Sunday

Planning Music Programs - Grade Level Practices

Planning programs can be super time-consuming and intimidating! Working backwards from the program date has worked well for me - try it and let me know what you think!


To work your schedule backwards, start with the performance date in mind. Write out a schedule with the end in mind, tracking how many days you want to practice in the performance space (Grade Level Practices), how many times you think they need to practice on the risers in your classroom (Riser Week), how many times they need to run through the whole show with special parts and speaking parts (Run Through Week) and beyond.

I'm going to be honest here - I give myself plenty of time with groups that are immature or groups that I don't know well (new school or lots of new students). You know your students' learning styles better than anyone, so you decide how much time you will spend on "program songs."


Side note: While I am a huge fan of using classroom curriculum songs as a performance, and use them as often as I can, I find that it's not always appropriate. Some schools/situations call for a separate set of "program" songs. In that case, I allow even more time to learn the repertoire. Programs with lots of moving parts (speakers, dancers, instruments, etc.) also take more time. If your program has these things, allow more space in your schedule for it. You'll be glad you did!

I try to schedule "auditions" and "sign-ups" for special parts as far in advance as I can, in order to give myself time to cast the show, type up scripts and notes home, highlight their parts, and sort all the papers by teacher to get them sent home. Shew! I'm tired just thinking about it!

Let's start talking through the details by talking about the week of the performance, or as I like to call it: Grade Level Practice Week.


Grade Level Practice Week

The week of the performance is "Grade Level Practice" week. Ideally, an entire grade level has specials at the same time. Work together with your specials team and pull all the classes into the performance space the week of your performance.

Pro Tip: I always try to schedule performances for Thursday (or Friday), to give me a minimum of 3 workable practice days. 

Day 1 Agenda:
  1. Get students into the performance space (risers, stage, etc.). Sometimes we line up by height (tallies to smallies) and sometimes I assign specific spots - it depends on the situation/group.
  2. Briefly go over the agenda with the students: "We will be doing the first half of the show today. If you have a special part in the second half, you will go tomorrow."
  3. Sing/Play/Speak through the first half of the show TWICE, including special parts like welcome, speaking parts, ribbon dancing, putting away ribbons/props, getting out instruments, playing instruments, putting away instruments, etc.

Day 2 Agenda: 
  1. Sing/Play/Speak through the second half of the show TWICE, including all the details.
  2. If you have any extra time, go through the hardest parts of the show again (songs that they like to rush, songs with many verses that they like to forget, etc.).

Day 3 Agenda: 
  1. I like to have an audience for the last rehearsal, so I invite a younger grade level, whenever possible.
  2. Run through the entire show with all special parts. 
  3. No stopping! Treat this as a performance (especially if you have an audience!) and try not to stop. If you have to stop, make a quick adjustment and move on!
  4. Be sure to debrief with kids about that evening's or the next day's performance before they go back to class.
Side Note: In an ideal world, your teammates will help you run the rehearsal, dealing with discipline issues that arise, passing out props, keeping kids on task. I have been extremely blessed over the years with teams that have been amazing at running rehearsals! Shout out to Carol & Amber (& Craig) & Debbie & Jennifer & Megan & Eunice & Belinda & Leticia & Kala & Susan & Jeanne & & Adam & Scott - Thank you!!

I ask the grade level teachers to attend the last rehearsal (or part of it) just so that they will know what is going on. Most likely, they will be the ones helping you the night of the performance or in the assembly (if you do a daytime performance).

By the day of the show, groups generally tend to be more comfortable (and predictable!) in the performance space. There's always a chance for a snafu or technical difficulty, so I remind the students that, "The show must go on," unless someone is hurt!

Special Tips for Weird Schedules

As much as you wish for and hope for an administration and staff that understands what you are trying to do with each performance, you won't always have an ideal schedule. Some years, you will have a class that meets at a different time than the rest of the grade level or a "mixed-up-files" kind of hodgepodge schedule. 

For those times, you have to rely on your relationships with the teachers/admin to get them to agree to switch their normal specials time. This is really tough the first year at a school, but as you prove yourself to them by your professional communication, your being on time, your performances and productions, etc., teachers are more friendly to the idea of swapping their schedule out for you. 

In essence, they are doing it for their kids, but it feels like a giant favor to you personally. I try to bring donuts or make brownies for my staff occasionally to make sure they know that I appreciate their flexibility. And I always write thank you notes after a show to let them know that they were a blessing to me and the students by their willingness to be flexible. A little gratefulness goes a long way!


I schedule these individual class switches way in advance and with the approval of my principal. Only once or twice have I had an impossible switch, and had to have a class come to the gym and sit and watch while I rehearse with a different grade level. In those cases, I provide tons of word finds and coloring pages to keep them busy and spread them out while we practice. 

