Sunday, October 11, 2015

Musical Assessment and Professional Productivity with Technology

This week topics were about technology and how the teachers use technology administratively. Technology has helped many fields and teaching was no exception. It has helped teachers to be more productive in their classroom. With these organization tools, teachers have more time to focus on the students. The class this week looked at how to be a productive music teacher using theses tools.

When looking at how we are productive we must ask many questions about what we want to teach the students?  How can we keep good records and assessments on the students so they also get the most from administrative time? Can other teachers help with their method of using technology for administrative time? I think theses answers can be easily answered with this week's topic. There are many tools available to the teacher so that they can be more productive and organized.

A tool we worked with this week was Google Docs. This is a free service that is offered from Google and all you need to do is sign up for a new email. The user has many functions to choose from when using Google Docs. Making a newsletter was one of the tasks this week and it was easy to understand how to use the newsletter function. This also allows the user to share the document with other users. The users can make changes and the owner of the document can see who made the changes. This is a great function that can help the teacher provide accurate information in their newsletters.

Quizzes or questionnaires are easily made in Google Docs. This information allows the teacher to get an instant assessment once the quiz or questionnaire is finished. This also can be sent to parents to fill out vital information need for trips or other question the teacher might have. Google Slides allows the user to make a presentation that is saved on Google drive with all the other documents that can be made. You can easily embed YouTube videos or pictures on the information that needs be included in a presentation.

Google’s calendar also can be shared with others. This can be great for teachers who send out performance schedules. This can also allow parents and teacher to effectively communicate with each other. The teacher can also make changes that are updated instantly. Organization can make a student's life easier and can be easily accomplished with a little time. There are great tools out there for the teacher to use to accomplish being organized.

Technology can help the private teacher be more organized and help make their students better. This can happen when the teacher makes his or her own lesson sheet. This allows the students to remember what was coved in their lessons. Financial records let the teacher know when the students have paid for the lesson and also allows for excellent bookkeeping. PayPal is a financial tool that can automatically track when the students make a payment. This also allows the teacher to accept credit cards for a small fee.


Making a personal website is also great for the private teacher. There are many sites that allow the user to make the website for free and included a link to PayPal on their site. The teacher could include a calendar so that students and parents could view their lesson time. They could also change it if the teacher is free on a different day. Whatever the teaching situation technology has enhanced how teachers can assess the students. They can make rubrics and post them so that students know the expectations. With a world of technology, there are many, many options for administrative use and it starts with the teacher. This can use to help create a better environment for the learning.

Musical Assessment and Professional Productivity with Technology


This week topics were about technology and how the teachers use technology administratively. Technology has helped many fields and teaching was no exception. It has helped teachers to be more productive in their classroom. With these organization tools, teachers have more time to focus on the students. The class this week looked at how to be a productive music teacher using theses tools.

When looking at how we are productive we must ask many questions about what we want to teach the students?  How can we keep good records and assessments on the students so they also get the most from administrative time? Can other teachers help with their method of using technology for administrative time? I think theses answers can be easily answered with this week's topic. There are many tools available to the teacher so that they can be more productive and organized.

A tool we worked with this week was Google Docs. This is a free service that is offered from Google and all you need to do is sign up for a new email. The user has many functions to choose from when using Google Docs. Making a newsletter was one of the tasks this week and it was easy to understand how to use the newsletter function. This also allows the user to share the document with other users. The users can make changes and the owner of the document can see who made the changes. This is a great function that can help the teacher provide accurate information in their newsletters.

Quizzes or questionnaires are easily made in Google Docs. This information allows the teacher to get an instant assessment once the quiz or questionnaire is finished. This also can be sent to parents to fill out vital information need for trips or other question the teacher might have. Google Slides allows the user to make a presentation that is saved on Google drive with all the other documents that can be made. You can easily embed YouTube videos or pictures on the information that needs be included in a presentation.

