Friday, September 26, 2014

ClassDojo

For some reason, my 5th graders have been particularly challenging this year.  Classes of beginners with nearly 50 students have been easier to manage than 2nd-year classes of 20.  It got me thinking about what I'm doing differently that could cause these kids to suddenly think it's OK to goof around in orchestra.

Don't get me wrong:  their behaviors, in the grand scheme of things, haven't been that bad--mostly talking and playing out of turn, but there's been some disrespectful behavior also.

So today I tried a new program with one of my 5th grade groups called ClassDojo.  ClassDojo is a program that allows teachers, students, and parents to record and communicate behaviors.  What I love most about the program is that the focus is on positive, not negative, behavior.

I used today to "dip our toes in," just to see what it was like.  First, we watched this video:

 Then, it was business as usual.  I was using it on my iPad, and it makes a friendly little "ding" whenever I give a student a positive point.  It also makes kind of a sad sound if I give a negative point.  Just the sound was enough to keep them paying attention for the entire period.  At the end of today, we had 81% positive points!  That's probably about where we were before, we're just paying more attention now.

The kids were REALLY excited about it!  A lot more excited than I thought they would be.  I didn't get their Secret Codes printed off before class because I really didn't think they would care as much as they did, but lots of kids couldn't wait to see how they did at the end of class.  They're also excited to customize their avatars.  

I also sent an e-mail to parents to explain what it's all about.  Parents can also log in to ClassDojo to find out in real time how their son or daughter is doing.  It also has a pretty slick messenger tool--it's a lot like texting but I don't have to share my cell phone number :)

My hope is that using ClassDojo will reduce the number of times in a day I have to say, "Please don't talk between songs," or "Wait to play!"  In the long run, I think it will result in more disciplined classes, and disciplined classes make happy teachers!

How do you use ClassDojo in your room?  What successes have you had?  What should I watch out for?  Any other apps I can't live without?  I'd love to hear from you!

Friday, August 29, 2014

New Room! (Preview)

I have a new classroom!

It doesn't have a desk... or a whiteboard... or any storage for instruments... but I have a new classroom!

Luckily, we recruit in the fall, so it's not a HUGE deal that it's not done yet.  I am confident praying it will be done by the time we start in a few weeks.

Anyway, I'm still pretty excited.  I made these posters to hang on the otherwise-boring walls outside the room.  It brightens up the space, and I have to say I'm pretty proud of the music-advocacy statement they make.  Plus, it's one small thing I feel like I have a little control over :)

Please excuse the crooked/blurry pictures.  I almost got trampled by the 2nd graders on their way out to recess!

I made one for band too.  Don't want them to feel left out!
Stay tuned for pictures of the inside!  Right now it's not ready for company yet...

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

What's in your Sub Tub?



The general music teachers in my district have Sub Tubs.  How brilliant is that?


It's basically a box of emergency sub plans in case you get a non-orchestra sub.  And the likelihood of that happening is pretty high. My principals allow me to cancel class if I can't find an orchestra sub (if they're not going to be learning orchestra AND they're missing whatever they're pulled out from, is it a good use of time?), but I thought it was time to make a Sub Tub just in case.

These ideas came from all over the place.  Some of them are from our method book.  (I'm telling you, Orchestra Expressions is the best method book ever--they even include sub plans!)  Others came from Pinterest (LOVE Pinterest!), the School Orchestra and String Teachers Facebook page (LOVE this group!), and my colleagues (LOVE my colleagues!)  

In the Sub Tub, I included a "Menu" so the sub can do activities they feel comfortable with.  Sneakily, the menu items are listed in the order I prefer they be done :)

Even if the sub feels comfortable having them play, I ABSOLUTELY DO NOT have them tune.  Unless they're a string player, I feel like it's just going to mean lots of broken strings.

Requests-My kids love to play requests.  Sometimes we do this if we have a few extra minutes at the end of a lesson (this rarely happens.)

