Detroit is responsible for Motown, techno, the late great beat master J-Dilla, Eminem, and now, perhaps for the teacher set ... Mr. Duey
Ordinarily, this resource would be the domain of the popular music group but since the tunes are so fun- and designed for so many disciplines as a rap Schoolhouse Rock - I'm positing the resource in multiple groups.
I did buy Mr. Duey's first CD, “Class Dis-Missed” and many of the teachers I worked with loved teaching with his stuff. His work seems aimed all the core curricula in grades 5-11.
Here's a sample song "Fractions" - dig it.
I'm sure many of you will enjoy teaching with these tunes. The cool thing is that his first album was released with lyrics and as an instrumental album so kids can rap over the beats in class.
The tracklisting on “Class Dis-Missed” gives you a sense of the scope of Mr. Duey's work:
Math Songs
Fractions
Point Plotting
Greatest Common Factor / L.C.M.
Integers
Measurement
Language Arts Songs
Nouns
Verbs
Adjectives
Essays
Science Songs
State of Matter
3 Rocks
Cells
Atoms
Social Studies
Latitude / Longitude
Democratic Values
Branches of Govt.
Things Changed
I love the fact that one can incorporate visual imagery and other media literacy ideas into a curriculum. I believe that students will understand the material more and use it to their ability. Why not incorporate a rap to a lesson? some kids nowadays love listening to this genre of music why not make it into a lesson. I hope to do this when teaching about parts of sentences, or parts of speech, and all that Language Arts consists of.