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I have experience with using several levels and overall have been dissatisfied with them. They do a good job with the "appreciation" part but teaching the notes, scale etc... is awful. The songs they want your child to sing are pretty dumb. My 6 yo started to cry when she heard the woman singing and was mortified that she was supposed to sing those song. She felt they were all very baby-ish. The upper level (middle school/high school) isn't bad because it is more of an appreciation course. If you are considering spending any money on it - don't. Seriously. ;)

 

Annika

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I have experience with using several levels and overall have been dissatisfied with them. They do a good job with the "appreciation" part but teaching the notes, scale etc... is awful. The songs they want your child to sing are pretty dumb. My 6 yo started to cry when she heard the woman singing and was mortified that she was supposed to sing those song. She felt they were all very baby-ish. The upper level (middle school/high school) isn't bad because it is more of an appreciation course. If you are considering spending any money on it - don't. Seriously. ;)

 

Annika

 

:iagree:

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Okay, I'll admit that the songs are, well, babyish (Beginning Music 1-2). However, the songs they "teach" are meant to reinforce the music principles being taught. There is also some music appreciation in the lower levels, but again, what you listen to is only meant to reinforce the music principles being taught.

 

At it's core, the Beginning Music 1 & 2 uses the technique of Solfege (sight-singing/ear training... you know it best as do-re-mi-fa-so-la-ti-do), basic rhythm... it moves very slowly (VERY slowly), but it is effective. Julliard has even used this method.

 

Intermediate Music 1, introduces the Recorder. I haven't gotten into that one yet, as we won't start that until September. Int. Music 2 & 3 is supposed to continue building knowledge of the notes and staff, and at the end of Music 3 have children able to recognize the music of major composers, different music types and techniques.

 

It all comes down to what pedagogical philosophy of music you wish to follow. But, the three piano instructors we've had, have all appreciated the Solfege and ear-training the kiddos have learned.

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Below is from the tutorials page... gives you an overview of what the program is designed to do...

 

 

The K12 Music Program is designed to help you help your student:

 

  • Learn to sing comfortably and properly
  • Learn to read and write musical notation
  • Develop an appreciation for great music from diverse traditions.

 

The K12 Music courses:

 

  • Preparatory: This course teaches the basic concepts of the musical language, how to move to the beat of music, and how to sing simple songs in the correct range for children.
  • Beginning 1: Beginning 1 introduces your child to the basic building blocks of a music education. Beginning 1 lessons assume no prior training in singing or reading music by either you or your child.
  • Beginning 2: Course builds on the skills that your child has acquired in earlier years.
  • Introduction to Music: Intended for students ages 8 to 10 who are new to the K12 Music Program.
  • Intermediate Music Level 1: This course picks up where your student left off in the earlier level of the K12 Music Program. Intermediate lessons assume that you have completed either the Beginning Music levels or Introduction to Music, but they require no other musical training.
  • Intermediate Music Level 2: Course begins where you student left off in Intermediate Level 1.
  • Intermediate Music Level 3: Course is designed to complete your student’s basic general music education.

About the Singing Voice

 

Children’s voices are delicate and take many years to mature. During these delicate years, children should sing in a way to avoid straining the vocal chords. In particular, they should sing in what is called the head voice. The head voice is characterized by a light, easy sound. When you sing in your head voice, you feel vibrations in your nasal cavity.

 

In contrast, the chest voice is lower, louder, and more forceful. When you sing in your chest voice, you feel vibrations in your chest.

 

The head voice develops first, while the chest voice does not develop until the child reaches the teenage years, only gaining full maturity in the early twenties. It's best to have your child sing with the gentler head voice. If your child is forcing loud singing, or is visibly straining while singing, coach him or her to take it easier and sing in a more relaxed way, using the head voice.

 

Encourage your child to sing in the range of the songs on the Let’s Sing CD (provided by K12). These songs have been recorded in a vocal range appropriate for young children. If your child has difficulty reaching this range, be patient. It can take many children a year or two to discover the head voice. The vocal warm-ups included in the lessons are designed to help your child sing in the proper range.

How to Teach Your Child to Sing

 

In the K12 Music program, you will help your child learn to sing many songs. When a lesson calls for your child to learn a new song, you have a choice of teaching methods.

The Song Sheet Method

 

Use this method if you are not comfortable with singing or confident about your own ability to sing.

 

  • Learn the words: Read each line of song words out loud and ask your child to say the words after you. Begin with one line at a time. Increase the number of lines each time you repeat the song until your child can say all the words to the song.
  • Sing the melody: Listen to the CD selection. Repeat the selection and say the words with your child in the rhythm of the melody.
  • Sing along: You and your child sing along with the CD. When your child is comfortable singing the song, proceed to the activity.

The Singing Method

 

Use this method if you feel confident of your ability to sing in tune for your child.

 

  • Prepare: Before you teach the lesson, learn to sing the song using the CD and lesson song sheet. Sing along with the CD until you feel comfortable with the song at the pitch level on the CD. Songs on the CD are recorded in a pitch range appropriate for the healthy development of a child’s voice.
  • Learn the melody: Listen to the CD selection with your child. Sing the melody of the first phrase using a wordless syllable, such as la, instead of the words. Point to your child to indicate that he or she should echo the phrase you’ve just sung. Continue until you have sung all the phrases of the song. If your child sings a phrase incorrectly, simply repeat it until he or she sings it correctly. Sing the song again, but this time, sing two phrases at a time. Point to your child when it is his or her turn to sing.
  • Add the words: Sing the song with the words, one phrase at a time, and ask your child to echo. Continue until you have sung all the phrases with the words. Sing the song again but increase to two phrases at a time. When your child is comfortable singing the song, proceed to the activity.

