Showing posts with label instruments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label instruments. Show all posts

Saturday, April 16, 2016

Do "The Shaker Hop!"

Hooray! Spring is arriving 
(finally) in Chicago, and here I go - Miss Carole of Macaroni Soup! 

           HOP HOP HOP

It’s a great time for you to pass out shakers and get hopping, too!  Indoors, outdoors – wherever!  
    Wait – you don’t have any shakers?  Make bottle shakers or buy some egg shakers – see directions below.



But first – “The Shaker Hop!”  Hear it HERE, or on my DANCING FEET recording.  It’s a hybrid of “The Bunny Hop” and “The Hokey Pokey” or “Looby Loo!”  So easy – SO MUCH FUN!  All you need is some kind of shaker or maraca – one for each child.

LYRICS:  
Put your shaker in, put your shaker out
Do “The Shaker Hop” – Hop! Hop! Hop!
Put your shaker in, put your shaker out,
Do “The Shaker Hop” – Hop! Hop! Hop!
Put your shaker in, put your shaker out,
Do “The Shaker Hop” – Hop! Hop! Hop!

(Marching or dance break**, then repeat sequence.)

Up and over to put the shaker out!



Yup – it’s that simple.  We often start in a circle – it makes the in and out motion less dangerous.  Another tip from many years of shaker hopping – teach the children to rainbow arc the shaker overhead when going from “in” to “out” – they are less likely to whack each other!




Watch where you're going when it's BACKWARD!




** I vary the dance break – sometimes we march, sometimes we boogie!  We even walk backward (with my 4’s and K’s), walk low, walk on tiptoes – ask your students for a new way to move each time you do it and add it in.  Their creativity (and difficulty) will astound you!
HOP! HOP! HOP!




Let’s make bottle shakers – it’s not hard and it re-uses plastic bottles and newspapers you might be recycling anyway.  Save enough 12 oz or smaller bottles – the sturdier ones will last longer.  NO WIDE-MOUTHS.  If the bottle makes a crinkly sound when you squeeze it lightly, find a different bottle.  Often the best bottles are from carbonated drinks – my latest fav is Ice Mountain Sparkling Waters.  Got a 24 pack at Costco, enjoyed the bubbly then made shakers for a whole class!


STEP 1:  Fill each clean, DRY bottle with ½ cup of filling – beads, buttons, popcorn, or rice.  If using beans, be sure to rinse and dry completely or they will sprout in a few days (yes, I speak from experience!)  Remove the label and plastic ring left when the cap was removed.

STEP 2:  Make a handle.  Cut a section of newspaper (8 pages) from the fold side across – about a 4” hunk.  Then roll tightly from the fold side to make a compact cylinder.  Stuff it into the top of the filled bottle.  If it’s too big, unroll and take off one or two sheets of newspaper and re-roll.

STEP 3:  Duck Tape!  Cut a 3-4” length and drape it over the top of the handle.  Fold in the sides.  Then wrap more tape from the top of the handle to the bottleneck (securely over the ridge where the cap sat) and then all the way back up to the top.  Two layers of tape will make your shakers last longer.  Some of mine are still shaking after 15 years of glorious music-making!


NOW SHAKE IT, BABY, SHAKE IT!                  

Watch the video for a step-by-step demonstration on my Facebook page!

My 4’s and K’s help make their own shakers.  They prep and fill them.  Then I give them a laminated nameplate to slip into the bottle before the handle goes on.  It’s easier for them to identify their own bottle shaker later.  My K’s wrap the colorful duck tape of their choice – some 4’s can do this step, some require assistance.  At the end of the year, each child takes their shaker home.


Children love to compare and examine what's in a shaker.  You might ask them to find another child who has the same color handle or same filling before shaking it up!




We're having fun now!
  • NOTES:  If you have a child that is sensitive to loud noises, encourage them to choose rice, colored sand or cottonballs for inside their shaker.  It’s easier on the ears!
  • Making a handle for a shaker turns it from a science project into an instrument. 
  • Do not use cereal as filler – it breaks up and turns to powder in short order.