Google’s calendar also can be shared with others. This can be great for teachers who send out performance schedules. This can also allow parents and teacher to effectively communicate with each other. The teacher can also make changes that are updated instantly. Organization can make a student's life easier and can be easily accomplished with a little time. There are great tools out there for the teacher to use to accomplish being organized.

Technology can help the private teacher be more organized and help make their students better. This can happen when the teacher makes his or her own lesson sheet. This allows the students to remember what was coved in their lessons. Financial records let the teacher know when the students have paid for the lesson and also allows for excellent bookkeeping. PayPal is a financial tool that can automatically track when the students make a payment. This also allows the teacher to accept credit cards for a small fee.


Making a personal website is also great for the private teacher. There are many sites that allow the user to make the website for free and included a link to PayPal on their site. The teacher could include a calendar so that students and parents could view their lesson time. They could also change it if the teacher is free on a different day. Whatever the teaching situation technology has enhanced how teachers can assess the students. They can make rubrics and post them so that students know the expectations. With a world of technology, there are many, many options for administrative use and it starts with the teacher. This can use to help create a better environment for the learning.

Sunday, October 4, 2015

Instructional Design and Technology

This week the class covered many important topics that can relate music technology and music in the classroom. All the elements covered in the reading related to TPACK. The chapter started with how people learn, Driscoll (2002) describes learning as contextual, active, social, and reflective. Collectively these ideas are often referred to as constructivism. This helps the teacher to form questions about the students learning process. How does the lesson fit in with the goal? What activities keep students actively participating in music? How is the social structure of the class helpful to students focus? Are the goals for learning being met and does it reflect in their learning? These can all be aided with this week reading.

This week we also covered project-based learning, which is wonderful in a classroom setting. It also helps the students with the social skills as they learn that everyone has ideas to add to the group. This can help the students discover new ways to think about the world around them. This can be a wonderful tool to use in music as input from all the students can make them better musicians. Backwards design was also a topic in the chapter. This is a cornerstone of being a musician in my personal opinion. This not only applies to teaching which is a very important skill to have, but it also shows in every performance. If we take a look at backwards design from a preparing music view. It is very easy to see that it fits in with teaching also. The teacher has to start with the big idea or the pieces that would go on a concert. Then we can work backwards and ask many of the questions that need to be answered.

The teacher has to ask how do I get the students to the goal? That is the same as the musician asking how do I get ready for the concert? It can come from following three core steps. Step 1 the learning outcome or what is the student learning from my big idea and how do I get them to learn the task? Most of the major ideas will already be established by a National standard. Step 2 assessment, we have to assess the students to understand if step 1 is working. This allows the teacher to see if the  students are learning or understanding the major idea that needs to be taught. Step 3 planning learning details; the teacher must plan the tasks that will guide the student to the big idea.  All these steps are similar to any concert planning. You would know the concert date, know the audience, and prepare music that is appropriate to the setting. The small details are in also. It is important to remember that all of this is fluid and can change based on the situation or the student.

Logistical support is important to any part of teaching and having technological resources can add to your planning. If you lack logistical support it allows for the teacher to be creative in the process that they must use to get the same outcome. With the internet in most homes this allows the technology to go home with students, this can still be a hurdle with some student. Sharing the world of music can have its own hurdles before introducing it to the students. Copyright Laws can seem like a stopping point, but a little knowledge about their use can have a great advantage for the teacher. Fair use is an important to know for non-profit education institutions. This can allow the teacher to choose many different styles of music to introduce them to the student.

Public domain materials are available and free for the user. This is wonderful for schools that have underfunded music programs and it allows the teacher to be more resourceful. There are many website devoted to public domain music that can help the teacher achieve their goal and help their students. Teachers also have access to creative commons that provides free copyright licenses for use.  Technology in the classroom has helped the teacher reach the student in new ways, but it also can go much further than the classroom. Having a little time and ingenuity can make your students better musicians.

