Faculty & Students
The most critical relationships in any school are those between faculty and students. Student success will depend on the individuals recruited by the Administration and their ability to design and implement programs with the interests and needs of students in mind.

 

Text Size
Thursday, 29 December 2016 14:00

Matching Spoons

Written by 
Rate this item
(0 votes)

Materials:

--Clear, plastic spoons

--Sharpies

Preparation: 

1. Use one color sharpie to draw a note or rest on a plastic spoon.  Use another color sharpie to write a corresponding number (value in beats.)  The pair should be stackable; when stacked, both the note and the value in beats should be visible.

2. Make multiple pairs of notes you want students to know, and only a few pairs of notes you are less worried about teaching

Directions:

1. Dump spoons on floor, students see who can find most pairs.

Notes:

--Photograph is from Pinterest article, which uses white spoons for note values and clear spoons for number of beats.

--The number should be the total number of beats on the spoon, regardless of how many notes are present.  (3 eighths bracketed in a triplet=1 beat, 2 quarter rests=2 beats)

--Use ties, sixteenth notes, etc. to help expand what students have seen.  Even if they don't know a few pairs, they will be able to figure out by eliminating the pairs they do know.

--Works best with 1-5 students, so if using with larger class, do so with stations. 

--Could use this same idea to teach various other musical concepts.  I plan on doing with chords in root position, which would require triplets that match rather than pairs.  

Read 5424 times Last modified on Thursday, 29 December 2016 14:37
More in this category: « Instrument Bingo
Login to post comments

CMC Universal Login