We put our shakers away by the color of the handle.
Egg shakers are great, too!  Please do not make them out of plastic Easter eggs.  If they break, they turn into sharp shards that can injure a child.  Likewise the inexpensive egg shakers on Oriental Trading – they can split open after a few uses.  Purchase quality shakers from West Music ($1.75 ea, less if purchasing 10 or more),  or Rhythm Band Instruments (2 for $5.99 or 12 for $20.99) – worth the investment as they’ll last many years safely.



Another great shaker song:  “We’re Going to Kentucky!” on my Baloney! recording.
Check my YouTube Channel next week - I'll have video of "The Shaker Hop" ready then!

            WHAT HAVE YOU GOT SHAKING?

A big thank you to Rindy Powell, Director and superb photographer, and Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Koek's class at St David's Nursery School in Glenview, IL for shaking and singing with me.  Another shout out to 3's teacher Mrs. Michols for the beautiful artwork behind me in the shaker-making video!


Yours for a Shaker Song!                    
 “Miss Carole” Stephens

Need professional development, a conference keynote or school visit?  Contact me:
PHONE: 847-384-1404


Saturday, April 9, 2016

Music is Magical in Pre-K!




Hi! I'm Ayn and I am a Ga. Pre-K teacher, serving 4 and 5 year olds in an inclusive setting. I share my classroom adventures on my blog, little illuminations.



We LOVE music in my classroom! We have music playing throughout the day and have several music and movement activities each day. Sometimes we are lucky enough to have special guests come to the class and share musical experiences with us. 

You may remember a post I wrote last year titled "Magical Meet-Up: When Worlds Collide, Magic Happens!" about having our illustrious Fairy Godmother of PreK+Sharing, Debbie Clement, come to our Pre-K class and share her music and books. It was a phenomenal experience and the children really enjoyed her visit!



Already this year, we've had several great musical experiences right in our own classroom! Today I'll share a few of these experiences here with you.


This fall, Mrs. Starcher, a local elementary music teacher and mom to one of my students, came to share some songs and stories with us. Many of the students in my class will have her as their music teacher next year, so it was a great way to get to know her! She read the classic children's book,"Caps For Sale" and sang much of the story, which brought a whole new level of enjoyment to the story, for both the children and for me!  She also played a couple of instruments, including the slide whistle (such a fun instrument!), and taught us a few new songs, including the Australian song, "Highway Number One" which became an instant hit and is requested by the students daily now!






We love to explore with sound, making patterns and rhythms with our rhythm sticks. Often, the children will use the instruments to add sound effects to a story I'm reading aloud. We like to play a copycat game where one student makes a rhythm and the other students close their eyes to listen, then try to repeat it.




While learning about nursery rhymes, we sang the song "Jack Be Nimble" substituting each student's name for Jack and each student took a turn to jump over the candlestick. A few times, we changed the action of the song from "jumping" to other actions like "skipping or hopping". 



We discovered a great song about "10 Apples Up On Top" done in the style of Jason Mraz and listened to it while we balanced beanbags on our heads. 






The kids frequently ask to hear songs that they hear "in Mommy's car". We've found children safe versions of popular songs like "Shake It Off", "What Does the Fox Say", "Shut Up and Dance" and their current favorite: "Watch Me Whip, Watch Me Nae Nae". They really can "bust a move" and have taught me a thing or two! ;)



Often, the kids like to get out instruments or scarves and play along with the music. I have a box in music center available so kids can make an instrument of their own if they wish.




We have recently changed up one of our favorites, "Boa Constrictor" by Peter, Paul and Mary. In the past, we've touched our own body parts (sort of like head, shoulders, knees and toes) but lately, we've used a small hula hoop with several children standing on the outside and one child inside the hula hoop. We move it up the child's body to go along with the song. The kids love it!







We have a wonderful little company that comes in and provides enrichment classes in our Preschool. They offer classes in computer (Computer Pals) , music (Music Pals) and signing (Signing Pals). I was lucky enough to book them for an "in house" field trip. We learned a song in sign language, learned some new music and movement songs, 
learned sign language color words and had a lot of fun! . Mrs. Julie and Mrs. Natalie are so talented and we are so lucky to have them! 




One of our favorite music and movement songs is "I Know a Chicken" by Laurie Berkner. We decided to make shakey eggs with some of leftover plastic Easter Eggs. The kids love making their own music and especially love to make it using their very own instruments! 