Sunday, September 27, 2015

Responding to Music with Technology

This week’s class started with reading in Music Learning Today by William Bauer. The starting of chapter five the story of Elizabeth a middle school general music teacher. Even though she was a middle school general music teacher, her passion and most of her education had been in choral programs. She was up to the task of teaching a general music class and wanted to instill the qualities that made her love choirs. At the start of her teaching, this was not a great strategy. The students did not respond to her teaching and they also showed no interest in the music that she had a passion for. So she decided to take a different approach to teaching music to her classes. Elizabeth had included the students in their own learning of music. This made the students excited about music and most of the problem that she had in the class went away.

When I look at this story it helps to remind me of a few things to remember about teaching. What music do students like? How can I make this a part of their lesson and still get them to the goal? How can technology help make them better musicians? What kind of music would they like to make? Students are all different each one has a different personal preference in music. We can start to answer some of these questions by just listening to the students. Having the student make a list of songs or share a song with class is a great incite on how to engage the students in making music. When a student can relate to the music they are making it draws them closer to the music. The participation is better and the students care about the music they make. This also makes the students willing explore new music to perform.

In the class this week we also look at a very powerful teaching tool Zaption. This website has a lot to offer the teacher and the student. When using the website you can take a video of what you like to cover and insert question about the video. This is also helpful for assessment and it can also be used in many situations. Also in the class we had to evaluate music software. I choose an ear training program called EarMaster. I have used other programs like EarMaster before, but this one was good for the beginner as well as the student who had taken ear training. We also used Diigo this week a website that organizes your bookmarks and allows you to tag them for later use. This week's assignments were beneficial to continue our look a music technology. The class also continues to expand our knowledge of what we can do to help a student become better musicians and performers.

Sunday, September 20, 2015

Performing Music with Technology

The focus this week was on the performance and how students use technology that can help them become better musicians. A piece of software that was used as a great example this week was Smart Music. This program allows the user to practice their instrument using a microphone as software records and tracks the performance of the student. This is very beneficial to the student and to the teacher. The student will know when they are not with the rhythm because the notes will be in red and the correctly played notes will be green. There was a discussion about smart music and students tone this was a focus of the discussion with many different types of educators. The teacher cannot rely on Smart Music as the only way to teach an instrument. Smart Music does create an advantage by giving the teacher more time to focus on tone during lesson or class. The teacher can also critique the students and also have the student self-critique by using Smart Music.

YouTube is the wealth of knowledge and anyone can find variety performances on the website. It also allows others to show their skills on their specific instruments. This can help the students learn about their own instrument. This helps the student advance with tone, technique, and other pedagogy areas then the students uses YouTube as a practice aid. This also gives the students an excellent way to listen to their own instrument and gain an aura appreciation about their own instrument. They can also record themselves and put themselves on YouTube for others to critique their performance.  They can also take  lessons from famous musicians who have posted videos on YouTube.

This week with Lynda.com the class continued with the digital audio principal chapters.  The first topic covered microphones this is an important topic for a teacher to know when recording their ensembles. The videos discussed three specific types of microphones that could be used in many different situations depending on the ensemble. The next topic covered audio input and output are bridges to soundboards or computer. These devices can be used in conjuncture with the next topic mixer. Mixers can be used in many different situations outside of the recording studio.  Using a mixer can allow the performers to have a better sound for their audience.

Computers and audio have been vital to recording and producing music. They also have a major influence in music technology.  This combined with the correct software can give modern musician more tools when working with music technology. After editing music has been complete using music technological advances the musician can now publish their own work. When choosing a format there are many options depending on what the recording is used for. Formatting music will take audio compression tools that can make the recording in a common format for the average listener.

This week the class used a program called Audacity, this program is a file share and free for use. Along with the download, you also have install the correct audio file compression software. This allows you have an MP3 of the edited music. Audacity shut down many times during my use of the program, which made it difficult at times to complete the assignments. This could be a positive teaching tool if the teacher could devote time to the program. Overall it did show how the process of editing and creating music in digital audio files.

