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- The basic elements of music
- Time elements
- Musical meter activities
Materials and preparation
- You won't need any audio equipment for this one, but if you play piano (or guitar), you may want to choose songs you can accompany.
- Again, choose songs with a variety of meters. Some students will find singing and clapping at the same time to be more of a challenge; choose simple songs that the children already know how to sing confidently, with a steady, consistent beat and strong rhythm. Songs that they are already learning in music class are an excellent choice.
Procedure
- The procedure is similar to the "Listen for Meter" procedure. This time, the children will tap their toes and clap while they are singing.
- When listening for simple or compound meter, let the students take turns; some will sing while others are counting the beats and divisions of beats. If the melody is very simple, older students with more musical experience may be able to sing "one-and-two-and-etc.", to the tune, but remember that the rhythm of the song is not the same as the meter, and the two will not always match up, even in a simple song.
Suggested simple songs to sing
- "Yankee Doodle" (duple simple)
- "London Bridge" (duple simple)
- "Row, Row, Row Your Boat" (duple compound)
- "Three Blind Mice" (duple compound)
- "Did You Ever See a Lassie" (triple simple)
- "Home on the Range" (triple simple)
- "Clementine" (triple; some people give this folk song a simple meter straight-eighth-note feel; others give it a
swing , compound feel)
- "Amazing Grace" (triple; again, some people sing "straight" simple meter; others sing "swing" compound meter)
- "Frere Jaque" (quadruple simple)
- "America the Beautiful" (quadruple simple)
- "I've Been Working on the Railroad" (quadruple; simple or compound, depending on how you sing it)
Dance with meter
Objectives and assessment
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Grade Level - preK (if developmentally ready) - 12
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Student Prerequisites - Students should be able to accurately identify and move to the beat of heard music.
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Teacher Expertise - The teacher should be familiar and comfortable with the terms and concepts regarding
meter , should be able to accurately and easily identify heard meter, and should be comfortable leading the choreographed movements with the beat.
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Time Requirements - If you have plenty of music, this activity may take one (approximately 45-minute) class period. It may also be done as a short (5-15-minute) warm-up to other music activities or as a break from desk work, or you may do it with
Listen for Meter or
Sing with Meter to fill one class period.
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Objectives - The student will learn a simple, repetitive choreography that reflects the meter of the music, and perform it accurately and on the beat.
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Extensions - Advanced students may be asked to design a set of movements that works well with the meter.
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Evaluation - During the activity, assess whether each student is learning the movements correctly and moving with the beat and meter.
Materials and preparation
- Do at least one of the other meter activities above before this one, so that the students are familiar with the concept.
- Find music with a variety of (steady) meters and
tempos that the students will enjoy moving to.
- Bring tapes or CDs of the music and an audio player to class. Have the tapes ready to play your selections, or know the track numbers for CD selections.
- Before the activity begins, you may want to work out at least one sample choreography for each meter. Depending on the students' abilities, this can be as simple as marching (left-right-left-right) to a duple meter, or something much more involved. Reserving steps, hops, turns, and other weight-shifting movements for strong beats is best. Make sure you always do the same thing on the same beat: step forward on one, back on two, for example. Kicks, foot slides and shuffles, are fine for weaker beats. Try using claps, finger snaps, and other things that don't involve shifting the entire body, for the "and" and "and-a" upbeats.
Procedure
- You may have the students decide the meter of each piece (see activities above), or simply tell them. The point of this activity is to "act out" the meter physically.
- Teach the students your choreography, pointing out how it fits the meter of the music.
- Let them "dance" to the music.
- Try a different piece with a different meter or
tempo and different choreography.
- As the students get the idea, encourage them to come up with motions to be incorporated into the new choreography. You may let the students design the entire choreography themselves, but make sure that it "fits" the meter.
Recognize meter in time signatures
Objectives and assessment
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Grade Level - 4 - 12
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Student Prerequisites - Students should be able to accurately identify meter in heard music, and should understand the concept of written
time signatures in
common notation .
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Teacher Expertise - The teacher must be knowledgeable about basic aspects of music reading and performance.
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Time Requirements - If you have plenty of music, this activity may take one (approximately 45-minute) class period. It may also be done as a short (5-15-minute) warm-up to other music activities or as a break from desk work, or you may do it with
Listen for Meter or
Sing with Meter to fill one class period.
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Objectives - The student will accurately identify the meter of a piece of music presented aurally, and will write a time signature that would be appropriate for the heard meter.
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Extensions - Advanced students can be given difficult examples: pieces with unusual meter (such as 5/4), complex or subtle rhythms, mixed meter, or borrowed meters.
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Evaluation - Assess student learning by grading written answers. For testing purposes, choose pieces with a clear and unchanging meter, and play or sing each selection for a reasonable length of time.
Procedure
- Identify each piece by name, or assign each a number or letter. Have the students write down the name, number, or letter of each piece.
- Once they have identified the meter of a piece (in
Listen for Meter or
Sing with Meter , or this may also be part of the written assignment), ask them to write down, next to its name, number, or letter, a possible time signature for it. Note that there will be several possible correct answers, although some may be more likely than others. Can they identify more than one possible time signature for the same meter?
- For an added level of difficulty, identify a rhythm in the piece and ask them to write the rhythm correctly in the time signature they have chosen.
- You may also want to ask: does the melody of each piece begin on "one", or are there
pickup notes ?
Questions & Answers
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Can you compute that for me. Ty
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Source:
OpenStax, The basic elements of music. OpenStax CNX. May 24, 2010 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10218/1.8
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