For the record, I should note, that I can not sing or play an instrument, but that does not stop us from making fun and music. We live it up in Pre-K and as long as we are all having fun, that is all that matters! 


 Stop by and visit me anytime at littleilluminations.blogspot.com or visit the little illuminations fanpage on facebook! And be sure to check out PreK+K Sharing EEE!

Saturday, April 18, 2015

CRESCENDO! - And Sites to Sigh For: edWeb & The Children's Music Network Blog!



Crescendo! Activities and Books for Investigating Music Fundamentals

Ms. Brigid here, from Merit School of Music  in Chicago, IL, happy to be writing you as April showers bring May flowers and Crescendo – which is the topic of the day! I’ll share instrument use and book ideas in this post. May’s offering will develop these ideas further with crescendo games and chants, as well as an update on a new recycled prop I’m in the process of introducing.

I’d like to share two excellent resources with you. It’s a teacher thing. We share! edWeb’s homepagage is a little daunting, but forge ahead to “Join Communities” and take a look at the numerous professional learning communities (PLC) available.

Over the fall and during the long winter, laid low by a fractured foot (not a good thing for one who teaches movement and music to kiddos), I enrolled in numerous, free, online webinars that kept me connected to the field, and expanded my knowledge base in profound ways. Along and along, I was able to identify engaging, consistently good, presenters that I would take anything from, including Michelle Luhtala, an illuminating Head Librarian and information services expert (Emerging Tech for School Librarians), and Shannon Holder (New Teacher Help and Tech Tools for the Classroom).

Commercial entities also sponsor communities. There is often a dis-connect when this occurs, but I’ve been impressed with the excellent webinars and follow up by all involved. Three recent webinars of note:  1.Early Learning Book Chats, sponsored by Gryphon House presented Strategies for Teaching Young Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder by Clarisa Willis. 2. Early Childhood Learning Solutions  through Frog Street Press promoted Fine Motor Skills…Write Out of the Box! by Marianne Gibbs (great for hand development and correct mallet position!), and 3. Music Together sponsors Arts & Music in Early Learning. Carol Ann Blank presented a very worthy webinar, Embedding Music in the Early Childhood Inclusion Classroom, which reminded me of the scope of the MT materials and their commitment to the field of EC music.  

All webinars are archived - and I’ve just touched on a fraction of the communities and offerings. CE certificates are sent out after attendance or after accessing the archived webinar and answering a few questions. The site is an embarrassment of riches!

Final notes: Each “Community” has a “Community Toolbox” with a dropdown menu. It’s easy to find and activate the webinar you want to explore. There seems to be no way to pause the proceedings, but that’s a small quibble. “Text box” comments, saved from the original webinar, are also available – and are a treasure trove of support material. One starts to recognize particular contributors of note. There’s someone in Florida named Barbara I want to meet! In fact, there are attendees from every corner of the globe – India, Japan, South American, Yerp (my family’s name for Europe), Australia and New Zealand, etc. Joining is easy. Enter basic info, your email, choose your communities – and feed your brain and soul!


The CMN Blog is my second resource gift. It’s guided by the considerable talents of Alina Celeste, a charming performer, writer and person. She’s a triple threat in the nicest of ways!

Alina Celeste!
On April 16, 2015, Alina and I launched a new outreach initiative. The official, hot off the presses announcement: “We here at the blog are excited to announce a new series! In tandem with new PIO! Editor Brigid Finucane, we will begin sharing songs from the extensive  PIO! archives once or twice a month. Songs will initially be drawn from the two All Songs issue and go from there. It is our hope that in providing sheet music, sound recordings, plus composer background, that we can share CMNs songs with the world!”  

Please visit the blog and take a look at our first entry. Save Some Trees, by Dave Orleans, ties in beautifully with Earth Day – though each and every day should be just that! A sidebar of “recent posts” makes the site easy to navigate. Keep a look out for the music and literacy articles by Liz Buchannan. Her website, “Antelope Dance” yields consistently great ideas and generous sound examples. Carole Peterson Stephens and I are frequently cross posted to the blog as well, so if you miss us on Pre-K and Sharing, you might find us on CMN!

And did you catch my special announcement? I am now the acting editor for the Children Music Network’s far reaching, biannual and newly digital journal, PIO!, which that stands for what we do at CMN – Pass It ON! The fall issue will have up to 50% free content – but we hope that you’ll like what we’re doing so much that you’ll join! A new Songs Library will be making its appearance in the very near future and other exciting offerings are in the works. I’ll keep you in the loop!

