The scariest part of music, to me anyways, has always been
theory and composition; it’s like music’s version of math, and I was never very
good at math. Whenever I’ve taken a theory or technology class in college that
requires an original work, it causes me immediate panic. Watching the week 2
video, I’m beginning to understand why that is; I had no exposure to composing,
and very little experience with theory, prior to my undergrad degree. Although
my high school offered a music theory class, it was very basic (learning how to
read music, etc.) and I already could do that due to my years in band,
orchestra and chorus. However, there were no music technology classes offered
and no advanced music courses offered. I think if I had more exposure to it
when I was younger, it would have been less terrifying as a young adult in
college.
Watching
the Bay Shore example, all I could think was “Man, those kids are lucky!” In a
time where music programs are continually being reduced or dropped completely
due to budge shortages, these students have a full music program, including
music technology. It also seemed to me that the teachers at the Bay Shore
school see the importance of working together: the elementary music teachers
understand that they are teaching the building blocks that the middle school
teachers will build on, and then eventually the high school teachers. I wish
more schools would look at that type of teamwork. When I was student teaching
at the high school level, the kids coming into the 9th grade classes
were all at different levels because they had different elementary school
teachers who all taught differently. When the music teachers are all on the
same page, it really enhances the overall learning potential for their
students.
The other
aspect that I thought was neat about Bay Shore was the way that the students could
overlap their learning into other subjects. The one girl that spoke in the
video was using her original composition from music technology in a video she
produced for her multimedia class. I think this is an amazing way to
incorporate the national standard that wants us to involve other subjects.
Going
into the rest of week 2, I am looking forward to learning about different notation
programs and continuing to grow our PLN’s. I have very limited experience with
notation programs (mostly with Finale and it was almost 10 years ago now) so I
am looking forward to seeing how far they have come in the last 10 years.
I agree that the Bayside video was awesome. Although as I said in my blog, cultural opportunities are out there everywhere, all you need to do is the research. I think if you had student taught in my one of our middle schools, you would have found a different experience. Though we are not perfect, the elementary music teachers work together towards common goals each nine weeks and also have a pre/post test we use to determine strengths and weaknesses across the county so we know what to work on. Finally, your observation of the cross curriculum learning is great and a professional goal of mine to incorporate more of it in my classroom. Great post!
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