Solo for a Sticker-Students take turns playing a solo for the class and earn a sticker to put on their folder.  Audience members are expected to show good concert etiquette.

D and A String Notes Koosh Game-One of my colleagues made this game and it is GREAT!  The kids get to take turns  throwing a Koosh ball at the SmartBoard.  The spot they hit takes them to a note to name.  Then back to the first slide and repeat!

Note Reading/Rhythm Practice on Chromebooks-Our district is 1:1 with Google Chromebooks.  It's awesome.  I have a bunch of links for note reading and rhythm games at my website.

Instrument Biography-This idea came from Tricia Laux.  It is a writing activity.  The kids can either write it by hand the "old fashioned" way or share it with me on Google Drive.  In it, they tell me the (fictional) story of their instrument.
  • Full Name of Instrument, Birth Date
  • Where was it “born?” Who made it?
  • Details on travels, experiences
  • Who has played it, injuries
  • Any other details
Youtube-I made a Youtube favorites list of pre-viewed, orchestra-appropriate videos and shared the password on the sub menu.  As always, I'd be careful to show students' suggestions (and they will have many) unless it's a video you've already seen and know it's appropriate.  Please learn from my mistake: When I was student teaching, I showed the Pachelbel Rant to some 8th grade students.  (Worth a watch if you're a string person and haven't seen it)  It has a mild curse word at the end and I felt HORRIBLE.  I'm sure it was nothing they hadn't heard before, but I was still really embarrassed and hope it never happens again.

Rhythm War-Like the card game War, but with notes.  See the original post here.

Orchestra Bingo-Stolen from the same brilliant colleague as the Koosh game, this Bingo set has a "word bank" or terms and symbols and kids fill out their own cards.  I'll probably throw a bag of Frooties in the tub for prizes.

Note Naming Dice-I saw these dice online but can't find the link anymore!  Should have saved it when I saw it.  Anyway, they are 8-sided dice with the D and A string notes on them.  The kids roll them, then name the note (or finger).  If I ever find them, I'm going to color-code them to make sure the kids are reading the right notes for their instrument. (Also, if you know where I saw it, PLEASE post a comment!!)

Orchestra Expressions Sub Plans-I am wild about our method book, Orchestra Expressions (and the publisher is NOT paying me to say that!), and they included a couple of sub/supplemental plans.  One is a composition activity and the other is listening.

I'd gladly post some of the files for the activities listed here, but it doesn't look like Blogger supports that.  If you'd like anything, send me a message and I'd be happy to e-mail you.

What do you put in your sub tub?  I know there are other great ideas out there!  I love to steal ideas, so if you have anything, please post it in the comments!

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Orchestra is AWESOME!

What a busy summer!  I taught a bunch of private lessons, started my Master's degree, and my husband and I took a trip to Europe.  It's almost slower now that we're back to school!

The beginning of the year is kind of a big deal for us in our district.  We do fall recruiting, so now is the time to get kids excited about (and signed up for) orchestra.  I'm really thankful to have good numbers in all my schools and also really thankful that I went from having 4 schools last year to 3 this year.  Everything seems a lot less crazy!

Recruiting 4th graders (beginners in my district) is one of my favorite things.  I love to play the instruments for them and see their excitement when they get to play the instruments themselves for the first time.  This year, my theme is movie music.  I've actually used it for a couple of years now and it seems to work well.  Here's what I'm playing on each instrument:

Violin-theme from Star Wars
Viola-Let it Go from Frozen
Cello-Everything is Awesome from the Lego Movie (Keep reading for more on Everything is Awesome!)
Bass-Theme from Jaws (naturally)

I'll admit that I try to stack the deck a little bit so I don't end up with a violin-only orchestra.  Picking popular tunes to play on the viola and cello seems to get kids a little more excited about playing those instruments.  For some reason, I never have a shortage of bass players. (Until they get to 5th grade, at least... if you have the secret for keeping bass players, please share!)

