Teaching Note-Reading on the Staff Using Steps & Skips

Today I thought I would share a little demonstration of some ways I like teach my young students to start reading notes on the staff. I think it’s important to get out of the method books and off of the bench to make the musical concepts make sense and come alive.

My six-year-old daughter and I were reviewing steps and skips on the staff today, so I snapped a few pictures to show you my process:

My Giant Floor Staff Banner and my Giant Floor Keyboard Banner continue to be my favorite resources for little students! They are so much fun and are a great way to teach lots of concepts. First we reviewed steps and skips by walking up and down our staircase in steps and skips, then walked steps and skips on the Giant Floor Keyboard Banner (the banner pictured has the staff on one side and the keyboard on the other!). We played some steps and skips on the piano too!

Using the Giant Floor Staff Banner we counted the lines and spaces, and then practiced pointing and saying in order from bottom to top, “Line, Space, Line, Space…” We added some beanbags on each of the lines and spaces and played the pattern on the piano. My daughter was great at counting how many beanbags and playing that many notes, in steps, on the piano.

Then we took away the line notes and were left with notes in skips on all of the spaces! We played some of these on the piano as well.

Next we used my Steps & Skips Strips. These fun little flashcards can be found in either my French Piano Pack or my Sight Reading Tricks Pack. I love these little flashcards! They show a simplified staff with just 3 lines and 2 spaces, and 3 whole notes on each card in different patterns of steps, skips and repeats.

Students get to choose any starting note and then try to play the notes on the card. I think it’s helpful to sing along “starting note,” “step up,” “skip down,” “same,” etc. to help them. Some students like to sing along too! My daughter is on the timid side so she didn’t sing with me. Here is one of her first attempts:

After a couple of tries she started to get every single one right. It’s so exciting when little ones start to actually read music on the staff – and it can happen early if you teach these concepts in fun and engaging ways!

The fun thing about these cards is that once your students get the hang of them, you can line several up in a row for a bigger challenge! They also translate really well into playing on the actual staff.

I love teaching intervallic reading to my young students. It is just so much more intuitive than memorizing note names. Of course knowing the letter names can come later, but having a strong foundation of intervallic reading will translate to awesome sight readers later on!

Check out all of my great piano teaching resources in my Shop!

Piano Beanbags

Today I just wanted to share something fun I made for my daughter! I have been teaching my 3-year-old daughter piano lately, and she really loves it. Her almost-2-year-old brother likes to tag along as well; it’s a fun part of our day!
Sometimes when I get awakened early in the morning by my *darling* children, the wheels in my mind start turning and I just can’t shut it off and go back to sleep – this was one of those early morning ideas that came to me last week, and it turned out so fun!
Since my daughter is pretty little, right now we are doing a combination of piano basics (keyboard topography, black key patterns, high/low, etc.), pre-staff notation/rote songs, music & movement, games on my giant floor keyboard, etc. I wanted a fun way to get her to start recognizing the different white keys without necessarily quizzing her on the letter names (she is still learning her alphabet anyway, and doesn’t know them all yet). So I made these fun beanbags for her! Each beanbag has either 2 black keys or 3 black keys with their coordinating white keys; each also has a colorful circle on one of the white keys.
When I sewed these my daughter was thrilled! We have put them to good use already. Here are a few of the ways we have used them in her lessons:
*matching them up with the black key groups on the giant floor keyboard (she puts them on either a 2-black-key group or a 3-black-key group)
*matching them up on the giant floor keyboard with the specific white key shown with the colorful circle – she got the hang of this so quick and did a great job! A good first step to learning the letter names on the keyboard.
*putting them all together in a row in the correct pattern (2 black keys, 3 black keys, 2 black keys, 3 black keys) to make a beanbag keyboard
*pretending to play some of her little songs on the beanbags once they are put together in a row!
The backs of the beanbags are just fun colorful patterns.
I’m having lots of fun teaching my daughter and focusing on coming up with ideas for one-on-one lessons for preschoolers. They are such a fun age group, and are so excited about music and learning things that it is a perfect age to start if you do it right (LOTS and lots of off-the-bench learning, music and movement, listening games, and just teaching with excitement and joy). 
What things have you found that work with teaching little ones? Or with teaching your own children?

Now Available: Mountains & Hills – Mighty Musicians lesson plan!

Well, happy weekend everyone! I am super duper proud of myself for posting TWICE in one week (yay!), and excited to have yet another new lesson plan available! It is all thanks to the fact that we are MOVING in about three weeks, and I am trying to get things done before we pack up and go. My awesome husband is graduating from optometry school, and he got a job in Ogden, Utah. So, it seems all too appropriate that this next lesson plan to become available is all about mountains.

