Integrating Music

Keeping Music Alive

https://www.responsiveclassroom.org/article/keeping-music-alive

Ideas for integrating music into daily classroom life

by Bonnie Baer-Simahk

Responsive Classroom Newsletter: April 2000

Despite the current pressure on teachers and students to accomplish more and to do it faster, there is strong rationale for the busy classroom teacher to find time for music. In this article, I suggest a few ways for teachers (even those with little or no musical training) to integrate music into the daily life of their classrooms and schools.

Music at Morning Meeting

Singing songs is a great Morning Meeting activity. Keep a list of favorite songs posted near your meeting area. Singing together builds community and enhances a sense of group competence. Choose songs that are enjoyable and comfortable for you and the children to sing. A few terrific songbook resources for lower and upper elementary grades are listed at the end of this article.

Some teachers offer students an opportunity to share the music they love at Morning Meeting. Each day, a different child brings in a tape or CD for the class to hear. Various musical styles can be explored in this way. This activity allows children to practice courteous listening, and calls for respecting diverse preferences. Teachers do need to be mindful of appropriate content and discuss any concerns with children. Although some controversial CDs carry a content advisory on the label, many teachers still find it wise to review selections prior to sharing.

Songs as ritual

Many teachers use songs as a ritual with which to begin or end each day. Songs can also be used for birthdays, special events, holidays, and as part of year-end and graduation/moving up ceremonies. At the Greenfield Center School, the K–8 laboratory school for Northeast Foundation for Children (NEFC), children learn a variety of birthday songs. At weekly all-school meetings, the children with birthdays that week choose one of the songs from the school repertoire to be sung to them. (Many of these birthday songs appear on the tape/CD, 16 Songs Kids Love to Sing, listed at the end of this article.)

Songs to reinforce content

We all remember the famous alphabet song. There are many other songs which facilitate and reinforce memorization. I know a second grade teacher who uses a song to help her students remember the continents and an upper-grade teacher who uses the old song, “Multiplication Rock,” to help students learn their times tables. Many of the ESL students I taught acquired a repertoire of American folk songs while at the same time improving their pronunciation.

Music for transitions

Music smoothes transitions and soothes tempers, especially in the early elementary grades. There is a long tradition of early childhood educators using songs to support transitions and clean-up times. Whether you’re cleaning up or lining up, it’s easier with a song! A song can also be used as a signal. A kindergarten teacher I know gathers the children’s attention by singing out, “Hello, students!” using a simple melody limited to notes within the range of five-year-olds. The children stop whatever they are doing and respond, “Hello, teacher!”

Music exploration

Music in schools should not be limited to children singing songs that they have learned from teachers. Children benefit greatly from opportunities to explore melody, lyrics, and rhythms in highly individual ways. They enjoy experimenting with sound, discovering ways to create it, control, it, and vary it. Just as children are given opportunities to explore with art materials, they need regular opportunities to explore with sound.

A music center in the primary grades

A great way to give primary-grade students opportunities to play with sounds is to create a music center in the classroom. My kindergarten classroom always had a theater arts center in which music figured prominently. Some teachers have a separate music center, where instruments, composition supplies, and tape recorders are made available. In these areas, I suggest providing a junk box full of objects which can be made into musical instruments, along with a good set of rhythm instruments. A variety of recorded music should also be accessible. Songbooks and sheet music can be available to introduce children to the musical symbol system. Dancing supplies, such as scarves, jingle bracelets, and ribbon sticks, are always popular.

Music exploration with older elementary students

Older elementary school students often appreciate background music. I know one middle school teacher who has a collection of standard selections she uses as “writing music” for her students. They enjoy listening to it during class composition time. I once observed two boys in this classroom glancing at each other, shaking heads and giggling when the teacher started the music, but within a few minutes they were writing with focus, feet tapping along with the music. I also know of middle schools that offer very successful lip-synch contests. Lip-synch practice can be one way to help older students begin to overcome their discomfort with musical participation. They may not be actually singing, but they are engaging with the music. In some of these schools, I have seen students and staff together offer highly entertaining lip-synch performances.