After they hear the demonstration, the kids get to play the instruments!  I know some people get worried about letting the kids play without proper form, but there is nothing in the world like getting to hold and play an instrument.  These kids get so excited to saw away and I love to see their enthusiasm.

Now back to "Everything is Awesome."  I never saw the Lego Movie, but one of my colleagues is really fired up about the song.  I Youtubed it yesterday and it is such a catch tune!  It's been stuck in my head for a day and a half!  In case you haven't seen it, here's the clip.  Watch at your own risk!

This particular colleague used the tune in her recruiting, changing the words to "Orchestra is Awesome," and I really liked that.  Maybe that can be our theme for the year!

 A Lego orchestra!  How awesome is that!?

How do you recruit?  What could I try to make my recruiting even better?  And, most importantly, what do I do to keep my bass players between 4th and 5th grade?

And if you're a public school strings teacher, (or I guess anybody, for that matter) have a great year!

Friday, May 2, 2014

Anchor Charts

I love Pinterest, and a lot of the people I'm following are teachers.  As a result, a lot of anchor charts show up in my feed.  Most of those anchor charts, though, are for subjects like math and reading.  Really important stuff, but hanging a poster of the revision process in my orchestra room doesn't make a lot of sense.

This wonderful idea of posters that help kids out with the material, a personal insistence that my students WILL learn to read their notes, and my excitement about my new classroom next year really got my brain buzzing.  It didn't take too long for Google to reveal that there wasn't much on the web for Alto clef.  Big surprise, huh?  Not wanting my army of viola players to feel out of the loop (and I'm proud to say I have TONS of violas!), I set out to make my own.  A lot of it is ripped off from other stuff I've seen, but that's what good teaching is, right?  Stealing good ideas?

In the spirit of orchestra teacher camaraderie, I thought I'd share with you.  Please forgive the so-so quality.  If you'd rather have the word file so you can tweak it to make it your own, please leave your e-mail address in the comments.  Admittedly, I would be skeeved out by that, but I've already done all the work, so if you don't mind it, more power to you!

Self-explanatory, I guess.  This is the process we always use when learning a new piece of music.

This I stole from a "Recorder Doctors" poster.  Encourage the kids to solve their own problems with sound!
Like the "Orchestra Doctors" poster, but I like this one better.  Here's a related, really bad joke:
What do you call an alligator in a vest?
An INVESTIGATOR!
A chart with expectations for unpacking time...
...and one with expectations for packing time.
And, finally, posters with the lines and spaces for treble, alto, and bass clef... and no forgotten violas!





I hope you find this stuff useful.  Heck, I hope I find this stuff useful.  Here's to better note readers!  And in case I don't have a chance to post again in the next few weeks, I hope your year wraps up excellently and that you have a great summer!

Friday, April 4, 2014

Mark O'Connor!

My principal told Mark O'Connor this afternoon that I was star-struck by him.  While it is true, I was a little embarrassed that she said it.

That's right... Mr. O'Connor was at our school today and my 4th and 5th graders got to meet him and hear him play!  He's in town to play a concert with the college orchestra and was working with select students from our school (from another program, unfortunately, not mine!) while he was here.  When I found out he was going to be at our school, I HAD to try to get something organized for my students.  What kind of teacher would I be if I didn't try?!  I ran into all kinds of dead ends trying to set something up, and I thought it wasn't going to happen.

This same principal who gave my little "fangirl" secret away gave me a great piece of advice:  try to track him down and ask him yourself if he'll meet with your kids.  It seems a little slimy, but that's what I did.

Yesterday afternoon, Mr. O'Connor gave a masterclass for the college orchestra and I was free so I went.  I stayed until the end and asked if he would be willing to meet with my kids today.  He is a super nice guy and didn't seem to mind at all.

We didn't really get a lot done in orchestra today.  By the time we talked a little bit about who we'd be seeing and reviewed the expectations (this part was very important!), that had pretty much used up our time.  It was worth it though.  Before long, it was 2:10--show time!

