Thursday, February 27, 2014

Powtoon

I am currently in a Hamline University Technology Cohort hosted in Edina. Through that cohort, I am being reminded of things I new about but didn't take the time to try and learning about new things, too. In fact, I am writing this blog because of the cohort. I started one a few years back but only made one post. So far, this one is faring much better.

One of the requirements of the current class I am in, Curriculum in the Cloud, is to fiddle with a few web tools and use one to create a project similar to what a student could do. I chose to create a Powtoon because I had already heard of it an been intrigued. I will say that, instead of taking one hour, I took about 2.5 to finish this but that's because I am a perfectionist and I wanted the images and transitions to be just right. The end result is kind of cool. Now that I've done it once, I'd like to continue to experiment with it. But maybe after informances are done.



Disclaimer: I grabbed all my pictures from google images but, because I wasn't originally planning on showing this on a broad scale, I didn't keep the citation.
(this brings up an interesting point: if I ask my students to do a similar project this spring with the iPads we got in a grant--perhaps preparing them for the Minnesota Orchestra/Orchestra Hall fieldtrip--what will I have to prepare ahead of time to make sure we don't break copyright?)

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

The latest videos

We are taking a break from videos until we are done with Informances so we can use every minute for practice. Although I didn't show this one, I still want to post it here because I think it was very creative. I'm hoping my kids are still going to the website to watch old videos or see if I've posted any new ones. I'm going to announce that this one is up and hope they check it out.


A fabulous "Mash-up"
For those of you who are Crazy about Disney's Frozen and remember the Piano Guys, check this out. They took part of Vivaldi's Winter and mashed it with Let it Go from Disney's Frozen. See if you can hear when they go between each song.



Technology Grant

Hooray! My Edina Education Fund Grant was accepted and approved! I would like to thank Abby Hilbelink, my student teacher this year, for all her help in compiling costs of various products, looking up standards and for giving me feedback while I tried to wordsmith the best way to make my case. I'd like to thank George Lundgren for blazing the trail and being the first of my colleagues to successfully complete a grant like this thus inspiring me to do the same. I'd like to thank my mother, the English teacher and Author who drilled into me the importance of grammar, proofing and an inherent ability to write well. I'd like to thank my father for bringing home that first Apple IIe which began my experimentation with technology and fanned the flame of interest in creating with it. Finally, I would like to thank my wonderful husband for his continued support and inspiration. Someone once asked me who of the two of us was more techie and I emphatically answered that he was. I learn so much from him and am so thankful for his willingness to share his knowledge.

Below is part of the grant request.
EDINA EDUCATION FUND INNOVATION GRANTS PROGRAM APPLICATION
1/ Grant Application Overview
1-1. Project Title:
iPads for collaboration, composition and performance
1-2. Descripe the project idea and how the funds would be used:  
The main purpose of the iPads is small group composition and the performance thereof which fulfills many of the National Standards in Music Education (numbers, 2, 4, 5, 6 and 7). Groups of two or three students would collaborate to create and compose rhythms and melodies using the SMARTnotebook app (standards 4 and 5). Then, using the Apple TV already in place, groups would project their compositions for the whole class to see and perform (standards 2, 5, 6 and 7). 

In addition to the primary purpose listed above, the iPads will be used to create learning stations for a program called “Recorder Karate” which develops independent musicianship in which students will work in small groups with iPads, jack-splitters and headphones to watch tutorials from the teacher YouTube channel, mrsprowell1, or listen to examples of songs for their skill level at the teacher website mrsprowell.com then practice that music together. This allows for differentiated instruction while I meet with individual students at the same time. 

They will also be used to create group collaboration stations for note recognition and practice, instrument identification, and virtual instrument practice using apps, and the five-way jack splitters and headphones.

Finally, they will be used as student responsive devices for informal assessment activities with programs such as socrative or kahoot. Funds would be used to buy 10 iPads with cases, 10 five-way jack splitters and a class set of headphones as well as 10 SMARTnotebook apps and 1 power strip.
1-3. What are the goal(s) of the Project? *  
The primary goal of this project is to enhance student creativity and collaboration in creating compositions as a group. In the past we have used paper manipulatives to compose but sharing compositions in this format is limited. With the addition of iPads and the use of AppleTV we can project student compositions and perform them in a way we have not been able to before. Students will use the SMARTnotebook app in which they download a notebook file that includes instructions and manipulatives. In their groups they will move the rhythms or pitches to create a song then practice it together. Finally, they will project their composition with AppleTV for other students to watch while they perform or to have the rest of the class perform with them. The compositions can be saved in the app or as a screen shot and used for assessment later. 