Crescendo!
At home in March, basketball reigned supreme, but in classes, my kiddos were in piano and forte
exploration mode – and  my post from last month offers diverse strategies to support their learning. Like piano and forte, crescendo is a word in Italian, the language of music.  There is something so satisfying in my kiddos chanting that to me! 

Symbolic inter discipline sharing and math connections are part of the conversation as well - a topic
for another post! 
From Perkins' "Hand, Hand, Fingers, Thumb." Love the illustrations!
Crescendo is easily experienced through creating an in-class rain storm with body music – the gentle drumming of fingers on the rug, followed by full hand use, getting gradually louder and louder and louder until you have CRESCENDO.  Stand up. Change levels.  Do it with full body. Rub palms together, transition to gentle clapping, perhaps to slapping  hips or thighs. Get the feet going……louder , louder, louder, Crescendo (arms up over the head. We know Italian, the language of music!). Make sure the progression is gradual and has purpose. A “class challenge” to listen without using voices usually does the trick.

Reverse the process to teach decrescendo – or another music word, diminuendo.  

Drums and Cymbals – What’s Not to Love!
It’s time to get out the big Remo gathering drum. By this time in the year, the kiddos have our class drum ritual down pat. We practice together while sitting on the rug, then groups of five (mas o menos) are invited up. They echo my syllabic pattern as I pat the drum and say “Hello, Drum!” (Hello, Drum!)  “Now let’s pet the drum.” We pet it, feeling the smoothness of the drumhead, listening for what it will whisper to us. “Now let’s give it a scratch. It’s itchy.” (We scratch the drum, listening to the change in sound.) We’re ready to make our own crescendo. I remind the children that we want to make this a loooonnnnnnggggg experience, not merely a moment of slamming their hands onto the drum and being done in a second. We’re musicians and good thinkers, so that’s what we do. I end with “Say, ‘Good Drum.” (Good Drum) – two thumps – and off they go, after they wave goodbye to the drum. Another group comes up.

I sometimes put out a row of six drums across the front of the room, a la the great Artie Almeida, as an alternative exploration. Nested drums, one bigger than the next, produce slightly different tones (the smaller the drum, the higher the sound. The bigger the drum, the lower the sound).
I assign each drum a family name, starting with the Dad Drum (biggest and lowest), and ending with the baby drum. The kiddos file up and get the drum in random order. We listen to the sound of each drum before we start. We are musicians and sound scientists. If there are lots of kiddos in the class (I’ve had over 35 in Kindergarten) I employ an extra 6th or 7th drum designated as a kitty or puppy.

The same greeting ritual is observed.  “Hello, Drum!”  Children at the perimeter, or on their rug squares practice crescendo with their hands. Everyone is active and engaged. Syllabication – playing the exact rhythm of the words on the floor while chanting – is a great literacy strategy

Sidenote: Al Perkins’  Seussical Hand, Hand, Fingers, Thumb is also a fun and effective gateway to classroom drumming. The illustrations are silly and charming. Full disclosure: I abridge the text.

What about the cymbal you ask?  And what are you thinking  - isn’t it LOUD? Of course! But the drama and gorgeous metallic timbre of the instrument is mesmerizing. Here’s one thing I do:  
I bring out my cymbal and play a long, drawn out, crescendo. Then I ask the children to get into a tight circle while holding hands and listen. As the crescendo commences, the circle gets larger and larger and larger with the sound until the circle is huge and tight. We’ve made our own sound waves!  No sound but the that of the cymbal and bodies moving. We repeat with decrescendo, and then contrast and compare. Who likes which best?

In smaller classes, kiddos play the cymbal with the mallet. In K classes, the teacher holds one cymbal and I hold and other,  suspended by a loop, and we cycle through the children fairly swifly – girls one week, boys the next. They trust they’ll get a turn. By now, they know that everyone gets to try everything.

One more thing to help things along: We make a “no crashing” promise. By this time of year, they’ve accepted I’m one hundred years old (at the beginning of the year, they’re incredulous. Now they just go with it), and I say if they crash rather than crescendo, it hurts my very old ears. The sound can also hurt their ears – and it’s no fun to be scared. Yes, some of my charges have sensory issues, and we, as teachers have to be aware and considerate of this very real issue.