Although these musical alternatives can be useful, there is no substitute for a group singing together, at any age. I encourage my colleagues to help children understand music as a participatory experience for everyone, rather than as performance for the gifted few.

A musical collaboration

I am always amazed by what is possible when teachers work in collaboration. One year when I was teaching ESL, the music teacher planned a concert featuring musical selections from around the globe. I supplied the music teacher with a cassette tape of the Southeast Asian children in my classroom singing a traditional Laotian folk song. She transcribed it and supplied the children with notation for the Orff instruments.

The song was performed at the concert, complete with singers, instrumentalists, and traditional dancers in beautiful costumes. It was nothing short of magical, and I will never forget what it felt like to be there. While it took a creative and energetic music specialist to design this authentic and inventive musical event, it also required collaboration with a classroom teacher. Musical events like this can happen when classroom teachers and music specialists find the time to come together and explore possibilities.

A musical world

We live in a musical world. From bird songs to the rhythm of ocean waves, we are naturally surrounded by music. Some children discover and develop musical awareness early, perhaps in homes where music is important. Some children, born musicians, find inexplicably in themselves a special passion for music and the ability to share it with others. In our classrooms and schools, all children can be given the opportunity to discover and develop an appreciation of music and how it brings people together. The children who have this opportunity every day in their schools receive a wonderful gift, and blessed are the teachers who give it. For their students, the music plays on.

Recommended Resources

16 Songs Kids Love to Sing,collected by Northeast Foundation for Children (Greenfield, MA: NEFC, 1998). Some great songs for younger and older children including four birthday songs.

The I Can’t Sing Book for Grownups Who Can’t Carry a Tune in a Paper Bag . . . But Want to Do Music With Young Children, by Jackie Silberg (Beltsville, MD: Gryphon House, 1998). Lots of fun ideas for little ones.

Music for Young Children, by Barbara Andress (Orlando, FL: Harcourt Brace & Co., 1998). Comprehensive teacher resource text with great child development information.

Lesson of the Week: Drama and Reading

Narrative Elements

Choose a poem that has clear narrative elements in it. I used The Creature in the Classroom by Jack Prelutsky.

Read the poem, act it out, then name the elements. This is a simple way to integrate drama.

  • Drama focus is on gestures and voice.

Teach the students how gestures are used with their bodies to help express feelings and events. Model some examples like shrugging shoulders, pointing fingers, etc. Then explain how the rise and fall in your voice sends a message to the listener. Practice reading one sentence using different kinds of voices (angry, happy, bored, etc.)

  • Reading focus is on identifying narrative elements.

 

Narrative Elements with a Poem from Marly Parker on Vimeo.

Extended Activities:

Have the students write what could happen next then act it out.

Have the students write their own poem to be acted out.

creature

 

Classroom Strategy: See, Think, Wonder

i-see-i-think-i-wonder-2fxryau

Click link below to see a video on the strategy for observing art closely.

Teaching Channel Video on See, Think, Wonder

See, Think, Wonder is a thinking routine to help students think critically about an object or idea and express their ideas with others. See, Think, Wonder is a strategy that was developed out of Harvard’s Project Zero. This strategy can be used many different ways in the classroom.

Here’s a link to a blog post about a kindergarten teacher who uses this thinking strategy. The Curious Kindergarten

see wonder think

Lesson of the Week: Visual Art

Exploring Color Combinations

color wheel

 Procedures

1. Read the students a story about color, see list below for suggestions.

2. Introduce the objective of lesson:
• Today we are going to create our own color wheels by mixing the primary colors to create secondary colors.
• Can anybody tell me what the colors of the rainbow are?
• Does anybody know what the primary colors are? (Red, yellow, blue)
• Does anybody know what the secondary colors are? (Orange, green, violet)

3. Look at images of artwork and have the students identify the primary and secondary colors in the artwork.

4. Hand out the poster board, with the drawn blank color wheel, and art materials.

5. Have students put the primary colors on their wheels in alternating sections.

6. Then, using the primary colors, students will mix them together to create the secondary colors (red and yellow; yellow and blue; blue and red.)

