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Music 310– Music in the Elementary Classroom

Fall 2003

California State University - Bakersfield

Instructor - René Ferrell, Ph.D.

Office - Music Building 107

661-664 –2279

SCHEDLUE

Section .01 – Tuesday and Thursday - 3:30 – 5:55 p.m.

Midterm exam – Tuesday, Oct. 7

Term project due – Tuesday, Nov. 4

Concert reports – Due the second class meeting following the concert, except for

those concerts taking place after November 10, which will be due the next class day. No concert reports will be accepted after Tuesday, Nov. 18.

Final exam – Tuesday, November 25 – 5:00-7:30 p.m.

Section .02 – Monday and Wednesday – 6:00 – 8:25 p.m.

Midterm exam – Monday, Oct. 6

Term project due – Monday, Nov. 3

Concert reports – Due the second class meeting following the concert, except for

those concerts taking place after Nov. 10, which will be due the next class day. No concert reports will be accepted after Monday, November 17.

Final exam – Friday, November 21 – 5:00-7:30 p.m.

OFFICE HOURS

Monday through Thursday – 2:30-3:30

Or by appointment.

Required Text - Music Fundamentals, Methods, and Materials for the Elementary Classroom Teacher, Third Edition, by Michon Rozmajzl and René Boyer-Alexander

THE KODALY SEQUENCE

This outline follows a basic Kodaly melodic and rhythm sequence. It utilizes the Kodaly principles of Prepare, Present, Practice in which the Prepare phase provides the students with activities, songs, musical examples, games, and movement activities that contain the musical concepts that are to be presented in the future. This initial step creates a foundation upon which the presentation of new concepts will be placed. The Present phase names a specific musical concept and provides the students with auditory and visual examples. The third step, Practice, provides many activities over a period of time that reinforce the concepts and facilitate their internalization and mastery. Every phase involves a variety of activities including: singing (folk songs, children’s songs, sight singing, pedagogical actives, etc.), movement (Dalcroze-Orff moment activities and folk dances), playing instruments (Orff barred instruments and percussion), and listening activities that include CDs of classical, jazz, folk, multicultural, and a variety of other styles.

The following syllabus is not dated because this course is student-centered in that it progresses at a pace determined by the students’ needs and their comprehension and mastery of each concept. The order in which the some of the topics are presented may change as needs arise during the quarter.

The classical examples provided below are examples of what will be included in the lessons. Additional examples will be played and discussed during the lessons.

Lesson Schedule

Introduction

Orff movement activities and vocabulary

Discussion of syllabus

Introduction to Kodaly sequence

Prepare beat, rhythm

Present beat/ ta/ rest/ ti-ti

Prepare high-low pitch

Lecture on child development, learning styles, and basic psychological

principles of learning as they apply to children.

Musical growth of children (Text: pp. 3-5)

Discussion of latest findings in brain studies as they apply to children.

Practice beat

Classical examples: e.g., Haydn’s “Clock Symphony,” Tchaikovsky “Dance of the Sugar-Plum Fairy.”

Examples of music having no beat: Gregorian chant

Present ta/rest/ti-ti

Classical e.g.: Beethoven’s Seventh

Introduce form: same/different, A/B/C/D

Rhythm dictation

Improvisation: From this point, during the process of practice of rhythmic and melodic concepts, students will improvise vocally and on percussion and Orff instruments.

Introduce timbre

Play “rhythm ensemble” by reading rhythm and performing on furniture, walls, etc.

Present high-low pitch

Vocal timbre

Prepare Sol-Mi

Present Sol-Mi

Present “Ten Steps to Music Literacy”

Present hand signs/ tonic solfa/ staff/ staff notation, etc.

Sightread sol-mi song with words from a score

Practice sight singing sol-mi w/hand signs, staff notation, etc.

Present and practice intervals: primes, thirds

Absolute letter names (Text: 56-60)

Prepare La

Present LA: hand signs, staff notation, etc.

Present Intervals: seconds, fourths

Prepare Do

Practice Intervals, emphasize Mi-La/La-Mi, fourths

Present Do: visuals, handsigns, tonic solfa, etc.

Present “Pillars” (I chord)

Practice DMSL: solfege hands, tonic, staff notation

Present Do clef

Speech chorus: round, ostinato, form, introduction, coda.