This lesson is part of our Mighty Musicians class, written especially for 5 and 6-year-olds. I really love these classes. It is a ton of fun, and this age group is amazing – they love to have fun and play and move to the music, they have a little bit better attention spans than those younger preschoolers, and they also are getting to that stage where they are ready for actual piano lessons! In fact, the Mighty Musicians class is a perfect introduction to piano lessons, and is a great way to determine which kids are actually ready for one-on-one lessons.

Each Mighty Musicians lesson includes a variety of activities to help teach the concepts in different fun ways. The format of each class is as follows:

Welcome – children sing the “Mighty Musicians” theme song and are introduced to the theme of the lesson!
Guided Listening – children are introduced to some great works of classical music and do various listening activities
Musical Concepts – musical concepts are taught in fun and hands-on ways
Sing & Move – children sing and move to classical music
Piano Primer – each child has an opportunity to play a pre-staff notation song on the piano
Creative Composition – children combine composition and art to use the concepts learned to write their own piece
Composition Performance – students have a chance to perform their composition for one another!

In this lesson plan, students learn that notes move up and down on the staff. Children will enjoy climbing their own “musical mountain” while learning how notes move up and down on the staff; will be introduced to Copland’s “Appalachian Spring” through fun listening and movement activities; will love singing and moving to “Simple Gifts;” will play a five-finger scale on the piano; will compose their own piece with notes moving up and down; and will have fun learning all about notes on the staff through song, play, movement, listening and art.

Here are a few previews of what this fun lesson plan includes:

Mountains & Hills is now available in The Teaching Studio Store under Lesson Plans For Sale. It may also be purchased in this post.




Mountains & Hills Lesson Plan:
Notes Move Up & Down
Digital download, includes student Take-Home book!
38 pages
Price: $10.00

Don’t forget to check out our other Mighty Musicians lesson plans we have available! I am hoping to have the final lesson plan of the 5-day camp, “Birds of a Feather,” up and available soon as well!

Now Available: Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Preschool Piano Camp!

Well guys, I am very excited to announce that we finally have our Early Explorers: Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Camp available for purchase! It’s been a long time coming. Many of you have already purchased and taught our Spring, Autumn and Winter lesson plans and have probably been wondering when our Summer plan would be available. Well we finally have it up and ready to go, and we think you are going to love it! We are offering all four lesson plans, along with some camp-planning extras, in one nifty bundle.

 

If you are looking for a fun summer music camp for preschoolers, look no further. This Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Piano Camp will introduce your young students to a year of music, going through each season from Spring through Winter. It works perfectly as a week-long, four-day camp, or as a month-long once-a-week class. This camp includes the following lesson plans: Spectacular Spring, Sizzling Summer, Amazing Autumn and Wondrous Winter.
Students will explore the four seasons through song, play, stories, movement, listening and art. Musical concepts covered in this four-lesson camp include: high and low, introduction to the keyboard, introduction to the musical staff, solfege, fast and slow, composition, beat, rhythm, one note versus many notes (chords), and more! Students will learn some music terminology (lento, largo, vivace, andante, tempo, staff, keyboard, etc.). They will make and take home several fun crafts (a springtime scene, paper flower hats, wearable fairy wings and turtle shells, a homemade drum and a snowman craft).
Children will be introduced to several pieces of classical music, including Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter from Antonio Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons; To Spring by Edvard Grieg; Summertime by George Gershwin; Summer Fairy by Sergei Prokofiev; Tortoises from Carnival of the Animals by Camille Saint-Saens; Flying Leaves by Carl Kolling; and Troika by Sergei Prokofiev.
Most importantly, students will play, jump, dance, sing, move, explore, listen, create, and have a blast as they experience and discover the joy of music!

 

The bundle includes a Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Camp Planner packet, chock-full of forms and documents to help you plan and organize your class. It includes registration forms, participant rosters, flyers, certificates of completion and more. We’ve done all the work for you to make your summer preschool music camp planning a breeze.

For those who purchase the lesson plans separately, the Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Camp Planner will also be available for separate purchase.

For more information on each individual lesson plan, please visit the Lesson Plans page of The Teaching Studio Store!

But first, can I tell you about our summer lesson plan? Because it is so much fun! We call it Sizzling Summer!

