Teaching with popular music is how my whole journey into teaching with popular culture began. I'm POSITIVE I learned more from Rolling Stone in high school than I did from any of my literature classes.
The first real Mindblue Production was this grant funded project where I worked with an intern to integrated the music, history and culture of Motown Records into the curriculum of a school outside of Detroit. Obviously, I'd love to plug the Blue Song Guides here (I'm allowed a few gratuitous plugs) but there are also tons of wonderful resources out there for us to share.
Please use this discussion forum to share cool projects, ideas and tunes that rock the classroom!
Thank you all for joining my favorite group!
Ryan:)
Started by Ryan Goble Jun 29, 2019.
Started by Ryan Goble Jun 10, 2019.
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Started by Ryan Goble Mar 30, 2019.
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Suite Success: From A-Plus to A-Sharp
By Mike Gange
This year I did something in my classroom I have never done before. And it turned out so well, I am wondering why I never grabbed onto this idea in the 30 years I have been teaching.
I love music. The very first song I can remember is Sam Cooke’s “You send me,” a 1957-release. I was a year old when it was on the radio.
This year, my media studies class was scheduled for Period One, 8:30 a.m. Second semester is particularly deadly with Grade-12-itis. The kids are cocky but lethargic, sometimes sullen and many thinking they are closer to graduating than they really are. These grade 12s would straggle in, half-awake, blinking in the light as if they had just crawled out of a cave. Part way through the term I decided to do something about this lethargy, which was spreading through the class like a sleeping sickness.
I went back to the personal inventory index cards they had completed on the first day of class. I picked their favorite music and musicians from the cards. Then I started to play the music they said they liked, finding a way to tie the song into the lesson of the day. I always write the agenda for the class on the chalkboard at the front of the room. This time, I wrote the Song of the Day first, then the agenda.
you can find the rest of the article here:
http://swimminginmedia.wordpress.com/2014/07/23/suite-success/
If you haven't seen this . . . so many "teachable moments" within this clip!
http://www.ted.com/talks/bobby_mcferrin_hacks_your_brain_with_music...
Wynter, First connect your project ,the British Invasion, to a specific writing or literacy skill. The British invasion happened back in the day, so you will need to connect the artists' voices of yesterday with the urbanized kid of today. Do this with hard copies of lyrics (this will take care of standards) then add the listening/speaking element. According to the Curator at the Buddy Holly Museum in Lubbock Texas, The Beatles were influenced heavily by the song styling and sound of Holly's band The Crickets. Beyonce's song with the chorus "You shoulda put a ring on it" has similar writing elements and styling.
I always intro Renaissance period history with Herman's Hermits, "I'm Henry the VIII I am" Too much fun! A great example of an I Am poem where students explore components of King Henry VIII as a Renaissance Man and then write a poem about themselves)
Connect music with history using autobiographies, journals and other primary sources in a group inqury session.
Reading your above intro, I understand your love of popular music, but I want to bring back old school sounds, but not the US old school sounds, the British old school sounds..not the obvious, Beatles, but the late 80s into 90s sounds of London, Manchester and Birmingham. There's a history in those lyrics, from the Hacienda to Nottinghill Festival. You grew up on Rolling Stone, I learned from Loaded Magazine.
I'm just beginning my career in teaching, how do I bring the British Invasion (Oasis, Blur, Drum & Bass) to the classroom?
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