Low Cost MusicTechnology Options For The Music Education Classroom
Low Cost MusicTechnology Options For The Music Education Classroom

Finding ways to stretch your budget in a music classroom is always important and even more so when trying to purchase high tech electronics, software, and other materials.  This article provides an updated list of dozens of different low cost or free alternatives to expensive music education products.  It includes such categories as music notation software, drill design software, special needs hardware, and many more.

 

The Star Spangled Banner- Free Sheet Music For Band Inst.
The Star Spangled Banner- Free Sheet Music For Band Inst.

This document contains sheet music for all common instruments to play The Star Spangled Banner, also known as the sheet music to the National Anthem of the United States of America. You can view the sheet music online or download the individual parts arranged for all common concert band instruments.  If you do not see your instrument listed please scroll to the bottom of the page and try one of the the other instruments.  Most musicians will be able to find at least one instrumental part that matches their range and preferred key signature.  If you are seeking a simple piano version of the song please select from the voice, trumpet, or alto saxophone versions.

 

Using Plickers as an Assessment Tool in the Music Education Classroom
Using Plickers as an Assessment Tool in the Music Education Classroom

Music, band, choir, and orchestra classrooms can be huge and assessing the knowledge and retention of individual students in such a large class can be daunting.  Plickers are one of several solutions that can be adapted to work in large groups, making the act of assessing a student’s understanding a little easier and a whole lot faster.  

Is Marching Band A Sport? Pros, Cons, and a Reality Check
Is Marching Band A Sport? Pros, Cons, and a Reality Check

In recent years the question of whether or not marching band is a sport has been brought up time and time again for various reasons and by various groups.  On one side you have the YES crowd who says that marching band is competitive, physically demanding, and every bit as much a team event as any traditional sporting event.  On the other side of the coin are those who say no, that marching band is NOT a sport and it is a musical pursuit that happens to involve coordinated movements.  Both sides are right, but to make a final decision we need to look deeper into the facts.  Read on to find out what they are!

Portable Digital Audio Recorder Buying Guide With Reviews
Portable Digital Audio Recorder Buying Guide With Reviews

Scroll down to view the comparison chart of over a dozen different portable digital audio recorders.

Buying a portable digital audio recorder is a major decision.  The balance between price, features, and quality is a fine line that has many different options to choose from.  There are dozens of different models of portable digital audio recorders, some of which have drastically different sets of features yet sell for roughly the same price.  This easy to read head to head comparison chart and guide to many of the more popular portable digital audio recorders is intended to help potential buyers more easily see these differences and make an educated buying decision.

Apps and More for the Choral Classroom
Apps and More for the Choral Classroom

The number of apps, software, and gadgets available for use in the music classroom continues to grow each year but finding things that can actually be beneficial to your classes grows more and more difficult as well.  We spoke with Dr. Christopher Russell, Director of Choirs at Oltman Middle School in St. Paul Park, Minnesota to get his must-have list of apps.

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In this next installment of little rules of thumb that we music teachers tend to forget from time to time I wanted to hit on something that is specific only to teaching instrumental music.  It's always tough when you have a music student that seems to be trying very hard yet they can't seem to get the hang of things.  You spend hours working with them to adjust their embouchure or change their hand position and yet it still doesn't seem to help.   How many times have we chalked up the inability to play an instrument to lack of talent or initiative when if we had just bothered to pull out the Sani-Mist and spray the thing down we would see that it was actually NOT their fault?  In this day of Swine Flu scares and other nasty maladies we don't check things on our student's instruments as much as we should, so before you tell a student they are doing it wrong, spray that sucker down and test it for yourself first!  Here are some examples.

Rotten Reeds!

This is more a problem for brass and percussionists who also teach woodwind instruments.  Reeds are finicky beasts, and especially for clarinetists trying to play across the break.  On many occasions I have thought that a student had an embouchure or finger position problem that was preventing them from popping up to the high register.  In some cases it was a poor quality or worn out reed that was simply not working right.  In others it turned out to be a bridge key alignment problem, a leaking pad, or a missing cork.  The moral of the story?  Always try playing on the student's instrument if they are consistently having problems.  If a student has the same problem week after week despite obvious practice and attention to the problem, it may very well be their instrument's fault.  What may seem to be a physical problem to the teacher may actually be a mechanical/reed problem instead, especially to those teachers who did not grow up playing the instrument.

Mechanical Maladies!

Just as the woodwinds have issues with reeds brass players also have instrument maintenance problems that can masquerade as other things.  Some common instrument problems can mask themselves in ways that the teacher assumes is the result of poor embouchure.  Take for example a horn student of mine that always had an airy tone despite consistent embouchure exercises and buzzing practice.  One day I had to play on his horn to demonstrate something (because I did not have my own horn with me that day) and discovered that it felt stuffy.  A quick trip to the custodians office and a jet of water from the hose blew out a piece of plastic wrap that had been stuck in one of the tubes.  Once it was out his tone was awesome and the high notes were not as big of a problem.  

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