In this lesson, children learn all about fast and slow in music. We use Vivaldi’s Summer to tell and act out a story about Tempo Forest and the fairies and forest animals who live there. We meet lots of fun animals that move fast and slow!
We do some fun summertime movement activities to help us learn about fast and slow in music. The children are introduced to Gershwin’s Summertime and we learn and sing some new words that help us remember a musical word for slow!
We make and decorate some adorable fairy wings and turtle shells that students get to wear and take home! And if your students are anything like my daughter, they will not want to ever take them off…..
(The lesson plan includes printable templates with full instructions on how to assemble the fairy wings and turtle shells.)
And what is summertime without a lemonade stand? Our Musical Lemonade Stand activity teaches about fast and slow rhythms in music, composition and listening.
Here are a few sample pages from the lesson plan so you can get a better idea of what it includes:
I hope you enjoy our Sizzling Summer lesson plan, and the complete Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Preschool Piano Camp! They would make an awesome addition to your summer teaching plans. Purchase in the Shop.
Early Explorers: Vivaldi’s Four Seasons
Preschool Piano Camp
Includes: Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Camp Planner
Spectacular Spring!
Sizzling Summer!
Amazing Autumn!
and
Wondrous Winter!
Price: $38.00
Digital download

 

Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Camp Planner
19 pages of forms & documents
to help plan your Early Explorers camp
Includes: registration forms, participant rosters, flyers,
certificates of completion and more!
Price: $5.00
Digital download
Sizzling Summer! Lesson Plan

187 pages, Digital download
Price: $10.00

Fun Piano Improv for Little Hands


Today we have a guest post by piano teacher Kristin Jensen. She has a wonderful website full of creative and adorable activities to get piano students improvising on the piano! I think you’re going to love it!

Want to know the best way to help kids master their music theory? Show them how to create their own music.

Kids love creating their own songs! When you teach your students to create, kids are even more excited about studying the piano, the parents think you’re an amazing teacher, and the kids really internalize the concepts you’re teaching.

Even very young students can successfully improvise and compose songs. I have two four year old students who always blow me away with their creations. These kids are confident and much more skilled than I was at that age! They have fun at the keys and take great pride in performing their masterpieces for others.

Here’s a quick activity that you can use with young students to get them started with piano improv. Kids love this activity—especially when you turn it into a fun themed contest. Ask all the kids to draw a picture of a space creature from Planet [insert your own silly planet name, or let the kids decide] or a strange critter from under the sea. Then show them this improv formula and turn them loose to create a song for their creature.  Have the kids perform for each other at a group lesson and give awards. The kids will have a blast!

Step 1: Position the Hands

Refer to the diagram to position the hands. Note the finger numbers.

Step 2: Play Through the Scale

Begin with left hand finger 4 and play each finger in order. Go up and then back down. You can even expand the scale into the next octave. Remember that the left hand always plays white keys and the right hand always plays the three black key group.

Step 3: Create Your Own Song

Now that you know which keys to play, you can start creating your song. Play the highlighted keys in any combination. Experiment to find the sequences and sounds you like.

If you know your music theory, you’ve probably recognized that this activity is based on the whole-tone scale. You now have a perfect lesson plan for introducing or reinforcing whole and half steps!

Visit Eartrainingandimprov.com for video tutorials and more fun ideas on how to teach kids to create their own music.

Kristin Jensen is a piano teacher who specializes in teaching kids to create their own music. Kristin loves working with young musicians and developing creative ways to accelerate their learning. Visit Eartrainingandimprov.com to see Kristin’s music teaching tips.

our winner! & why I love teaching preschool music

Thanks to all who entered our “Wondrous Winter” lesson plan giveaway! The lucky winner is…..

Blogger JeremyandElizabeth said…

Sounds like so much fun! 🙂 ~Elizabeth
13/2/13 12:19 PM

 Delete

Congratulations, Elizabeth!! Please contact me and let me know what your email address is so I can get you your free download!

Be sure to visit The Teaching Studio Store to check out our “Wondrous Winter’ lesson plan as well as the others available there. And be sure to check back in the next week or so for our next lesson plan which should be available soon (and is one of my very favorites to teach!!!).

Here’s a hint about our next lesson plan – it involves Smetana’s “The Moldau,” which is an amazing, gorgeous piece that is probably my favorite to teach to the kids. This piece has been a long-time favorite of mine – I remember listening to it with my Dad on a Saturday morning, we pushed a couple of small couches together to make a sort of “boat” to sit in while we listened to this beautiful music. Now I get to share this beautiful music with my kids and my other little students! My five-year-old son often begs me to turn on “The Moldau” while we are driving, so he can pretend our car is a boat.

I have really been amazed over the past couple of years teaching preschoolers just how much music can touch these little ones. These classes can be so meaningful for these kids, particularly if the parents read through the take-home books with their kids at home and turn on the classical music! My own kids absolutely love listening to classical music in the car or at home, especially when it has a neat story to go with it (whether the story is commonly-known, or if it’s one we made up on our own). My 18-month-old daughter just beams with joy when a song she loves begins, and often will break into applause after a grand ending and ask to listen to it again. Music is a real blessing in our lives, and I have discovered that it is never too early to begin – it really isn’t!

Do you teach music to preschoolers? What do you love about it? I’d love to hear your comments!

Have a wonderful weekend!

We have a winner!!

Thanks to all who entered our giveaway for our “Musical Valentines”  preschool lesson plan! Congratulations to our winner….

…Amanda!!!

