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Hatch, Emily – Journal of General Music Education, 2023
The ability to compose music must be taught and practiced. Students need purposeful opportunities to develop their musical thinking. This article presents a number of games and playful work that teachers can use to develop musical thought and lead toward intentional composition.
Descriptors: Music Education, Thinking Skills, Musical Instruments, Skill Development
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Johansson, Mats – Music Education Research, 2022
This article discusses approaches to improvisation from a learning perspective, using Irish traditional fiddle music as a case study. Within this genre, concepts of improvisation are largely implicit: many skilled musicians are engaged in spontaneous variation, without particular attention given to the phenomenon and without reference to the term…
Descriptors: Music Education, Musical Instruments, Creative Activities, Teaching Methods
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Rivkin, Aaron – Music Educators Journal, 2022
Group improvisation encourages students to improvise in a collective setting to build confidence in their individual and group improvisational skills. In this article, I describe group improvisation methods that offer an accessible entry into creative music-making for learners in secondary school instrumental ensembles. Instructional…
Descriptors: Music Education, Creative Activities, Groups, Music Activities
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Coss, Roger G. – General Music Today, 2019
Research suggests that exploratory experiences in the music classroom are a crucial developmental stage as students begin making the kinds of decisions required of them during composition and improvisation. The aims of this article are to (1) articulate a rationale for exploratory learning experiences in the music classroom and (2) outline…
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Music, Music Education, Musical Composition
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Isbell, Daniel S. – Music Educators Journal, 2023
Much like an effective speaker, a flexible musician is competent across multiple settings. The sociolinguistic theory of code-switching can be a useful tool to better understand how musicians acquire a set of skills and knowledge to support music-making in a range of activities in and outside of school and throughout society. In this article,…
Descriptors: Music Education, Code Switching (Language), Music, Musical Composition
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Park, Leo – Music Educators Journal, 2019
Improvisation-based exercises may be the key to unlocking students' innate musical creativities. This article focuses on two exercises--drone improvisation and circle stringing--that can be easily integrated into the orchestra curriculum and adapted to the learning needs of the individual student, small-ensemble, and large-ensemble settings. Of…
Descriptors: Music Education, Musical Instruments, Creative Activities, Student Needs
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Hong, Ng Hoon – Music Educators Journal, 2019
This article presents a three-pronged strategy for teaching collective improvisation in the general music classroom through structured surround soundscapes. This strategy consists of developing socio-interactive skills, shared understanding, and personal music vocabulary in collective improvisation. In the music classroom, these concepts should be…
Descriptors: Music Education, Creative Activities, Teaching Methods, Vocabulary Development
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Norgaard, Martin – Music Educators Journal, 2017
Improvisation is an ideal way to develop musical creativity in ensemble settings. This article describes two prominent theoretical frameworks related to improvisation. Next, based on research with developing and expert improvisers, it discusses how to sequence improvisatory activities so that students feel accomplished at every step. Finally, the…
Descriptors: Music Education, Creativity, Teaching Methods, Performance
Perlmutter, Adam – Teaching Music, 2013
Jazz band directors tend to face a lot of time constraints in readying their ensembles for performance. Sometimes the race to the stage can result in suboptimal playing, a rhythm section that does not quite gel, or soloists who "blow and hope"--that is, fail to put in the appropriate amount of thought before and during their…
Descriptors: Music, Music Activities, Music Techniques, Music Education
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Mason, Emily – General Music Today, 2014
Young teachers often struggle with pacing and the ability to cover more than one or two songs and activities in a single 30-minute general music class. Included in this article are lesson activities that show it is not only possible to include many of the National Standards in a single lesson, but also possible to sing, play, and create in every…
Descriptors: Singing, Music Activities, Music Education, National Standards
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Sindberg, Laura K. – Music Educators Journal, 2016
This article describes a collaborative clinical field experience initiative conceived to provide meaningful fieldwork for preservice music educators, musically engage underserved students in a high-poverty school, and include instruction on composition and improvisation. The author chronicles the planning, implementation, and subsequent revisions…
Descriptors: Musicians, Music, Music Teachers, Musical Composition
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Thibeault, Matthew D. – General Music Today, 2012
This column presents an improvisation game designed to be played by any two musicians from beginner through professional skill level. The author argues that two aspects are critical for success: one, an understanding of the creative power of limits; and, two, the importance of framing the activity as a game. The game, based on the limit of the…
Descriptors: Musicians, Social Environment, Creative Activities, Music Education
Perlmutter, Adam – Teaching Music, 2010
Improvisation--the act of spontaneously creating music, as opposed to playing music that is strictly pre-composed--is a practice that has most often been taught only in the context of jazz in the classroom. But it has actually been part of many more musical traditions, cultures, and periods. Classical icons like Bach, Mozart, and Beethoven,…
Descriptors: Music, Creative Activities, Musicians, Music Education
Perlmutter, Adam – Teaching Music, 2009
Orff-Schulwerk, or simply Orff, is an approach for teaching music to children that was developed in the early 1920s by the German composer Carl Orff (1895 1982) and his fellow composer Gunild Keetman. The Orff approach encompasses music and movement and is based on activities that come naturally to children: singing, clapping, and dancing. Orff…
Descriptors: Music Education, Musical Instruments, Music Teachers, Teaching Methods
Gordy, Karen Townsend – Teaching Music, 2005
Fiddling is a style of bowed string playing often associated with folk musicians in the Western world. Many styles have arisen in various parts of the planet, including, among others, Scandinavia, the British Isles, and the United States. String teachers can include fiddling in their classes or lessons in a way that benefits both the student and…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Music Education, Music Teachers, Teaching Methods
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