, but it’s a challenge every day. Be positive, and always remember why it is we do what we do. I have found that consistency and positivity is the key to successful classroom management. It’s not necessarily about rules but following through and developing real relationships with kids. Students, young or old, know if we care about them. Ask them about how their soccer match went or how they did in their gymnastics competition. Relate to them (“I watched the Superbowl last night!”), but don’t be afraid to push them to be better musicians and better people.
As always, I hope you have nothing but success with your little musicians! That’s what they are, right? Musicians! Call them that, and let them know that’s what they are.
Best of luck!
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]]>The post Classroom Management Part 1: General Music Classrooms appeared first on MakeMusic.
]]>But seriously, that phrase says so much because it’s true! I’ve had the pleasure of experiencing both the general music classroom setting and large ensemble/small lesson group settings, and this year especially, I’m experiencing both realms and seeing how they relate to one another.
If you read my article called Build it. Sustain it. and tried some new recruitment strategies, well then chances are your program is either starting to build up or perhaps bursting at the seams with a huge number of students! Awesome, right?
Of course it’s awesome, but now it gets tricky: how does one person manage something like this? Those half-hours go by so quickly, but in our minds, they are long and exhausting. We need to keep the momentum going and have every minute planned.
I’m going to tackle this in two sections, starting with the general music classroom.
For classroom management tips in the large ensemble classroom, read part 2.
First off, can I just say it? We are in no way general music teachers: we are foundational music teachers! We have a huge role in creating an entire generation of music lovers that enjoy music and have a love and an appreciation for it. When your 2nd graders are raising their hands enthusiastically every time they hear the famous four-note motif from Beethoven’s 5th symphony, we’ve done our jobs. So, have that in your mind when you read this section and enter your classrooms next week.
Nothing made me a better teacher than teaching in the general music classroom setting. Whether you’re teaching on a cart and rolling into classrooms or the students come to you, classroom management in this setting is always a challenge. As I stated earlier, I get to teach both general music and instrumental music in the same school, and in doing so, I set the expectations and groundwork for my little musicians and can positively feed my own programs. This means that my little kindergarteners, who may one day sign up for orchestra in third grade, will either love music and want more of it or consider their last three years of experience and want nothing more to do with it.
If you are like me and feed your own programs (i.e., teach general music but also teach instrumental like band, strings, or ensembles like chorus), your classroom atmosphere directly impacts such programs. And even if you teach general music only, you are a critical component in fostering a love for music, thus impacting such programs.
While I speak primarily from an elementary standpoint, please remember that many (if not all) of these strategies can be applied to the middle and high school levels, albeit adapted.
I love what I do, but it’s a challenge every day. Be positive, and always remember why it is we do what we do. I have found that consistency and positivity is the key to successful classroom management. It’s not necessarily about rules but following through and developing real relationships with kids. Students, young or old, know if we care about them. Ask them about how their soccer match went or how they did in their gymnastics competition. Relate to them (“I watched the Superbowl last night!”), but don’t be afraid to push them to be better musicians and better people.
As always, I hope you have nothing but success with your little musicians! That’s what they are, right? Musicians! Call them that, and let them know that’s what they are.
Best of luck!
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]]>The post Build It. Sustain It. appeared first on MakeMusic.
]]>As an elementary school orchestra and general music teacher, I have heard these two words countless times over the last ten years of my teaching career. We love children, music, and teaching, and that is what any music teacher will tell you. But as much as we love it and know how it positively impacts our kids, we always need to remember that our instrumental programs are sign-up based and not always required. The key to building up and sustaining a successful instrumental or choral program comes right down to a dedicated, talented, and loving music staff. In other words, WE as teachers are responsible for building and sustaining our programs—building a loving musical culture—and while that is no easy task, it sure is a fun and rewarding one!
Music educators know that a successful public school instrumental or choral program begins with a strong foundation, and I am not just talking about your elementary school band numbers. Your schools’ general music teachers are the building blocks of anything and everything that is music. A loving, fun, and talented general music teacher whose kindergarteners excitedly enter the classroom is responsible for creating and nurturing an entire generation of music lovers. These are the future adults who will jam out to music enthusiastically in their cars, or sing and rock their babies to sleep with a good singing voice and a steady beat. They may also be the one who decides to sign their child up for your orchestra program, or could even one day be a member of your schools’ board of education and have discussions about budget cuts. If their experience in music was enjoyable, then they are the advocates for your music program! So, give your general music teacher a big hug, and observe them and how they teach. What words do they use? Do they have a certain style? How do they teach the students to count rhythms? They are the feeders of your programs, and with them we can build our pyramid.
Before I continue, I will use the word program as a simple umbrella term that encompasses many realms of music, and not just your typical band, chorus, and orchestra programs. The word program can apply to music technology, a steel drum band, or even a world drumming music class, so please keep that in mind as you continue reading.
Some districts begin instrumental instruction in elementary school, and others might begin in middle school. There are some schools that have such programs built into the curriculum, while for others it might be co or extra-curricular. Regardless, building or recruiting for your program needs to happen from the beginning. If your program starts in third grade, then that is where you begin. How do you get kids to buy into it and want to sign up for flute? How do you convince your kids’ parents?