 

These teaching methods are designed to present the musical information in small chunks, rather than all at once. They will help your child learn songs quickly and thoroughly.

Revisiting Songs

 

A song introduced in one lesson will often be repeated in later lessons. When you encounter the same song in a later lesson, repeat either of the above procedures as needed. Encourage your child to sing the song once on his or her own. This will help your child develop the confidence needed to sing alone. Be sure to praise your child’s efforts.

What to Do With the Reluctant Singer

 

Some student may show great reluctance to sing by themselves, particularly boys. This reluctance is natural. Try to gently encourage your student to sing by singing with him during the lesson. Even if you don’t feel you have a great voice, your own willingness to put yourself on the line can inspire your student to do the same. You may also want other men and boys in your family to sing along as well. Younger boys can get over their cultural prejudices about singing if they see men that they respect taking part in the activity.

Above all, don’t force the activity. If you student is reluctant to sing, treat the singing activities as listening activities instead. Follow along with the words of the songs and talk about what you find in them. Try to think of reasons why people might have passed the song down from generation to generation. Even listening to folk songs can be of benefit to your child.

Terms and Concepts

 

Beat

 

The steady strides of a jogger, a washing machine’s agitator moving up and down, a mother rocking her baby back and forth—all these are examples of movement to a steady beat. Beat is the foundation of music. Beat can be fast or slow. It can speed up or slow down.

 

In music, beat is a steady musical pulse. Many lessons ask your student to move along with this steady pulse. This movement helps students identify and internalize the beat.

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Rhythm

 

With the eraser end of a pencil, tap a pattern of long and short sounds on a table. This is rhythm—a regular pattern of long and short sounds. Your student probably already recognizes rhythm in poetry, for example, in lines like “Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall, Humpty Dumpty had a great fall.†In lines like that, rhythm is simply “the way the words go.â€

Rhythm Syllables

 

To help students hear and describe different rhythms, we use two simple sounds called rhythm syllables. The first, ta (pronounced tah), describes a sound with one sound on a beat, such as the word fish. The second, ti-ti (pronounced tee-tee), describes words with two sounds on a beat, such as kitten. The third, ta-ah, describes one sound that holds for two beats. (If you can already read music, you will recognize ta as a quarter note, ti-ti as two eighth notes, and ta-ah as a half note.) Other new syllables that your student will learn this year will include tiri-tiri (four sounds on a beat), ta-ah-ah (a sound that holds for three beats) and ta-ah-ah-ah (a sound that holds for four beats). Rhythm syllables help students identify and understand patterns in rhythm. We use these syllables rather than their traditional names because these syllables match the actual sound of the rhythm.

 

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Stick notation

To help students learn how to read rhythms, we use stick notations or lines to identify the beat. The notation for ta is one vertical line. The notation for ti-ti is two vertical lines with a horizontal line connecting them across the top.

 

In Intermediate Music 1 students will make the transition from these simple syllables and stick notations to the conventional musical vocabulary of quarter notes, eighth notes, sixteenth notes, and so on. From this point, these terms will be used interchangeably during practice phases.

Pitch

 

A lion emits a low growl. A bird trills a high song. The high and low quality of sound is called pitch. The part of a song we often recognize first, the melody or tune, is the sequence of changing pitches. Our music lessons use body-movement activities to encourage your student to respond to melodic direction, which is the way the pitch moves—from high to low or low to high. If you make a low sound with your voice and gradually make the sound go higher, the melodic direction is going up. If you start on a high sound and make your voice gradually get lower, the melodic direction is going down.

Rests

 

Count aloud a steady beat: “1, 2, 3, 4, 1, 2, 3, 4….†Now do it again, but this time don’t say 4 aloud. Instead, say it silently in your head. In this example, the 4 is a rest. A rest is a beat without sound.

 

Your student will often be asked to clap a rhythm. When clapping, to show a rest, he or she should flip the hands open rather than clap them together. Similarly, when you are speaking rhythm syllables, mouth the word rest for the silent beat, but do not say it aloud. (Some children like to touch their lips with the index finger to remind them to remain quiet for that beat.)

 

In stick notation, a rest is represented by a symbol that looks like a Z, the last letter of the alphabet.

 

Solfege

 

To teach students how to identify different musical pitches—the sound of musical notes—the K12 Music Program uses a method called solfege (pronounced SOHL-fehj). With the solfege system, students learn how to use their body as a reference point for each pitch. As your student identifies the pitches, he or she will use special hand signs to show and read melodic patterns.

 

We use a solfege system called the moveable do system. In this system, the solfege notes don’t refer to a specific pitch, but to the relationship between the notes themselves. For example, so may be placed on any pitch on the staff. The placement of so will determine where all the other notes fall on the staff. Using this system, your student will gradually be able to recognize and understand even the most complex melodic material. During Intermediate Music your student will review do, mi, so, and la and learn one new solfege note—re. Using these five notes, your student will learn a wide variety of melodic patterns.

Letter Names

 

Intermediate music courses introduce students to the letter names for pitches as instrumental music is taught. Letter names, unlike solfege, are absolute. A letter is given to each line and space of the staff and the letter never changes. Letter names and solfege are complementary systems and each teaches a different skill. Solfege is most useful for sight singing, since most singers learn music by its relationship to the do, or the key of the piece. Letter names are useful as instrumental music is learned, since the fingerings are referred to by absolute pitch as well.

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