7. Discuss the secondary colors created (red + yellow = orange; yellow + blue = green; blue + red = violet.)

8. The students will then describe how to create secondary colors in a written math equation (red + yellow = orange; yellow + blue = green; blue + red = violet) and complete a journal entry describing their experiences with mixing colors.

Extensions
Visual Arts: Students can create a piece of artwork, based on a theme in class, using primary and secondary color


 

Suggested Books

Baxter, Nicola. Amazing Colors. Chicago, IL: Children’s Press, 1996.

Ehlert, Lois. Color Zoo. New York: HarperFestival, 1997.

Ehlert, Lois. Planting a Rainbow. San Diego, CA: Harcourt, Inc., 2003.

Richardson, Joy. Using Color in Art. Milwaukee: Gareth Stevens, 2000.

Westray, Kathleen. A Color Sampler. New York: Ticknor & Fields, 1993.

 

This lesson was taken from the website: www.carearts.org

Tableau & Writing

A tableau is a frozen picture. It can be used many different ways in your classroom. This example has to do with writing.

Here’s a quick way to work with the narrative elements problem and solution.

1. Put students in small groups

2. Have groups brainstorm potential problems in a story.

3. Vote on the problem.

4. Practice tableau.

5. Share tableau and explain the problem in the story.

The video below shows several frozen pictures and has students explaining the problem.

Tableau from Marly Parker on Vimeo.

Next, have the students write the story. The tableau has inspired their creativity!

Bloomboard Videos & Articles About Integrating the Arts

This year Bloomboard has updated it’s site. It now includes a lot of videos and articles that focus on integrating the arts. The steps below will bring you to the place to view the videos and articles.

Step 1: Go to Bloomboard and sign in.

Step 2: Click Learning Recommendations.

Step 3. Click Explore Bloomboard Resources

Step 4: Click Skills I’m Teaching

Step 5: Click Communication

Step 6: Click Communicating Through Art

A lot of the entries come from the Teaching Channel. It’s another great place for ideas. Below is a link to one of their videos.

Elements of Art Lesson for Elementary School

Lesson of the Week: Dance and Reading

Story Summary

This lesson integrates dance with reading. First the students listen to a book read aloud to them. The teacher has parts of the story written on sticky notes before it is read. After the book is read, the sticky notes are placed in order onto a chart. The students then pick a part of the story to use to come up with three 8 counts of a short dance that depicts the part of the story that is on their sticky note. After that, the students perform this in front of each other having the audience guess what part of the story they are performing. You can add to the game by having the audience also have to say where that part happened: beginning, middle or end. Finally, (this was not done in the below video) you can put all of the movements together to create one big dance that shows the entire summary of the story.

This can be used for the Arts Fair. For the art form, the students learned how to use their bodies to create movement that explains a part of a story. For the subject, the students learned parts of a story, sequence of events, and creating a summary.

 

DANCE MSA from Marly Parker on Vimeo.

Lesson of the Week: Integrating Drama and Reading

Interpretation

1. Put students into small groups.

2. Before reading a picture book, pass out copies of some of the illustrations to the groups. Give a different illustration to each group.

3. The students take turns sharing their interpretation of the illustration. Remind them to “read” the illustration closely to decide character, setting, possible problem, etc.

4. They then act out the story they think the illustration is showing.

5. Have each group share their interpretative skit.

6. Discuss the narrative elements depicted in their skit.

7. Then you read the book.

After steps 1 – 7, you have them get back into their groups and act out the illustration again now showing it’s real meaning.

The final scene can be used as an entry into the Arts Fair. For the art form, they learned how to interpret an illustration to develop a prediction for a story. For the subject of reading they learned recognizing how illustrations impact the telling of a story and helps show narrative elements.

IllustrationInterpretation from Marly Parker on Vimeo.

 

See me if you have any questions. Feel free to leave a comment!