Amanda, please contact me and give me your email address so I can get you your free download today!

And for all you other readers, be sure to check out all of our preschool lesson plans available in The Teaching Studio Store (and look for more coming available very soon….the next of which will be our “Wondrous Winter” lesson!)

Here are a few sneak peeks at our “Musical Valentines” lesson plan….we think you will *LOVE* it! Happy Saturday!

My Recommendations

I don’t know about you, but I love reading and learning about pedagogy, different teaching methods, and anything having to do with music. And it’s great, because each different season of life I am in I am interested in some different facet of music education. Right now I am focused more on learning about early music education, since I have young children of my own!

I wanted to have a place where I could give my recommendations on pedagogy and other music books that have really helped me become a better teacher or that I have really enjoyed. I will gradually be working on updating my “I Recommend…” page to include my favorites, and I hope that some of these will help you as you strive to be a better teacher as well! Instead of just a big list, I am trying to include reasons why I like each book, and what some of my favorite sections were.
And since I am one of those people who always has a big stack of books to read (instead of just one at a time) and who has a huge wish list of books to read, I will also have a “Books to Read” section, of books that I have not yet read myself but that look interesting to me 🙂
My latest book I picked up is “More Than Music: Studying Suzuki Piano.” I figured I didn’t really know much about Suzuki’s methods, and since it is very relevant to young children I thought I’d give it a read. So far I love it (at least the few pages I have read since I started it yesterday!). 
What books about music have you enjoyed recently?

Mighty Musicians! (…plus a giveaway!!)

Happy Saturday!

Well as some of you may have noticed, I haven’t been around a lot lately. I’ve been a bit busy….my friend Nichole and I recently wrote a whole new curriculum and taught a new music class for 5- and 6-year-olds. We call it Mighty Musicians and it was a big success! We are so excited to share it with you all, and I’ve been working like crazy getting these lesson plans all ready to go.

Our Mighty Musicians class is similar to the Early Explorers course (and I *promise* to have more of those lesson plans available soon as well!), but geared toward those 5- and 6-year-olds who are able to catch on and then apply the musical concepts a little more quickly than the preschoolers. This class is very fun, and it involves lots of singing and movement and creative play with the music, but it also has some basic piano technique elements involved to give those kids a great and fun intro to piano lessons! At each class, students get to play simple pre-staff notation pieces at the piano, and they also get to compose their very own songs! We learn about some famous composers and their music and just have a blast singing and moving and listening.

We have five lesson plans that will soon be available for this class (for either a week-long camp or a five-week course). Each lesson is for a one-hour session. Our plan is to get a new one up and available each week….so stay tuned!

TODAY, the first lesson plan, Night & Day: Music Tells a Story, is available for purchase on my “Lesson Plans for Sale” page, and we will also be giving away ONE free copy to a lucky reader!!

The format of the lesson plan is a downloadable e-book, which is awesome because once you purchase it you can print out as many copies of the pages as you need for your class. It is 82 pages chock full of awesomeness…aside from the actual lesson plan and teacher’s guide, there are plenty of resources, printables, songs, clipart, and visual aids, and it also includes a ten-page student take-home book! We think you’re going to love it 🙂

So a little about this lesson plan – we talk about how music tells a story! We do this all within the fun theme of “Night & Day.” We go over some basic musical elements, learn a little about Edvard Grieg and a couple of his famous pieces, sing and move to his music, improvise at the piano, write our own compositions using the musical elements we learned about, learn some basic keyboard topography and play a simple piano piece!

Here are some sneak peeks into the lesson plan and its contents –

So would you like to win a FREE copy of this lesson plan? Just leave a comment! You may receive ONE extra entry into the giveaway by posting about this giveaway on your blog or facebook page (leave an extra comment to let me know you did it). Giveaway ends on Friday, July 20 at 11:59 pm Central time. I’ll announce the winner next Saturday.

Giveaway Sneak Peek & Free Printable!

Today I wanted to give you a little sneak peek into our Spectacular Spring! lesson plan…and give you a little portion of it for free! As part of our class, we have often used these fun Snack Mats to reinforce musical concepts…and to give the kids a chance to have a little snack and get a change of pace from other activities. We put these two pages back to back and slip them into sheet protectors. The children sit around the table with small snacks (fruit snacks, cereal, goldfish crackers, raisins, etc.) and we do ear training and other activities. The children can listen for high or low notes, for example, and place a snack on the high or low end of the piano or the grand staff. Our snack mat has a grand staff on one side, and a piano keyboard on the other. There is also a section for listening for fast/slow, soft/loud and short/long notes.

This is just one of the fun activities included in our Spectacular Spring! lesson plan. If you haven’t entered our giveaway yet, don’t forget to enter! Giveaway ends Monday, April 16.

Also available on the “Printables & Downloads” page!

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