Monday, February 8, 2010

Lesson Plans

Our 1st Lesson with the Drummin' Buddies Hand Charts.

[It was better than I could have imagined!]

First we found the rhythm, then we found the song.
If you can see it, you can say it. If you can say it, you can play it.

Age Group: 6- to 10-year-olds.
The point is to play and to play well with others.  Be easy on corrections. Handing is not as important as timing.

Activities

  1. If this is the first drum lesson, teach students simple technique for bass, tone, and slap.  Show them first how not to hurt their hands.
  2. Print Moribayassa Picture Rhythm for each child.
  3. Guide each student to touch the pictures one by one and say "DU" in each frame with a drum. They need to make sure to touch the empty frames as well. A space is also a note...   After they have sorted it out, keep a gentle pulse and have the whole group saying the pattern together.
  4. Replace the "DU" with an appropriate representational verbalization for bass, tone and slap. 'DU' 'DO' 'TA'  or 'Gun' 'go' 'pa' or simply, 'bass tone slap'.  Suggest that each 'note' has a matching pitch like 'Do, re, mi'.  Repeat the patten melodically this way.
  5. After the students can sing the parts, play the rhythm with them so they can hear the song on the drum. This will stabilize the rhythm and tempo. Play s l o w l y! The tempo will pick up as they develop auditory and muscle memory.
  6. Have fun, always.
The Students in our Children's Programs have a variety of learning styles and challenges.  Some are refugees and do not speak English well. Some of the kids in my Adapted classes are non-verbal. I can't wait to try this out in those classes this week!

If you have questions, comments or a good story, please share! I'll post your class experiences here for other teachers.
Rhythm Rules!

_______________________________________________________________
Tap-O-Phone

Grade Level: All Ages and Abilities               

Focus: (Concept or skills to be emphasized)

Rhythm        Listening

Activities:
1. students form a single line
2. Gently, but clearly tap a [*success-appropriate] pattern on the upper back of the person at the end of the line
3. Each person in line taps the pattern on the person’s back in front of them
4. the final person claps the pattern to see if it made it intact, all the way up the line

* Success-Appropriate = Match the patterns to the students.  Very young children will be very successful with simple patterns; older kids can practice more complex ones. If you have kids in your class with physical or cognitive variations, make the pattern something they will be able to repeat.

Variations:

_________________________________________________________________