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Showing 1 to 15 of 88 results Save | Export
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Thomas, Ronald B. – Music Educators Journal, 1991
Discusses the Manhattanville Music Curriculum Project's concentration on the purpose, substance, and means of music instruction. Describes improvisation as the dominant means for teaching concepts, knowing how music works, and knowing how to make musical sense. Urges that the same goals of aural acuity, creative thought, and musical facility are…
Descriptors: Creativity, Curriculum Development, Improvisation, Music Education
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Grashel, John – Music Educators Journal, 1989
Provides a selected list of contemporary performance literature suitable for middle school and junior high bands. Considers both quality and consistency, as well as the ability of a composition to remain interesting and challenging throughout rehearsal, as selection standards. Groups the 100 works according to difficulty level. (LS)
Descriptors: Bands (Music), Bibliographies, Junior High Schools, Middle Schools
Geltman, Eve – 1984
This book introduces music reading skills in 21 lessons that focus on the violin but which may be applied to the study of any musical instrument. The lessons are designed for beginning music students and build upon previous lessons in the book. This volume focuses on the violin because of the large number of students presently learning to play it…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Music, Music Education, Music Techniques
Moore, Herb – Classroom Computer Learning, 1985
Discusses how computer-generated music can be used as a starting point to explore the science of sound. Listings for programs which focus on pitch (including a pitch matching game), beat, and frequency are included. (JN)
Descriptors: Computer Software, Elementary Secondary Education, Music, Music Education
Upitis, Rena – 1987
Learning to read and write music should be as natural as learning to read and write the English language. Similar instructional models can be used for both. This was the premise for the investigation of 5-year-old Joel's musical development. Joel was the youngest of a four-member musical family. He was surrounded by musical literature and role…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Elementary Education, Music Education, Music Reading
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Campbell, Patricia Shehan – Music Educators Journal, 1991
Discusses the importance of teaching improvisation. Defines improvisation as the spontaneous generation of melody and rhythm without specific preparation or premeditation. Answers reasons for not teaching improvisation. Suggests training the ear, providing models, allowing for imitation, developing performance facility, guaranteeing success, and…
Descriptors: Creativity, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Improvisation
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Meadows, Eddie S. – Music Educators Journal, 1991
Offers suggestions for students and teachers for learning jazz improvisation. Discusses listening, practicing scales, chords, phrasing, developing a sense of swing, and shaping creative ideas through structural features. Emphasizes the relationship between chords and scales as a critical key to improvisation. Recommends educational materials to…
Descriptors: Creativity, Improvisation, Jazz, Learning Strategies
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Brunner, David L. – Music Educators Journal, 1992
Provides tips for choral directors to use in selecting repertoire for school ensembles. Explains that the first step in choosing repertoire must be a systematic assessment of the singers, the director, and the program's objectives. Suggests that each composition must be appraised for musical content, teaching value, and aesthetic appeal. (DK)
Descriptors: Check Lists, Choral Music, Evaluation Criteria, Music Education
Burns, Mary T. – Creative Child and Adult Quarterly, 1986
Educators need to develop teaching strategies that allow children to explore creative musical processes that will nurture musical skills, self-awareness, and imagination. A sequence of five lessons encompassing language arts and music demonstrates how students can develop creativity by writing haiku and then composing music to accompany the poems.…
Descriptors: Creative Development, Creativity, Haiku, Lesson Plans
Nolan, Evonne, Comp. – Teaching Music, 1995
Maintains that commissioning musical works is almost as old as music itself and that it is a privilege to premiere a work that has been composed specifically for you and your chorus. Describes the approaches that classroom music teachers used to commission musical works. Includes seven guidelines. (CFR)
Descriptors: Choral Music, Educational Strategies, Elementary Secondary Education, Music Education
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Quintana, Cecelia Keay – RE:view, 1992
Teachers of children with visual impairments are encouraged to create their own useful and age-appropriate songs to help teach orientation and mobility skills to children in preschool to grade three. The songs can be created by writing new lyrics to well-known tunes or by writing new lyrics and melodies. (DB)
Descriptors: Blindness, Elementary Education, Musical Composition, Preschool Education
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Modugno, Anne D. – Music Educators Journal, 1991
Suggests methods for music teachers to use in helping at-risk students gain confidence in electronic music composition class. Recommends that at-risk students be given leadership roles and worked with on an individual basis. Emphasizes maintaining a supportive, nonthreatening, and creative classroom environment where students can feel positive and…
Descriptors: High Risk Students, Music Education, Musical Composition, Secondary Education
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Dienes, Zoltan P. – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 1987
A learning sequence is sketched that enables children to have valid experiences in music, language, mathematics, and movement, more or less simultaneously. The activity starts with a short tune and works toward a song as the solution to the problem. The creation of a dance follows the writing of the song. (RH)
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Elementary Secondary Education, Interdisciplinary Approach, Language Arts
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Farber, Anne – Music Educators Journal, 1991
Offers ideas for teaching musicians to be improvisors. Suggests that structure, organization, and continuity are problems that can be solved by learning to improvise. Recommends exercises in building phrases to help students acquire a sense of the developing whole. Concludes that improvisation can be taught by showing students how to teach…
Descriptors: Creativity, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Improvisation
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Williams, David B. – Music Educators Journal, 1992
Discusses the use of technology in music and music education for teachers. Describes resources that are available presently and how they may be used for performing, composing, research, and administration. Addresses areas where a gap exists between what is or should be available and the technology actually being used in classrooms. (DK)
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Courseware, Curriculum Development, Higher Education
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