Mr. O'Connor played for them and answered some of their questions.  I have never seen those kids so silent!  It was funny to see kids watching him play with their mouths literally hanging open.  It was such a great experience for them and something I hope they'll never forget.

Before they left, he told them how much his teachers meant to him (Hope they'll be saying the same thing about me when they're famous!) and gave them cards for free audio downloads, which was super generous of him.  A couple kids who didn't have to ride the bus stuck around and he signed autographs.  Truly a really cool, nice guy in addition to world-class musician!

Here's a photo I took of him playing.  Notice how the orchestra students are sitting still and listening attentively! :)


I have the best job.

Friday, March 28, 2014

Concerts and Reflections

Long time, no see!

I hate to make excuses, but it's been super busy with concerts!  Since I teach in 4 schools, I have 4 spring concerts, plus the 5th graders do a festival to help recruit them into orchestra in 6th grade.  Plus solo and ensemble contest in April.  Plus my own playing.  Ah, concert season!

But speaking of concerts, I think it's really important for students (well, really everybody) to be reflective about their learning.  My beginners reflect on their learning after every concert (and hopefully more often than that!)  I try to get a video of each performance, then I put it on YouTube.  Even though I make it "Private" so no creepy people can watch my kids play, this is very exciting to them!  The next orchestra day after the concert, we eat popcorn and watch the video.  Then we reflect.

What did you learn?
What went well?
What could have been better?

I also have them "rate" their posture/playing position, bow hold, and how comfortable they were with the music, and have them tell me their favorite song and why.

The questionnaire is pretty heavily based on one the band teacher used at my previous job.  It was so great, I had to steal it!  The kids don't seem to mind filling them out--in fact, because I bring popcorn, they think it's a party! And we really do get some insightful reflections.  They often surprise me, saying things like "I liked our tone" or "We didn't really play that together."  These are beginners!

This activity is so great because it helps the kids realize how much they have learned, especially this time of year when the going is starting to get tough--more notes and more skills sometimes gets to be overwhelming.  I also love that it helps us focus our learning and set goals for the next concert.

Of course, we always save some time for a fun YouTube video at the end.  This time, it was the Piano Guys' version of Let it Go from Frozen.  Fantastic!

(If you are a music teacher and you haven't subscribed to the Piano Guys, DO IT NOW!  They are great!)



So take some time to reflect with your kiddos.  The sense of accomplishment and the sense of direction doing an activity like this provides is so valuable.

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Orchestra Minute to Win It

A couple summers ago, my husband and I really got into Minute to Win It, a game show that had one-minute challenges that got progressively more difficult.  As the challenges got harder, they were worth more prize money.  One of the challenges that I always thought seemed IMPOSSIBLE was having the contestant stack apples on top of each other without them falling.  Doesn't that seem cruel?  It was a summer filler series and it's not on anymore, which kind of bums me out because it was a fun show.


I got the idea to play Minute to Win It in my classroom from another orchestra blogger.  You can find her ideas here.  Most of what I did was borrowed from her, so I really can't take any credit at all!  We played the day before President's Day break as a reward (read:  bribe) for keeping instruments in the proper spots. 

When the kids came into the room, I had groups of chairs set up so they could get into teams.  I let them pick their own teams with a little guidance.  A couple of the games depended on having at least one violin/viola or cello/bass on each team, so I tried to help them out that way.  I also made sure to encourage them to pick teammates that wouldn't get them in trouble :)  Teams of 4-5 worked well for me and on the day I did it, my largest group was 25.  I don't know if I would be brave enough to do it with some of my larger groups, because 25 did get a little crazy.

I put a description of each activity (and a list of materials for me!) along with a timer on the SMARTBoard.  Most classes got about halfway through this list, but one class got them all done and even played a couple games a second time!  They LOVED it!

What's in a Name?
Teams had one minute to think of their team name.  We had some pretty hilarious ones.  One of my favorites was the Lactose-intolerant Spider Monkeys.