Meter (Text: pp. 13-17)

Kodaly: Five Steps to Analyzing Meter

Accent mark, barlines, double barline, repeat sign, measure, meter signature

2/4 meter

Reading activities

Conducting gestures

Present half note, half rest

Practice activities for 2/4 meter

Present 4/4 meter

Present whole note, whole rest

3/4 meter

Dotted half note, dotted half rest

Classical example: Strauss waltzes

Identify duple and triple meter:

e.g. “Comedian’s Gallop,” “Sleeping Beauty,” etc.

Note values (Text 20)

Discussion of use of multicultural music in the academic class

Several resources will be suggested to the class, e.g.

Book and CD: Roots and Branches by Patricia Shehan Campbell,

ISBN 0-937203, 53-X

West Music Catalogs will be distributed to the class and discussed.

Present ti alone, 1/8th rest

Present syn-co-pa

Present phrase, question-answer

LECTURES ON MUSIC FUNDMENTALS AND MUSIC LISTENING

Beat – steady, unsteady, music with no beat

Rhythm – even, uneven

Tempo (Text: 123)

Melody (Text: 376)

Solo vocal music

Choral music

Harmony (Text: 376)

Monophony

Homophony

Polyphony

Form: Rondo, theme and variation, song

Dynamics (Text 123)

Absolute and programmatic music

Instruments of the orchestra (Text: 112-118)

Dynamics (Text 123-127)

Presentation and practice: songs, games, movement

Copland - “Fanfare for the Common Man”

Beethoven – “Moonlight Sonata”

(Discuss instrumentation)

Tempo (Text 123)

Presentation and practice: songs, games, movement

Classical examples: “Moonlight Sonata,”

“Sabre Dance,”

“Ballet of the Unhatched Chicks”

Etc.

Absolute and Programmatic music (Prepare to teach orchestral instruments)

Classical examples: Bach “Brandenburg Concerti,”

“Little Fugue in g minor”

Holst “The Planets’

Copland “El Salon Mexico”

Sweet Honey in the Rock “Mystic Oceans”

Etc.

Instruments of the orchestra (timbre) (Text: 112-118 and Text CD)

Lecture and visual aids

Classical examples: Britten: “Young Persons’ Guide to the Orchestra”

Rimsky-Korsakov: “Capriccio Epsilon”

Sousa: “Stars and Stripes Forever”

Etc.

Instruments used in jazz

Book w/CD: The Jazz Fly, by Matthew Gollub (ISBN 1-889910-17-1)

Dave Brubeck “Blue Rondo a la Turk” w/ puppets

Guitar: Rodrigo “Concerto in la menor”

Rondo

Speech activities: “Witch’s Brew,” speech choruses, etc.

Mozart: “Horn Concerto No. 2 – Rondo”.

Theme and Variation

Visual examples: sneakers, etc.

Copland: “Simple Gifts”

Lecture: The Shakers, American history painted in music

Present Re

Visuals, hand signs, staff notation, songs, games, etc.

Orff arrangements w/barred instruments, percussion, voices

Intervals involving DRM SL

Present Pentatonic Scale

Extract tone set from “Rocky Mountain”

Improvisation: Improvise on Orff in DO pentatonic

Augmentation-Diminution

Use “Rocky Mountain”

Britten: “Old Abram Brown”

Polyphony

Partner songs: Rocky Mountain w/Great Big House w/ Dinah, Dinah, etc.

Rounds

Ostinati

Arranging and performing:

Students divide into groups: Arrange a pentatonic song using the techniques that have been taught up to this point. Notate the song and perform it in class.

Use of California folk songs in the fourth grade California history class:

Resources: All the books, tapes, and CDs published by Calicanto Associates, 6416 Valley View Road, Oakland, CA 94611.

Days of Gold available from West Music.

Present High Do – Extended Pentatonic Scale

Present anacrusis (Text 43, 99, 100, 78)

Refer to “Five Steps of Teaching Meter”

Present Low Sol

Present Low La

Present 16th note rhythms

tiri-tiri (Text 307, 144, 20)

ti-tiri

tiri-ti

Present Fa

Hand signs, staff

Scale Passage - Do-La

Present Ti

Major Scale - solfege, auditory, singing (Text: 96)

Whole and Half Steps (Text 69-70)

Formula for Major Scale (Text: 70)

Accidentals (Text: 20, 73-75)

How to locate the tonic using a key signature (Text: 76-79)

Present dotted quarter and 1/8th, 1/8th and dotted quarter

Present relative minor – La minor (Text: 79-85)

Present dotted 18th/16h and 16th/dotted 8th

Present musical sequence

Example: “Blow the Winds Southerly”

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