When looking back at this week's topics  there are many important questions to ask about their use in classrooms or lessons. What do the students gain from the use Smart Music? Where does Youtube fit into the teachers lesson plans? Why is it important to use these tool  when thinking about to goal of performance? What kind of software can we use to teach students get their personal recording to the public?

Theses questions are not simple to answer and they take the time to complete and put into practice during the lessons. If the student starts to use these tool in small projects then they can become like second nature and make the students musical experience better.

Sunday, September 13, 2015

Soundtrap.com

Soundtrap.com is an interesting website that is very similar to Incredibox.com. There are differences you can create a song with Soundtrap.com that is use many different voices that are available in small sections. There are so many different choices it makes it difficult to know where to start. I created my song with four sounds that are the constant background. The tutorial does not offer much when starting but if you play around with the website things become clear. I worked with the website for around 3 hours to produce a song that was around three minutes long. I did have difficulty with moving the loops around, but I just deleted the loop and replaced it where I wanted in the song. The useful features are that I could play the sounds over the composition before selecting them. This website has many possibilities for the students composer and the teacher. Students from a non-traditional backgrounds could create a composition for the other students to hear and receive feedback.


The creative possibilities with Soundtrap.com and other websites all up to the user. The teacher could ask the student to each create a movement for a larger piece. The students could also use a picture or a memory to create a new song on Soundtrap.com. If the student were given proper guidance this would affect their learning in both traditional and non-traditional setting. The teacher must be willing to give a small amount of time to make technology and non-traditional learning possible. Through this type of learning using Soundtrap.com and other websites like it could expand the student knowledge of the music world around them.

https://www.soundtrap.com/playlink/139663cf-b708-4cde-aded-2e12cdee4a99/

Non-Traditional Learning

This week the started with an introduction to the website Lynda.com. The website is devoted to learning about many varying topics. This week topic for the class was on the technology used by many musicians. The videos gave a very detailed about summary about technology, sound, and audio files. The first video explained the difference in the quality and the size of the recording.  This would show that small files contained less quality. The next topic was about the digital audio workstation. This was a good view of what a professional uses when editing or mixing music that has been recorded. I was thinking of how this could benefit the student user? Teaching this portion to a student is similar to garage band or similar software it gets them on the path to using editing software.

Cables and connector also a topic used in the video. This topic is a great for students that are musicians or want to make music. You have to know how to choose the right cables to use at the right time. I remembered at one time in my musical career thinking how does this affect my job? When I started playing with an Army Jazz combo the entire group is required to have some knowledge of the cables that are used to run the soundboard and the sound system.  This would also apply to any student that wanted to use this knowledge for his or her own music groups or recording these groups.

Computers and audio can be a tricky topic for professional that you asked for their advice. I know that most student and even professional that don’t use computers and audio equipment well. It is very important for all musicians to understand how this equipment works. Understand computers and audio equipment will include working with midi sounds that are made in the binary langue is also very important. These files can have a use for students looking to compose or share the music they have written. With all the topics on Lynda.com that were covered were very detailed and serve as a great tool for teachers to offer to their students to supplement their own learning.

The class also worked with other non-traditional music methods this week. Soundtrap.com is a wonderful website that allows users to create their own melody based on small snippets. Through this website, you can engage your students that are looking to make music but not wanting join one of the traditional musical groups a school has to offer. They can also share this with others and receive feedback. This is also important to any musician to make them grow.

This did bring up many questions about non-traditional learning and technology. How can students use these tools effectively supplement with traditional ensembles? Where else could this be beneficial to 80 percent of students that are not in these traditional ensembles? How do you add this into a busy schedule for student learning? With many of these question, it seems if you add these lesson into small increments then the students could benefit from these non-traditional learning tools.