Rhythm Sorter

Materials:  Cups numbered 1-4, one set for each team; ping pong balls with rhythms written on them, one set of 12 for each team


One person plays this game.  Their job is to add up the number of beats on the ball and toss it into the cup with the correct number of beats.  This was kind of tough for them and the cups tended to tip over, so I ended up standing behind and picking up tipped cups.  At the end of a minute, the team with the most correct earned their team a point.

Note Roller
Materials:  Giant staff made from masking tape on the floor, ping pong balls (I used the same ones from the Rhythm Sorter.)



I had two people from each team come up for this one.  One person was in charge of rolling a ball onto the staff and naming the note it landed on.  I did verify that the note was correct :)  The other person stood on the other end of the staff (at the top) and their job was to roll the balls back and keep track of the number of correct notes.  The pair with the most correct notes at the end of the minute got a point.

Bow Balloons
Materials:  Balloons, student bows

One person from each team had to keep a balloon in the air for one minute using a good bow hold.  At first, I had them stand inside a tape square, but that was WAY too hard, so I let them go wherever they needed to.  I had envisioned that they would keep in in the air using the tip, but many kids flipped their bow so it was parallel to the floor and used the stick and the hair to keep the balloon up.  I wasn't too fussy about how they did it as long as their bow hold was OK.  This one was a riot!

Bass (or cello) Challenge
Materials:  Student bass (or cello)

This one was funniest for me if the kids used a bass, but since I don't have basses in all my groups, I thought a cello would work OK too.  For this one, a violin or viola player needed to unpack a bass and learn how to play Mary Had a Little Lamb.  Teammates could coach, but not do (for example, take out the endpin) or demonstrate.  I ended up giving one minute to unpack and one minute to learn the song since it is kind of hairy to get those basses out of the soft cases.  We played pizzicato so we didn't have to mess with the bow.  Anyone who could do it with no mistakes ("no mistakes" being a pretty loose term) got a point.

Violin (or viola) Challenge
Materials:  Student violin (or viola)

Same thing as the bass challenge, but a cello or bass player has to play on a violin.  This one was easily done in one minute total.  

Method Book Mayhem
Materials:  Student method books

In this game, I chose a random song and played it for the class.  It was up to the teams to figure out which song was played.  Each team who got it correct got a point.  This was a pretty easy one, but they liked it.

Balance Challenge
Materials:  Student violin/viola, rubber duck

Here, students balanced a rubber duck on their violin or viola for one minute without hands.  At first, I tried it with pennies and that was a disaster.  Thankfully, the PTA had some rubber ducks left over from a fundraiser and I borrowed a few!  Anybody who could do it got a point.


Balanced Bows
Materials:  Student bows

Students balanced a penny on their bent bow thumb for one minute.  I had them do it with their tip pointing at the ceiling.  A point for anyone who lasted the whole minute.  Another pretty easy one, but they enjoyed it.  

Scale Maker
Materials:  Masking tape fingerboards on the floor, Cards with the notes of the D scale, one for each team.

In this challenge, one student had to construct the D scale on a fingerboard on the floor.  For the 4th graders who haven't learned the D scale yet, I just called it their D and A string notes and it worked fine.  I gave them the cards scrambled so they had to think a little to get them in the right order.  I was a stickler for having the notes on the correct string (so the picture below would be correct for a viola or cello, but wrong for a violin) but did not penalize kids for incorrect half/whole step spacing.  Again, anybody who could do it got a point.



Do You Hear What I Hear?
Materials:  Student instruments

Starting with the instrument in its case, one person will unpack his or her own instrument and play a song by ear.  I had them do "Hot Cross Buns" just because it isn't in our method book.  "Twinkle" would be great too or really any tune you want.  A point was given to anyone who could play it for me at the end of a minute with no mistakes (I was a little harsher judge on this one since kids were playing their own instruments).  I only had one class get to this one, but they did well and seemed to like it.