I will do whatever it takes to have a grade level practice the week before a performance. I don't believe I could do a performance without it (unless I had to!). If that means doubling up classes, teaching during my lunch, or rearranging my schedule with my other school, I will do it! I have to be willing to be flexible, too!

The week before the switch, send out reminder emails and put a copy of the changed schedule in their box, just to be safe. I like to have them write a note in their substitute folder just in case!

Check out my latest post about Riser Week here



Saturday

How to Make Open House in the Music Room Fun!


Before I started to host informal Open House and Parent Night performances, I dreaded these events with a passion. I put all the instruments away, hid my breakables, and prayed for the best.

Inevitably, kids would come streaming in with their parents, run straight to the instruments and start hitting them with whatever was nearby. Little siblings would dig into cabinets and drawers and my room ended up a huge mess before the night was over!


Now, I plan ahead and pull out only the instruments that I want them to play, and have specific instructions written in several places for the parents.

I have an activity planned for each group so that even my wiliest ones can see that it's not a free-for-all. Thank goodness!


The Setup:
On a table, I set out buckets of instruments that are needed. I put everything else away.

I physically block off all areas that I do not want them to walk in (with chairs or tables or music stands) and leave one pathway to the seating area.

I hang a welcome sign on the door and on a music stand just inside the door. It lets the parents know that I would like them to come in and sit down and wait their turn, rather than walk around while someone else is performing.


How to start: 
Greet the first group that comes in the door and tell the group to take a seat and wait until I call their child's grade level. Then I start calling up grade levels to the instrument table, "Do we have any Kindergarteners in here?"

I have each set of students go get one of their grown-ups to come play instruments with them! They love this and the parents get a kick out of playing the triangle or the rhythm sticks! It's a riot!

I just have them stand around the instrument table and play for each other - no need for a special set up or formation. Most of the time the parents face the board (because I put the title or the instructions on the board), but they don't have to!

For the beginning of the year open house:
Setup:
1. several tubs of shakers (for K) on a table
2. a bucket of rhythm sticks and the tub of triangles (1st & 2nd)
3. 4 large drums (for 3rd & 4th) at the front of the room

Kindergarten:
I have my K students & parents pick a shaker and we shake along to Hokey Pokey. Super simple, a little silly, and very accessible for our newest parents.

1st & 2nd grade:
I have my first and second grade students play sticks with All Around the Buttercup and have their parents play the triangle on the rests. (1st graders don't know ta rest yet, so I say, "After each sentence, parents will play on the triangle.")

*Pro Tip: Give the student the rhythm sticks and have the parent play the triangle on the rests. You as the teacher can give them a big cue when it's time to play. It's very intuitive and the kids love to see their parents hold the little triangles!

3rd & 4th grade:
I have my third and fourth graders do an easy call and response drumming activity that my co-teacher taught me last year. (Thanks Karla!) I have a little picture of four "choices" to eat for lunch. Mom or Dad taps "What's for lunch?" on the drum and the student has to answer one of the choices.

We do this four times in a row and then I play a pop song for them to drum along to. This year, I used Joel Adams' Please Don't Go. It has a simple intro section followed by a 16-beat section with drumming. I've also done the Kidz Bop version of See You Again - my students love this one!


For middle or end of the year parent night: 
Setup:
1. several buckets of rhythmic percussion instruments (for K & 1st)
2. buckets of wood blocks / tone blocks, triangles, and shaker instruments (for upper grades)

Kindergarten & 1st grade:
After practicing A Sailor Went to Sea, Sea, Sea in class, my students do an instrument circle with this song. We have various rhythm instruments set around the circle and in between each verse, they rotate to a new instrument.

For Parents Night, we let each student & parent pick an instrument and they play along to, "sea, sea, sea" and "chop, chop, chop" and "knee, knee, knee" and "tap, tap, tap."

Upper Grades:
After studying The Nutcracker Ballet in December, my students do a quick and easy play along to the A section of March that I blogged about here.

A section -
16 beats: Wood instruments
16 beats: Shaker instruments
   + Triangle on the last beat!

As people enter:
It's a revolving door and I play each of the songs 4 or 5 times, but it is a blast! As soon as new people come in the door, I try to shout out a "Thanks for coming in - grab a seat and it'll be your turn soon!" over the instruments.

How to finish: 
After each group, we give our parents high fives and show them how to put away the instruments we got out. Then I announce the next group. So simple!

I'm looking forward to our next parent night because I just got a grant for some xylophones, mallets and ALL the books that go with Mallet Madness (Thanks Tri Kappa Gamma!). I can't wait to teach these and let the kids show off to their parents!

