Jackie Wiggins
(jhwiggin@oakland.edu)
is Assistant Professor and coordinator of music education at Oakland University,
where she teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in music education.
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 JACKIE
WIGGINS
xperienced
general music teachers who are accustomed to working within highly structured
curricula, developed over years of practice, are often unsure about the
role technology can play in their classrooms. Many fear that, in order
to move into the 21st century, they will have to abandon what they hold
dear. Often they are uncertain as to how to go about integrating technology
into existing curricula. Still others fear the impending obsolescence
of acoustic instruments. There are several answers to those who hold these
concerns.
First
of all, synthesizers are instruments. They can be used in the classroom
in many of the same ways music teachers already use xylophones, Autoharps
and classroom percussion and can be used side by side with these
acoustic instruments. The added benefit is that synthesizers have so many
more capabilities than traditional classroom instruments they offer
the students so many more possibilities. Also, electronic instruments
are the instruments of our students' world. Bringing them into the classroom
as one of the choices available to students gives a tremendous amount
of credibility to everything else we do. The students see the teacher
as an "expert" in one of the more important aspects of their culture.
Second, allowing students opportunities to make choices between electronic
and acoustic instruments allows them to understand the strengths of both
media. I have seen students work to create their own electronic drum tracks,
only to abandon them in search of acoustic drums that can replicate the
same patterns. It is not uncommon to see students use electronic media
as tools for creating and then choose to execute their final performance
on acoustic instruments. In my experience, I have found that children
value both media and tend to make appropriate choices, when given the
opportunity to do so.
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More specific information about the lesson
plans included in this article can be found inthese publications:
Composition in the Classroom: A Tool for Teaching
(Wiggins, MENC, 1990);
Synthesizers in the Elementary Music Classroom: An Integrated Approach
(Wiggins, MENC, 1991);
Toward Tomorrow: New Visions for General Music
(MENC, 1995);
...and in various articles:
Music Educators Journal
April 1989
May 1993;
General Music Today
Fall 1994,
Spring 1996;
Journal of Research in Music Education
Fall, 1994;
The Quarterly Journal of Music Teaching and Learning
Spring 1996.
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Third, and perhaps most important, it is possible that music curricula
that have no place for the music and media of the 21st century need to be
reevaluated. This does not mean discarding everything we hold dear
but it does mean taking a good look at what we are presently doing in our
classrooms. I have found the most productive place for electronic media
in the classroom is as tools for problem solving. Experts on learning tell
us that the optimum learning situation is one in which students need to
use what they know in order to solve problems. They also tell us that students
need opportunities to interact with subject matter on their own and with
peers. Can we find a place in our teacher-centered, teacher-directed music
classrooms for students to interact with music on their own and with peers?
Including electronic media in our classrooms provides us with wonderful
opportunities for students to make music independently from teachers.
hat
do musical problems look like? Some of the best problem solving activities
involve composition and improvisation.
Small groups, pairs or individuals can solve musical problems by creating
original compositions, using electronic and/or acoustic media, including
voice. Timbral choices should be made by the students. Compositional problems
can take many forms. The most successful are designed around more holistic
parameters, such as form, meter, texture, style or affect. Starting from
rhythm patterns or particular pitch combinations tends to be less successful
because students, in planning compositions, tend to conceive of the larger,
overriding characteristics first, and determine specific motivic material
later on in the process.
- Students can work in small groups or independently to write original
songs and create performance arrangements of those songs using electronic
and/or acoustic instruments. They can teach their arrangements to peers
and develop performances of original works.
- Students can draw upon what they have learned through performance
and analytical listening experiences to create original works. For example,
students who have analyzed songs and pieces for their metric structure
can work with peers to develop a piece that changes meter from "twos"
to "threes" and back to "twos." Students who have studied ABA form,
through analysis of songs they have performed and pieces they have listened
to, might be asked to create an original work in ABA form.
- After having studied the ways in which a particular composer generated
a certain affective response in the listener (such as the way Grieg
manipulates various musical elements to generate intensity and excitement
in the listener in his "In the Hall of the Mountain King"), students
might develop an original work that generates the same kind of effect.
Improvisational
problems can also be enhanced by the addition of electronic media:
- Students can explore sound sources, seeking alternate means of sound
production for conventional instruments and combining them with interesting
electronic sounds. The sounds can then be utilized in group improvisations
(whole class or small group).
- Much instrumental music of our children's experience is background
music movie and television themes and so on. Therefore, a good
starting place for free improvisation is to ask them to create the background
music for a particular mood or scene. Describe the mood or scene and
let the music begin naturally.
- Have students improvise background music for a video segment, such
as a short clip from an underwater nature show.
- Use synthesizers, Autoharps and/or guitars to establish underlying
harmonies for melodic improvisations on xylophones or resonator bells.
Arrange the bars of the solo instruments in chord patterns. Students
create melodies on the appropriate chords as they hear the harmony shift.
Keep chord progressions short and simple, but make each chord last long
enough for soloists to have the time to think.
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