Sidenote: This year, small, sterilized Chobani brand containers (thank you, Costco, and college-going daughter with exquiste taste) are coming to the classroom, and each child will receive two to make crescendos with. They can be rubbed on the rug, thomped, clopped together….lots of ways to make sound!  It’s been fun and satisfying to try at home, and I’m anxious to see how it  works out with large groups of thunder makers! I love sonic experiments – and will give a full report in May! 

Thunderstorms may elicit deep fear in the Pre-K and Kindergarten population, so listening to crescendos can start helpful conversations that address this. One thing I say is that the sound is thunder saying hello to us, but another helpful poem, Kay Cooper’s Boom! Bang! THUNDER ! really comes to the rescue! This hand rhymes can be found in her fantastic collection, Too Many Rabbits which includes clear, accessible, and easily shared science information. Themes: Animals, Weather, Nature, and Universe. Each rhyme is accompanied by gorgeous cut paper illustrations – making it a delight to peruse.

BOOKS!
There are lots of lovely options. I’ll share two. If you have a book  to share, please put it in the comments below. My selections are available at most libraries. If you find, like I have, that it’s nicer to have repeatedly used books on hand, they can be found for $.01 – plus shipping, which is 398 times more than the cost of the book. 
For dreamier exploration, look no further than Listen to theRain by Bill Martin and John Archambault. The rich, onomatopoeic* – heavy text travels through the anatomy of a rainstorm, from start to finish, accompanied by James Endicott’s enchanting illustrations. * Yes ,I had to look up that word!

THUMP, THUMP, Rat-a-Tat-Tat by Gene Baer is perfect for noisier explorations. Students echo repeated text motifs with gusto. A passing parade, rather than a rainstorm, is the subject matter of the book. Flat and colorful illustrations are provided by Lois Ehlert. 

Carnival of the Animals – The Lion’s March
Better in French: Le Carnaval des Animaux - Marche royale du Lion

Thank you for joining me. Tune in next month for more crescendo ideas thundering your way. I’ll leave you with this YouTube by Victor Craven, a favorite of my 5-7 year old students. It’s a little retro – but how often do you get to combine Camille Saint-Saëns with a magenta-tongued, jaggel-toothed fanged and ominously throated sedentary circus lion – that opens his mouth on cue – to crescendo!


Chicago Families
Please come to Merit’s Storytime sessions – the 2nd and 4th Mondays of the month. It’s free, fun, and facilitated by singers and storytellers Amy Lowe, Irica Baurer & me. Stories and songs start at 11am, and we end with instrument exploration and family networking. 

For Those in the Chicago Area
…Call on Merit School of Music! Our onsite school is in the West Loop. We work in the schools throughout the area providing band, orchestra, percussion, choir, early childhood, and general music instruction with project based units including Recorder, Music and Storytelling and Songwriting. We do great work! YoYo Ma is a supporter!

Professional Development!
I’d love to help your school or community blossom musically!  My specialty is music and literacy teacher training (with a dose of technology), singing games and dances from around the world, and more!  I’m a national presenter, writer and now an editor!! Full disclosure: I’m not 100 years old! People say I’m smart and funny – and that I’ve changed their lives (for the good). I live in the Midwest, but travel widely. I’m Gateways registered and IAC approved – at least for the next three years! See my contact info below. If you’re local, please look for my workshops through IL Children’s Home and Aid. 

And in the End
My posts are historically archived below. Click a link to read about Chinese New Year, Pete Seeger, Music and Literacy, Listening Locally to Musicians from the Midwest, Great Lakes and Ontario! Then Pass It On!

I am continually inspired by The Children’s Music Network (CMN) community. an international group of socially conscious musicians, educators, librarians, families, songwriters and good people, who “celebrate the positive power of music in the lives of children by sharing songs, exchanging ideas, and creating community.” Please visit CMN, and find a gathering in your region.

©2014 Brigid Finucane  * 847-213-0713 * gardengoddess1@comcast.net
http://prekandksharing.blogspot.com
http://brigidfinucane.blogspot.com
@booksinger1

BLOG HISTORY









Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...