What do you do to make Open House manageable?

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Thursday

How to Use Capturing Kids' Hearts in Music Class

One of the game-changing techniques I learned in my Capturing Kids' Hearts training is having a class rater.

Today I'm sharing about how I adapted Class Raters for music class, how to prep your students for critical thinking, plus a bonus extension activity!


Class Rater Basics

You might have used rubrics before in class, but you may want to discuss them again when you first start using a rater. We look for very specific things at first that can be easily tracked.

At the beginning of class, I assign one student to be our rater for behavior and one student to rate our "academic performance."

At the end of class, the rater gives the whole group a score (any scale you choose - I use either 1-4 or 1-10) based on the criteria they were looking/listening for.

*Yes - I actually hand-pick the rater the first few times. After that, I can use randomization, but I want to get some success under our belts with students that I know can handle this.

Behavior Rater:
- 1st grade: the behavior rater might be on the lookout for blurters that day, or the number of times someone had to sit out / sit down for misbehavior
- 3rd grade: they might be tracking the number of times the teacher had to say "Give me 5" to gain their attention
- 5th grade: they might be looking for a specific number of times the class lost points for playing an instrument out of turn (and whether it was an improvement from the last class)

When they give their short report at the end of the class, they can say something like, "I noticed that we had less blurts this time," or "We only lost points twice for playing out of turn," etc. They never mention names.

Academic Rater:
For the academic rater, they look at what they worked on during class and they get to determine if the class understood or had trouble. If the class has been having trouble stopping on the correct beat, or following the conductor's instructions, that's what we will track.

When they give their short report, they might say, "When we sang Dance Josey in canon the last time, our class had more people on the steady beat than the first time we sang it," or "When we held our imaginary beach balls, everyone moved them up and down at the same time by the end of class." (Don't your students answer in beautifully composed complete sentences?! ha!)

Prepping for Critical Listening

To prepare the students to be raters, they have to be used to listening critically to their performances, and paying attention to behavior in class. You have to practice it. (Shocking, I know!)

Before I assign a rater (or sometimes the same day), we practice rating smaller chunks of class. It's so fast to say, "Close your eyes. Give me a 3, 2, or 1 that tells how you think we did on ____."

I'm usually pretty specific about what we're looking for so that they only have to think about one thing at first.

Basic questions to start with:
- How did we stay together on the beat?
- How did we all start/stop?
- How was our blend? (Could you hear one person singing louder than the rest?)
- How did we follow the game directions? (or more specifically, did we all clap with our right hand on top, etc.)
- How was our balance? (Could you hear the sung melody louder than the hand clapping?)
- Did you hear any extra claps in the rests?
- Did anyone start talking after the song ended?

More advanced - You can take this as far as your musical skills will allow! You can address intonation, articulation, style, or any other concept or skill that you are working towards. Ask about two skills at the same time (Did we blend our voices and sing the correct dynamic level at measure 5?), or build on vocabulary words that you just learned.

I was AMAZED at how much better my students got just by bringing attention to the little things that make music come alive. If they've never been taught that we breathe together before the first word, how will they ever know they're supposed to be doing that?


"One Thing" - Extension Activity 

Take this idea one step further by having students tell you the "one thing" that was best/worst about that segment of class. Most of the time I prompt with the phrase, "One thing we did well; one thing we could do better?"

Sometimes I have to spin what they say a little to make it constructive for the class. "So you're saying that we sing better when our fingers aren't in our noses. Great!" BAHAHA.

Most of the time I get a wide range of answers - if you have a positive reinforcement system in your class (you should!), give more points for more critical answers/deeper thinking. This subconsciously prompts the other students to listen more carefully the next time to see if they could hear the same thing.

How do you help your students to listen more critically to their own music?

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Lori's Lists: Things I am Grateful For

It's three weeks into summer for me! Now that I'm more caught up on my sleep and some of the stress has drained away, I want to frame this year with some positives! 


Things I am Grateful For

- I had (2) classrooms to teach in, instead of being on a cart!

- I had fantastic principals, admin, and gen ed teachers to work with at both schools!

- I had a fantastic co-teacher that didn't freak out over all my texts and emailed questions plus she shared ideas with me that I used all year! Holla!

- My students improved tremendously over the year! (musicality, behavior)

- I memorized more than 50% of my students' names by the end of the year! Woo!

- Year one is done! I always feel like Year One at at a school is a beast unto it's own. 

- I still love my job! 


Overall, this year was fun - I tried out tons of new ideas (which I love) and new instrument activities  (which my students love). In the next few weeks, I think I will start to process what went well and what I want to use next year. 

For now, I'm going to go run errands in the middle of the day and enjoy hanging out with my puppy!

Happy Summer!