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Note Toss Workstation

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Music Workstation FREE download – Note Toss.  Learn how to create this DIY music center with a few easy materials.  Your students will love playing this game in your classroom and you’ll love their excitement at reviewing note values.  This workstation can be altered and used for math facts and reading too!  Let’s get crafty!

Sometimes inspiration comes out of nowhere.  Sometimes it comes from the clearance aisle at Walmart.  I was dashing in to pick up a prescription, some cream cheese won tons and the largest bandages I could find (don't ask!). That is when I saw them.  Honestly, I didn't even know what they were, but the clearance tag was calling my name.

Music Workstation FREE download – Note Toss.  Learn how to create this DIY music center with a few easy materials.  Your students will love playing this game in your classroom and you’ll love their excitement at reviewing note values.  This workstation can be altered and used for math facts and reading too!  Let’s get crafty!
These are cardboard clay holder stands.  It turns out that these sturdy little stands hold the clay birds used for shooting practice.  They are normally 6-8 bucks.  Check them out here.  I looked at them and knew exactly what I wanted to do!  I would create a tossing game and use it in a workstation.

Music Workstation FREE download – Note Toss.  Learn how to create this DIY music center with a few easy materials.  Your students will love playing this game in your classroom and you’ll love their excitement at reviewing note values.  This workstation can be altered and used for math facts and reading too!  Let’s get crafty!

Next, I needed something that I could toss into it that met this criteria:
1.  Would fit through the holes with a moderate amount of success even for a bad thrower like me.
2.  Would cause minimal to no damage to the stand, my classroom or another person.  (You never know.)
3. Would be cheap and pretty.  (My two favorite ways to decorate my classroom.)

I tried tennis balls and golf balls.  (Right size.  Too hard.)  I tried some little bouncy balls.  (Too bouncy.)  I tried a rolled up pair of socks.  (That might have been just for fun.)  I also tried a few miscellaneous balls I found in the kids' rooms.  Nothing was just right.  This necessitated a trip to Target, The Dollar Tree, Party City and Hobby Lobby.  Okay...don't tell my husband but I went to a couple of extra places just because. 

What I found were these colorful Wiffle balls at Hobby Lobby.  The tag says "Play Balls" and they are made of a light, durable plastic.  Perfect.
Music Workstation FREE download – Note Toss.  Learn how to create this DIY music center with a few easy materials.  Your students will love playing this game in your classroom and you’ll love their excitement at reviewing note values.  This workstation can be altered and used for math facts and reading too!  Let’s get crafty!

Next, I painted the clay holder stand a lovely shade of purple.  I added the white around the cut-outs because I wanted a little more contrast to help students aim.
Music Workstation FREE download – Note Toss.  Learn how to create this DIY music center with a few easy materials.  Your students will love playing this game in your classroom and you’ll love their excitement at reviewing note values.  This workstation can be altered and used for math facts and reading too!  Let’s get crafty!

I had a game in mind.  Actually, I've had a game sheet made up for a game that I've used that is similar to this.  I tweaked it just a little and you can download that at the end of this post.  For this game, I needed to mark each circle with a note or rest value.  Wanting to use this with the most grade levels possible, I stuck with quarter note, half note, dotted half note, whole note, barred eighths and a quarter rest.

Music Workstation FREE download – Note Toss.  Learn how to create this DIY music center with a few easy materials.  Your students will love playing this game in your classroom and you’ll love their excitement at reviewing note values.  This workstation can be altered and used for math facts and reading too!  Let’s get crafty!

Next, I added little color coding dot stickers with the note and rest values.  I chose these little stickers for a couple of reasons.  They are inexpensive and easy to remove or replace.  Since I could imagine this game working for multiple grade levels and multiple subjects, I wanted to make sure that whatever I used was versatile.   I think that with my next one I may upgrade and buy some chalkboard labels to use.

Music Workstation FREE download – Note Toss.  Learn how to create this DIY music center with a few easy materials.  Your students will love playing this game in your classroom and you’ll love their excitement at reviewing note values.  This workstation can be altered and used for math facts and reading too!  Let’s get crafty!

To play, students use one score sheet per team.  They take turns tossing the balls into the circles that will earn them the most points.  They write down the note that they hit and its value on the score sheet.  At the end of the game, they tally their scores.  The winner is the player that has the most number of points.

When placing this in a center and giving instructions, I think that it may be necessary to let students toss until they make it or give them at least 3 tries before moving on to the next student.

From our experimentation, about three feet away was a good distance.  This provided a good amount of success, but wasn't too easy.  You may find with older groups that you can get away with putting your tossing line a little farther back.

Music Workstation FREE download – Note Toss.  Learn how to create this DIY music center with a few easy materials.  Your students will love playing this game in your classroom and you’ll love their excitement at reviewing note values.  This workstation can be altered and used for math facts and reading too!  Let’s get crafty!

This idea could be used for a variety of subjects and activities.  By simply using numbers, this activity could be used for an addition or subtraction workstation.    Add the consonants b, c, f, h, p and s and have students toss and write the "-at" word family words.  The possibilities are endless.


 You can grab a free download of the score sheets that will work for this specific game.  Included are 4 version.  Two of the versions have a key at the bottom to remind students of how many beats each note or rest gets.  Two of the versions use the rest as a negative number that takes a point away from their total.

Note Toss Blog Exclusive Freebie by Tracy King




Music Workstation FREE download – Note Toss.  Learn how to create this DIY music center with a few easy materials.  Your students will love playing this game in your classroom and you’ll love their excitement at reviewing note values.  This workstation can be altered and used for math facts and reading too!  Let’s get crafty!
I hope you love this project and get much use out of it in your classroom!