Overall, it was a really fun time and I think I even tricked them into learning a little bit!  It was a LOT of work to set up, but I was here for conferences the night before we played so that worked out great.  The kids had a lot of fun and are already asking to play again!  It was perfect as a reward and we might even do it on the last day after instruments are turned in.  All in all, a great way to spend the last day before a break!

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

The Kids Need to Know

I'm a big fan of Kid President.  If you haven't heard of him, look him up on YouTube.  Do it now.  I'll wait.


This kid is so inspiring.  He is one of the most positive, enthusiastic people I know (well, I don't know him, but... you know what I mean.)  I would never have guessed that he has Osteogenesis Imperfecta, a brittle bone disease.  It's so uplifting that he doesn't let his condition define him.  You can read a lot more about this young man who we should really all model our lives after here.

I follow Kid President and the channel that posts his videos (among lots of other great stuff), SoulPancake.  Here's one of his latest gems.



In his video, Kid President asks the question:  What do kids need to know?  My answer to this question is that kids need to know how to create.  They need to know how to solve problems.  They need to know how to work with other people.  They need to know that some things are bigger than themselves.  And they can learn it all by participating in music.

At a time when arts education is in a somewhat dangerous spot, I think it's important that we reflect on all the benefits the arts really offer our kids.  More and more research is coming about about how arts and music education will make for smarter kids and higher test scores, yet funding continues to be cut for such programs.  It's really a shame and it's our students and our future that's taking the hit.

One of my Facebook friends posted this article the other day and it's just one of many I've read recently in support of music education.  Give it a read for yourself.  Then become an advocate for music education.  Because, after all, it's going to teach the kids what they need to know.

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Storage Solutions

We are fortunate to have strong (and big) band and orchestra programs at my schools, which is great except that storage is kind of a problem.  At one of my schools, we have over 100 orchestra students and 75 band students.  That's a lot of instruments and we don't have a lot of space.  There is just enough room for kids to store their instruments if they put them where we ask them to.  That's a big "if!"

I feel like I've tried a lot of things... I have picked instruments up and put them where they belong, I have moved them to a different spot so the kids come ask me where they are and we have the "was it where it was supposed to be?" conversation, I have tried letting them leave them wherever they want... it's driving me crazy!  So today I had an idea:  if we can keep our instruments put away for the next three weeks until President's Day break, we will have a party the last day before break.  The kids seem jazzed about it and already the room is much neater, which makes me a more relaxed and happy teacher :)  And hopefully three weeks will be long enough to make it a habit!

Neat room = happy teacher :)


My question is this:  how do I enforce?  If there's one chronic instrument laying around, does everybody else lose the party too?  What if a kid moves another kid's instrument so they can put theirs where it belongs?  (Believe it or not, it DOES happen!)  I'm going to make it "all-or-nothing," so that either everybody earns the party or no one does.  After all, we are a team and we all need to work together to keep this place organized!  Maybe we can have a few "strikes" so one stray instrument doesn't ruin everybody's chances.

Leave me a comment if you have an idea.  I am counting the days until we are in our new room!  Which, by the way, is next year!! (AND we will have more storage!  Yeah!)

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Superstars!

I have to admit, I stole this idea from a colleague, but it's so good I have to share it.

The method book we use is Orchestra Expressions published by Alfred.  I LOVE it, and they are not paying me to say that!  Although it's not perfect (no method book is!), it's probably the best I've worked with.  My favorite thing is that they provide rich accompaniment tracks as part of the teacher package, so the kids feel like they're making music even when they're just playing one note... but that's a different post :)

Anyway, the book identifies a couple of tunes per unit with asterisks and wants the kids to memorize those tunes.  My colleague came up with the BRILLIANT idea to type a list of those tunes and hand it out to the kids:  the "Star Chart."  When a student has one of the songs memorized, he or she can play it in the last 5 minutes of class, reserved for "Star Chart Time."  The kid earns a sticker for each Star Chart song memorized.  My colleague also gives a Frootie for each memorized song (see previous post about how much I love Frooties!), but I don't.  I suppose I could.


