Lesson
by Lynnel Joy Jenkins, Westminster Choir College of Rider University
Materials:
Tamati Soso, Traditional
South African Folksong;
Cinquain,
by Lynnel Joy Jenkins; We’re in Grade Six by
Marilyn Davidson
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CRITICAL PEDAGOGY |
EMPOWERING MUSICIANS |
LESSON STEPS |
NATIONAL STANDARDS |
LESSON FORM |
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Who
We Are |
Engaging
Musical Imagination |
1
Honoring Their World Children
are asked to close their eyes and think about the following:
“You are going to meet a person from another country for the
first time. But, the only way
you can communicate with this person is through sharing your music.
Pick a piece of music that is your favorite to give to or to sing
to or to play for this person that would tell them who you are.”
Students share their pieces and teacher lists them as a web on the
board or on chart paper in the front of the room.
If appropriate, children sing some of their pieces.
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Experiencing
Music (6,
7) |
Exposition |
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2
Sharing the Experience Teacher
moderates a discussion to answer the following: What about the music you
picked defines who you are? Are
there any patterns among the songs listed on the board that show how we
are similar and how we are different? |
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Who
They May Become |
Engaging
Musical Intelligence |
3
Connecting Their World to the Concept
Students
listen to the teacher perform Tamati
Soso, a folk song from South Africa with a rhythmic ostinato
and asks, “Where you do suppose this song is from?
How do you know?” The cultural context of the South African folk
song is given. Students are invited to perform the song with a rhythmic
ostinato. Students are
divided into small groups and create a new ostinato, using body
percussion, to complement or replace the existing ostinato.
Groups share for the class. |
Connecting
Music 8,
9 |
Development |
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4
Dialoguing Together Together,
the teacher and the students find all the musical devices in Tamati
Soso. Teacher
presents the definition of ostinato, explaining how it is used as a
compositional device in composing music and how it is notated.
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5
Practicing the Concept Students
devise a checklist of the criteria from the previous step (step 4).
They listen to a performance of We’re
in Grade Six chant and, using their checklist (i.e., rubric)
find the ostinato and perform it. |
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Who
We Might Become Together |
Engaging
Musical Creativity |
6
Connecting Word to World Teacher
reads a cinquain while the class performs a rhythmic ostinato.
Students, again in their groups, are asked to compose their own
cinquain with ostinato. The ostinato should contain spoken speech and body
percussion. One member of the
cooperative group will write the ostinato down using traditional notation
when possible. |
Creating
Music 3,
4, 5 |
Improvisation |
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7
Assessing Transformation Each
group performs their chant and ostinato.
The other groups critique and discuss the ostinato in terms of
their having met the criteria developed in step 5 of this lesson.
How does the music reflect “Who We Are and What We Have –as
MUSICIANS—become? |
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Engaging
Musical Celebration through Performance |
8
Acknowledging Transformation
Students perform their ostinati with speech and body percussion for
their sixth grade colleagues in another class. Students
perform their compositions for their sixth grade colleagues in another
class. |
Performing
Music 1,
2 |
Recapitulation |