“A
primary goal of music listening activities should be to develop lifelong music
listeners” (Bauer 2014). This sentence is something that I aim for as a music
teacher. My first year teaching sounded just like Elizabeth’s story at the
beginning of chapter 5. Like all undergrads, I took classes to prepare for my
future teaching career. My first year ended up being a wakeup call. I wanted to
teach lessons about classical music, music theory, and music eras. I taught in
a school district that had a new music teacher every year. These types of lessons
were not effective and interesting to the students. I got advice from some of
my colleagues who told me to teach about things the kids know and can relate to.
I did some research and came up with lessons where the students can listen to
their favorite music but also compare it with other styles they may not be familiar
with. My goal was for the students to listen to the lyrics of the songs and
identify what makes both of them similar. I continue to do this lesson today because
of how successful it has been. At the beginning of it, I tell the students that
the objective is to appreciate some of these music styles; no matter their
opinion at the start of it.
Songs tell stories about the
lives of the singers and performers. Every song we listen to in class, I ask
the students to give me their opinion about the story of it and what the
emotion is. Another lesson I do with students involves music from the Romantic
era. We first go over who Beethoven was and they learn the background of his
life. Then the students listen to a piece composed by him called Fur Elise. This
piece is Beethoven’s version of a love letter; written to a woman named Elise. After
the lesson, I have the students write what they think the words are in this
instrumental piece as a letter format. They have to give me their opinion about
what he would have said if this were a real letter. Some students have a hard
time writing this because they have trouble picturing the words in the song.
Many students only listen to one type of music genre. They have difficulty opening
up to other kinds of music and hearing the meaning of the song. This lesson
gives them the chance to open up to music they are not used to.
I am very familiar with Spotify.
I use it constantly and enjoy that I can hear my favorite music for free. The
only problem is that it is a free three day trial before they begin to air commercials
and stop replaying your music. On the basic, you can still download your music
for free but you have to pay in order to repeat music you want to hear consistently.
You can share music on the basic plan; which would be a great teaching
opportunity in class when discussing music genres. The only issue I see with
this is sharing music that is not school appropriate. Some students also may be
embarrassed to display their music with others as well.
Bauer (2014) discussed
formalized listening which takes place in schools and is structured by the
teacher. They make the decisions about what to listen to and how to listen to
it. Many students have come to me and said they do not like music class because
of the kind of music they hear. Besides my lessons with comparing music genres,
I do a fun activity called favorite music Friday. If there is time available,
the students have an opportunity to listen to their favorite music during class
on Fridays and sit to talk with their friends. The guidelines for it are school
appropriate songs must be played and they cannot ask who picked the song. I use
myself as an example on how I would not like it if others heard my music
because of judgement. If it does happen, then the activity is over and we do
school work. The students have liked this because they listen to their music and
they get some free time off. Some do not participate because of their songs not
being appropriate but I give them the chance to listen to not only music they
like, but songs their classmates like. I see many good vibes from this and I
love seeing attitudes change due to the music they are listening to.
We encounter music in
everyday life. How we perceive it is up to the person listening to it. Music
teachers have a difficult job to get others to appreciate different types of
music. Using connections is helpful as well as getting the students to see the
story in the song. “Music educators strive to develop students’ abilities to
listen to and describe music, analyze and evaluate it” (Bauer, 2014). As long
as students see music as pure enjoyment, the music educator has done their job.
Bauer, W. I. (2014). Music learning today: Digital pedagogy for creating, performing, and
responding to music.
Hi Ashley,
ReplyDeleteYour lesson on Beethoven seems like an extremely creative one. How old are these students? I imagine you must guide them through the meaning of the song in some detail. Even for 4th and 5th grade, this seems like a challenging, brainstorming activity that will certainly allow them to make their own emotional connections and interpretations. In addition, a lesson like this satisfies a writing segment to a music lesson which their full time teachers might love you for. Reaching students on a "classical music" level will give any General Music teacher in this day and age a sense of accomplishment.
Unfortunately there is very little time to teach in regards to emotion in music for a 4th grade beginning strings ensemble. Pressure for my students to reach a certain technical proficiency on their instruments is the priority. Although, I strive to incorporate my own playing in to my lessons and show videos that convey the beauty and ability of stringed instruments to express emotions within various styles of music.
During my leave replacement as a General Music teacher, I can remember playing a variety of different songs for my 4th graders including pop, classical, bluegrass, country, rock all with very different lyric ideas. Having students decipher which songs make them feel which emotion or having them interpret an appropriate setting in which a song might be played will open up their eyes to music in an entirely different way.
Thanks for your post this week.