A secondary goal is to create a flipped classroom or stations model for student learning. Students can collaborate and learn musical concepts in small groups while the teacher works with individuals or small groups to remediate or enhance learning thus providing differentiated instruction. This will be most useful in a program already well establisted in the music classroom called "Recorder Karate." In this program, students are given 3 songs at each "belt" level, 2 of which they need to pass with fluency, accuracy, and good technique in order to move on to the next level. At the completion of each level, the student receives a yarn "belt" to tie around the bottom of their recorder. To help them in this program, I have created a thorough webpage (mrsprowell.com) with the sheet music, sound clips, recorder fingerings and helpful hints as well as a YouTube channel (mrsprowell1) that has video tutorials that show students how to read the music, play the new note, and for the lower belts, how to play the song. While one student is being tested by the teacher, the rest currently work in small groups. The goal of adding iPads and headphones is that students will use this time to work in small groups accessing the web-based help that has previously only been accessed at home and on an individual basis. 

A final goal is to aggregate data on student learning and comprehension through informal assessment activities using the iPads as student response devices as well as saving compositions after they are finished and recording their own performances and saving them.
1-4. This project most closely aligns with the following District Initiative(s) or Goal(s)
The Edina mission statement speaks of educating all individuals to be learners who possess skills, knowledge creativity, self-worth and ethical values. Working together to create fulfills this in a myriad of ways. Students must learn to collaborate with respect towards each other, listening and making compromises, and ending up with a finished project that they can stand behind. This process of sharing ideas and being listened to, as well as the process of creating creates in itself a sense of self-worth. Furthermore, having one’s creation performed by others is an extremely fulfilling experience. Working with iPads and accessories within apps not only teaches students responsibility for materials, but also the responsibility of being accountable to one’s group or ensemble. And, of course, they are using 21st century technology to do the creation and sharing which gives them foundational skills to thrive in a rapidly changing, culturally diverse, digital, global society.

1-5. Describe the student population served by this project: 

Each week over 400 students, K-5, come through the doors of this classroom and will have multiple opportunities throughout the year to uses these materials in a variety of ways.

Monday, February 10, 2014

Fabulous lesson for tim-ka (dotted-eighth-sixteenth)

This lesson just sort of happened. I didn't quite have it planned this way but I followed the flow and ran with it and it was a success!

Fifth graders have identified the new rhythm concept: tim-ka, or dotted-eighth-sixteenth notes. Now we are playing with it, seeing if we understanding it by echoing it, decoding it in 4 beat phrases, and improvising with it on instruments.

We started by just echoing a few. Then, as a class, I clapped a 4 beat phrase and they decoded it together. Next, I had them do it one at a time as part of taking attendance. I told them, "Welcome to the music room, mistakes are made here and that's okay. I just want to know how we are doing in understanding this new rhythm." (there is a banner on my wall that says the first part of this sentence and I quote it often. Big thanks to Roger Sams for teaching it to me.) Some got it, some didn't. No big deal. It was just a dipstick to show me how they are doing in comprehension.

Next we looked at the Japanese song, Yuki, which we learned last time (the excercise was to clap the rhythm which used all eighth notes then find which eighth notes needed to be turned into dotted-eighth-sixteenth notes). After singing the song, I improvised 4 beat rhythms using tim-ka on a glockenspiel and they echoed back the rhythm, improvising the pitches in F Pentatonic. We went back and forth for a while then I had a few soloists answer me in a "musical conversation". Next I asked for a volunteer to take my job and lead us. Finally, I had pairs of students do four 4 beat question/answer conversation phrases, making sure to end on F=do. Once that was established, we brought back Yuki and sang the song then students improvised their "conversations" back and forth until we returned to Yuki. At the end of class, one student said, "that was so fun!"

Yes!

Inspiring Videos

Every week I try to show a short video clip of a musician doing something extraordinary or innovative with the musical skills they probably started developing in elementary classroom music.  Of course, all of the these innovators then had to go out and practice in order to be able to do what they do. I want to show them that what we begin to do here in class can lead them to inspiring and creative endeavors if they take in the learning and run with it.

Two weeks ago we saw footage from the Norwegian IceMusic Festival in which all instruments were made of ice or snow. Fantastic! That got me interested in other "unconventional" instruments. Last week we watched footage of someone performing Bach's Tocatta and Fugue in D minor on a "glass harp" (wine glasses and water goblets filled with various levels of water and strapped to the table. Played by rubbing the rim to create friction which causes the glass to vibrate and "sing"). It was a 7 minute video. Most classes wanted to watch it all the way to the end when I asked at the 3 minute mark if they wanted to move on or keep watching.


Today I got this email from a parent...
Good Morning,
 [Xxxxxx] came home (whichever day he had music last week) excited about a video you had showed him in class--glass harp, or something to that effect?  Anyway, on Saturday he wanted to try it, so we got out a few wine glasses, put different depths of water in them, and had fun with it.  Soren loved it so much, because (this is a direct quote), "It's music *and* science!"  :-)
 Thanks again for harnessing [Xxxxxx]'s musical enthusiasms.  
 Mission accomplished.