Sunday, August 18, 2013

I'm baaaaack!

I'm so excited to start blogging again!  I've just returned from a difficult year personally and needed to take some things off my plate.  I'm ready to start creating and sharing again so I hope you'll come back and visit.
<3 Lesley

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

BRAIN ENGAGING!

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Here's an activity that really engages the whole brain!  It challenges students to play a piece of music with as few mistakes as possible while physically performing another task.  I used "Hot Cross Buns" on recorder.  My students (grades 3-5) played HCB for a review before attempting the task.  I asked my students then to stand on the perimeter of the carpet and remove their shoes.  I then took the shoes, and tossed them about the carpet so they were forced to maneuver among other students and other shoes.  Some shoes were tipped onto their side while others were upside down or right side up.  The goal of the activity is to find your shoes, put them on the right feet, and return to the perimeter-all while playing HCB over and over.  When we tried it for a second time, our goal was to play with fewer mistakes than we made the first time.  You can challenge your students by playing another familiar song.  The kids LOVED this activity....so I thought I'd write it down and share. :)

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

METER/BEAT




I use this activity with my daughter who is taking Suzuki violin, but it could very well work for a classroom.  You could substitute bowls with plastic cups, plastic containers, etc.  Set up the bowls (3 different sizes for triple meter or 4 for duple meter) largest to smallest or according to timbre.  For instance, I will make the first bowl a plastic tupperware container so that beat one is accented through timbre.  Then while she listens to the music, she taps the beat on each bowl with a wooden spoon.  This promotes parallel listening, not passive.  My son even likes to jump in and play while she plays violin!  If you are a music teacher, you could have students evaluate steady beat/tempo during recorder (or any other instrument) performances!  The original idea came from Sarah Bylander Montzka's video on the Parents as Partners Suzuki website.  I modified it to work for me :) 

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

FUN WITH BUBBLE WRAP!


I found a roll of unused bubble wrap at Goodwill and thought I should come up with something for it.  So, my first graders were working on So, La, Mi, and Do and my fourth graders were working on steps, skips and repeated notes....VOILA!  Two birds with one stone!  So, I cut the bubble wrap in sections, made a three lined staff (so my first graders could read with ease) and drew on the back of the wrap with a Sharpie.  The trickiest part was, figuring out how to draw the treble clef backwards!  As an added bonus, I can use it over and over because the kids are so small, they don't really even pop it (unless they're trying).  For first grade, I sang a pattern, and they had to find it and stand on it.  If I get some more (which I'd like to), I'd like to make a game board out of my carpet and have them move from pattern to pattern according to what they hear me sing/play.  For fourth grade, I put the patterns scattered on the floor (upside down, etc.) and I said "Begin on a space.  Skip up, step up."  I hope you find this useful!

Thursday, December 29, 2011

SOLFEGE CANDYLAND

Here's a fun way game for students who may have already mastered the concept you are teaching.  It's quiet, too!  They draw a card and move to that color.  If they can show the other players the correct Curwin hand sign, they can stay on the spot.  If not, they stay where they were and wait until their next turn.

THREE IN ONE FILE FOLDER ACTIVITY: SIMPLE RHYTHMS-MATCHING

As you can tell, I enjoy connecting children's literature with my music lessons.  It serves so many purposes and I'm happy to support my colleagues by reinforcing reading concepts like phonics, story retelling, chunking, etc.  I've always been jealous of teachers who have the ability differentiate there instruction with file folder activities.  (Of course, teachers have them readily available to purchase, whereas us music educators make EVERYTHING!) Students who have already mastered a skill or students who need to reinforce a concept, can run to the back of the classroom and do the file folder activity.  When they are finished, they show you before they place the pieces back in the bag so that you can do a quick assessment.  I'm working on making file folder activities for my music room.  It's going to be a long work-in-progress, but I'm excited to dive in!  Please let me know what you think by commenting below, liking it, or pinning it on pinterest.  Thanks!

Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What do you See?
3 Rhythm matching activities in one folder!
The pieces are mini-craft sticks and free downloaded printables from http://www.homeschoolshare.com/.

Here's what the empty folder looks like.  Game one: Match rhythm sticks to each picture.

Here's what that will look like when you are finished.


Game two: Match words to rhythms.  This is also cross curricular as it asks the student to read the words and decipher how many syllables it has to match it to the correct rhythm.  The word descriptions can be placed in the rhythm pockets.


Game Three: Match the picture to the rhythm.  Again cross curricular as they have to see the picture, say the words, and place the picture with the correct rhythm.
Studnets can also place the pictures into the correct rhythm pockets.

Thanks for checking it out!  Let me know what you think! 

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

FILE FOLDER ACTIVITY: MI RE DO

Product Details used from $3.93 on Amazon.com
Great book for a lesson on mi, re, do (or whatever your choice may be).  Here is a file folder game I made to reinforce it.


Let me know what you think!!!  Thanks!