NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 13 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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
Watt, Dan – Popular Computing, 1984
Describes features of five new software programs--Songwriter, Musical Ideas, Musicalc I, Musical Construction Set, Musicland, and Music Designer II--which facilitate musical composition and musical creativity in a variety of ways. Shortcomings are briefly discussed, and sources for further information are given. (MBR)
Descriptors: Computer Graphics, Computer Software, Creativity, Documentation
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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
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
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
London, Marilyn – Music Educators Journal, 1984
Music motivator projects that enable the elementary teacher to use social science methods (known as ethnomethodology) to observe and learn about students without testing are described. Working in groups and guiding each other, students compose a musical composition and then notate it. Discovery learning is encouraged. (RM)
Descriptors: Creativity, Discovery Learning, Elementary Education, Learning Activities
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Campbell, Patricia Shehan – Music Educators Journal, 1990
Examines music creativity from a cross-cultural perspective. Delineates the difference between creativity and re-creativity giving cultural examples of each. Discusses the differences between composition and improvisation and analyzes the language of musical expression. Describes the cultural traditions of musical creativity in India, China, Iran,…
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Creativity, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Differences
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Zentz, Laurie; And Others – Music Educators Journal, 1992
Presents a collection of teachers' ideas on instruction for musical improvisation. Includes suggestions for ascending grade levels, spontaneous composition, and creation of sound maps. Recommends making technique training fun and creative through improvisation. Suggests that children be taught to think in sounds and to experiment with variations.…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Creativity, Elementary Secondary Education, Improvisation
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Kratus, John – Music Educators Journal, 1991
Discusses improvisation as a phenomenon. Offers suggestions for a learning sequence. Warns against allowing students to skip levels. Identifies developmental levels of improvisation as exploration, process-oriented, product-oriented, fluid, structural, stylistic, and personal improvisation. Urges that improvisation can and should be a meaningful…
Descriptors: Creativity, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Improvisation
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Piirto, Jane – Roeper Review, 1991
A review of the research on similarities and differences between creative women and men in the areas of the visual arts, creative writing, mathematics, musical composition, and science suggests a need for educators to stress the importance of commitment and intensity in pursuing a chosen field. (DB)
Descriptors: Creative Development, Creative Writing, Creativity, Exceptional Persons
Rudaitis, Cheryl, Comp. – Teaching Music, 1994
Contends that band students who are taught composition techniques improve listening skills, make aesthetic decisions, and become more imaginative and creative. Presents ideas from five music teachers for incorporating composition into the music curriculum. Discusses the use of computer software in musical composition. (CFR)
Descriptors: Bands (Music), Class Activities, Computer Software, Computer Uses in Education
Nolan, Evonne, Comp. – Teaching Music, 1995
Maintains that, to improvise successfully in music, students must have an understanding of the creative process. Presents teaching suggestions for encouraging creativity in music classes. Maintains that improvisation is an excellent method for students to explore and practice creativity. (CFR)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Concept Formation, Creative Thinking, Creativity