I decided to take it one step further and create a "Superstar Board" in my room.  For every 5 stickers earned, the student gets to decorate a star and hang it up where they want.  


The hope was that this incentive would increase home practice, but the jury's still out on whether or not it really helped.  I have 4 schools, and the kids seem really motivated at some schools, but not so much at others.  My hunch is that the kids who are earning stars are the ones who practiced before, and the non-practicers are still not practicing.

How do you motivate your students to practice?  We'll save the great "Practice Log" debate for another day.

Friday, January 10, 2014

Remember Frooties?

They used to have them at the bank when I was a kid.  My family also used to go to a Labor Day parade and the people on the floats used to throw them.  I loved filling my bag with all the different flavors--and they come in TONS of flavors.

I recently discovered that a local drug store sells them!  The bags they come in are enormous and they are cheap!  So I decided to have a "book check."  On a randomly selected day, any kid who had all their materials earned a Frootie.  I couldn't believe what a big difference it made!  Suddenly, I had kids saying, "I have my instrument and book today--is it a book check?"  "When are we having another book check?"  Lost books magically appeared, and kids who couldn't find theirs started coming up with money for replacements.

A teacher I work with said to me last week, "It's amazing what kids will do for ONE Tootsie Roll."  True story!

Thursday, January 9, 2014

How to Get a Good Sound

One of our big 4th grade objectives for this quarter is getting a good sound out of the instrument.  It's hard!  Lots of things have to be just right to get a nice tone.  The bow needs to be in the "sweet spot."  It needs to be straight.  It needs to be on the right string.  The left hand fingers need to be all the way down to the fingerboard.  Not to mention it's almost impossible to get a good sound with poor instrument position or bow hold.  Bless these kids for not quitting!

Our curriculum is great in that it includes a lot of preparatory exercises.  We use bow tubes (aka toilet paper tubes) to practice getting a straight bow before we even put the bow on the instrument.  After that, it's lots of open strings, and the kids seem to get a great sound.  Then we put fingers and bow together.  Suddenly, it's much harder to get a good sound.  I do a lot of demonstrating this time of year and a lot of moving kids' bows for them.  Cello players seem to have the toughest time, which is weird, because I'm a cellist.  What are you doing to help your kids get a beautiful sound?

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Where are all the Orchestra Bloggers?

I love Pinterest.  I love pinning stuff for my orchestra classroom.  But a lot of the things I pin are for the elementary general music classroom and I have to adapt them to use with my 4th and 5th graders.  Although I have found a lot of good "adaptable" stuff, I discovered another orchestra teacher's blog on Pinterest a few weeks ago and started wondering:  Why aren't there more of us doing this?

So here we go!  My hope is that through this blog, I can share some things that have worked for me and gain some knowledge from all the fabulous orchestra teachers out there.  Some days, I don't feel like I have it together at all, but maybe we can all muddle through together!

Let's jump in with both feet, shall we?  I'm looking for advice on how to handle kids who want to quit.  I find that this time of year is particularly challenging.  The 4th grade beginners are starting to learn more notes and skills and it's getting harder.  The 5th graders, who have one year of playing under their belt, start to learn music with multiple parts for spring festivals and concerts this time of year.  It's not easy!  And I have a handful of kids who want to give up.

I really think I'm in the business of teaching life skills just as much as teaching string technique, so I try to find out why a student is losing interest.  More often than not, it is because the material is getting harder.  I try to work through the problem with the kiddo and find out a solution.  I've even been known to have the "we need to finish what we start" conversation.

There's one little guy in particular who has probably missed 3 weeks of class and who just doesn't want to play anymore.  I've tried talking with him:  Is not coming to orchestra going to make it easier or harder?  Why is it important to finish what we start?  I've tried coming down hard:  When we sign up for orchestra, we sign up for the year.  I've tried getting his classroom teacher on my side.  Nothing has helped.

So help me out!  How do you handle tough kiddos like that?