Get in the classrooms and perform for the kids. Literally… put on a show. You can’t walk into a third grade classroom, hold up a clipboard and say, “Okay, who wants to sign up for orchestra?” You will definitely get a show of hands, but you can get the other kids too. So, have fun. Play tunes the kids know, perhaps something from a popular TV show. You can play pop music, film music, or famous classical pieces they’re bound to recognize. I use my violin and show them how to make it sound like a police car driving off into the distance. I’ll also tell a Dad Joke and then do a funny wah wah wah on my violin. The kids adore it, and most importantly, they remember my visit and go home and tell their parents!
And that’s the next step: we often forget about recruiting parents! On back to school night, stand in the lobby and play your instrument, or have student ensembles from previous years perform. Smile at the parents and chat with them. Then, pop by their classrooms and introduce yourself. Make jokes, talk about your passion, and encourage them to sign their kids up!
There are loads of ways to start your program, including having older kids come by and perform for them. You can make your concerts interactive. “Where are my 2nd graders? Ahh my future orchestra musicians. This is going to be you next year!” Personally, I love connecting with the kids and their parents right away and being fun.
This does work and it can work for you. I recently began a new position teaching orchestra in two elementary schools, and the numbers were typical to a chamber ensemble. I wanted MORE though. So, I went to every classroom in grades 3–5 and played my violin. I gave presentations, we watched videos, and we laughed and had fun. The best part was always at the end, where I looked at all of them and said I can’t wait to have every single one of you in my orchestra! Don’t forget to sign up tonight. The participation number in both schools increased by over 50%. With a number like that, you have visibility of your program and parents are with you.
Middle and high school teachers can do exactly the same. Visit every one of your feeder schools… multiple times. Sit down and play or sing in the groups. Chat with the kids and have fun. Go to concerts and help tune. Show the kids that you’re friends with their current teacher, because this helps build trust early on. When I taught middle school, I used to go to my elementary teachers and hug them before I spoke to the kids about signing up. Make sure you conduct a rehearsal and show them what life is like with you. You can even co-teach with their teacher. The point is: get in there, and make them laugh! Don’t forget that they’re kids.
High school teachers, you need to do the same, and not just with your feeder schools’ eighth graders. Go down to the elementary and middle schools and be visible. If a program starts in third grade, you have to wait six years before that cohort of kids comes through. Those are six precious years that you can use to build relationships with kids. Remember, there is no guarantee those kids will continue, because our programs are not required. We have to ignite the passion and encourage our students to continue.
This is the retention part of building your program. I got the kids in, now how do I keep them? We can’t keep them all, but you certainly can try. If your program lasts three years and then the kids move on to a new school, focus on keeping them for those three years, and then bridging the gap and trying to get them to go onto the middle school program.
To do so, make sure that your classes incorporate the following:
Most importantly: make sure they know you care about them, and work hard to give them successful concert experiences. These moments help build their confidence levels and your students will trust you more, which means you can continue to raise the bar and challenge them.
The most challenging aspect of retention are the transition years when students leave one school and move on to another. Some programs experience a typically average dropout rate between elementary and middle school. Maybe you had 35 students in fifth grade orchestra, and only 30 continued to middle school. That’s an 86% retention rate, and I’d say that’s a successful transition.
Unfortunately, the largest dropout rates occur between middle and high school, where many schools are barely able to maintain a 30% retention rate. What can you do to help retain those numbers? Well, refer back to the section titled Build It. How actively involved are teachers? Transitioning to high school is challenging and intimidating enough, so make sure all teachers are visible, fun, or engaging. Also, were those early elementary years enjoyable and fun? Did they leave a lasting impression on kids?
Consider the following questions:
The final topic I’ll quickly discuss is motivation through either intrinsic or extrinsic motivation. The easiest ways to define these terms are to give examples of what they look like in your classroom and at your students’ homes:
These are two HUGE factors that can determine the success of your program. Extrinsic rewards focus on students having to do something in order to earn something in return. They associate practicing their instrument as something they have to in order to get something in return versus wanting to do it. And when the rewards fail to satisfy, what do you think happens?
Intrinsic motivation is teaching students to do it for themselves and encouraging them to share it with others. It’s a reward in and of itself. Can you surprise your kiddos with a little prize that randomly cannot be associated with anything? Absolutely! The point is, don’t make that prize reliant on something such as practicing their instrument. The best thing I hear as a teacher is “I want to play for the class” and “I practiced my instrument for an hour last night and my mom had to tell me to stop and do my homework.” I teach lessons on the stage and at the end of my students’ lesson, students start coming in for lunch. The kids excitedly beg me to go out and perform for their peers. That is a special reward that no one can take from them, and it means something.
Recruitment (Build it) and Retention (Sustain it). Both go hand in hand, and depending upon the culture you have created, it could mean the difference between a giant high school choral program or a small one that dwindles down to twenty or so kids by the start of senior year. What’s the point of having your band students drill scales, note reading, rhythm exercises, and perform playing assessments if they grow up to dislike what it is we as teachers love so much? There are plenty of people in this world who can read very well, but hate reading books. They find no joy, and that’s the biggest issue. Join up with your elementary general music teacher. Have meetings with your colleagues and discuss the vision. A program can grow incredibly fast in only one year, but it’s up to you!
Finally, this article is not suggesting that numbers are the most important factor in the success of a music program. I had a beginning band of 25 students one year and was able to nurture, develop true relationships, and spend a lot of time with them. So yes, there’s the argument quantity versus quality, but even with the 150 orchestra students I have in grades 3–5, I’m still able to nurture and develop relationships with each one.
Good luck in building your programs, and remember to have fun!
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