Last year I spent my summer posting crafty projects that you may enjoy for your classroom.  You can see those posts HERE.   Join me this summer!
1.  Grab the Summer Project Sundays picture above.
2.  Link to this blog post.  
3.  Add your link below.  
I can't wait to see your projects!

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Princesses Don't Do Math - Number Mats for a Reluctant Learner

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Princesses Don’t Do Math – Number Mat Ideas for a Reluctant Learner.  You’ll love these number mat ideas for getting your reluctant preschooler playing, counting and adding their way to success.  Number mats are great for developing number sense and these mats work with bottle caps!  They can work with playdough, rocks, and more but I think you’ll like how perfectly the bottle caps can work with any theme.  Great for preschool and kindergarten aged students in workstations or at home.

Welcome to a new segment on my blog.  As a busy wife and mom, I've decided to share some stories from my crazy and wonderful home life.  Crafting, recipes (that I don't ruin!), parenting and loving the one you are with will all be features of MrsKing@Home.  I'll also be sharing activities that I've created for my kids to further their education and some that are just for fun!  Eventually, you'll be able to see all of these posts by clicking on Mrs. King @ Home right under the page header.

My daughter, a bright and sassy 4 year old, lives in a world of princess, mermaids, rainbows and unicorns.  With her rich imagination she is always playing pretend or performing for us in some dramatic fashion.  Last week, I thought that we should spend a little time working on recognizing numbers.  Unfortunately, she disagreed.
"Noooo!" she whined.  "Princesses don't do math!"

When I stopped laughing, it occurred to me that I needed to make this time just a little more fun for both of us.  Thus, the bottle cap number mats were born!  If you are a regular reader of my blog, you know that I love recycling bottle caps to use in the classroom.  I use them for a bottle cap staff and have used them in a dip tray workstation too.  Since I just happened to have a big stash of these, they made the perfect muse for my hands-on number mats.

Princesses Don’t Do Math – Number Mat Ideas for a Reluctant Learner.  You’ll love these number mat ideas for getting your reluctant preschooler playing, counting and adding their way to success.  Number mats are great for developing number sense and these mats work with bottle caps!  They can work with playdough, rocks, and more but I think you’ll like how perfectly the bottle caps can work with any theme.  Great for preschool and kindergarten aged students in workstations or at home.

I collected many of the caps myself, but I also enlisted parents to help me as well.  It didn't take long before I had more than enough caps for all the projects I would ever need!  I put them all in the sink with hot, sudsy water and sloshed them around.  (Yes, "sloshed" is the technical term.)  I laid them out on a towel to dry and they were ready to go.

Princesses Don’t Do Math – Number Mat Ideas for a Reluctant Learner.  You’ll love these number mat ideas for getting your reluctant preschooler playing, counting and adding their way to success.  Number mats are great for developing number sense and these mats work with bottle caps!  They can work with playdough, rocks, and more but I think you’ll like how perfectly the bottle caps can work with any theme.  Great for preschool and kindergarten aged students in workstations or at home.
Here's what they look like in action.   These are cleaned bottle caps in a variety of colors.  I had a few parents turn in lids from larger bottles and from milk jugs.  I've got them stashed somewhere for another project, but for the number mats I really wanted to use just bottle caps.  This Ferris wheel set is one of my daughter's favorites.  It is second only to the the mermaid set.
Princesses Don’t Do Math – Number Mat Ideas for a Reluctant Learner.  You’ll love these number mat ideas for getting your reluctant preschooler playing, counting and adding their way to success.  Number mats are great for developing number sense and these mats work with bottle caps!  They can work with playdough, rocks, and more but I think you’ll like how perfectly the bottle caps can work with any theme.  Great for preschool and kindergarten aged students in workstations or at home.

Each of the sets contains mats for 1-10.  I printed off the full color versions, but in the sets that I've posted in my store there are four versions.  In addition to the full color version with the little circles to show placement of the bottle caps, there's one with an ink saving background.  There are also versions without the circles in full color and with the ink saving version.

Princesses Don’t Do Math – Number Mat Ideas for a Reluctant Learner.  You’ll love these number mat ideas for getting your reluctant preschooler playing, counting and adding their way to success.  Number mats are great for developing number sense and these mats work with bottle caps!  They can work with playdough, rocks, and more but I think you’ll like how perfectly the bottle caps can work with any theme.  Great for preschool and kindergarten aged students in workstations or at home.


For the hammer and nail version I painted the tops of some gray bottle caps and added "ones and X's" as my daughter described them.  When we worked with this set we used a little plastic hammer to smack them as we counted them.
Princesses Don’t Do Math – Number Mat Ideas for a Reluctant Learner.  You’ll love these number mat ideas for getting your reluctant preschooler playing, counting and adding their way to success.  Number mats are great for developing number sense and these mats work with bottle caps!  They can work with playdough, rocks, and more but I think you’ll like how perfectly the bottle caps can work with any theme.  Great for preschool and kindergarten aged students in workstations or at home.

Princesses Don’t Do Math – Number Mat Ideas for a Reluctant Learner.  You’ll love these number mat ideas for getting your reluctant preschooler playing, counting and adding their way to success.  Number mats are great for developing number sense and these mats work with bottle caps!  They can work with playdough, rocks, and more but I think you’ll like how perfectly the bottle caps can work with any theme.  Great for preschool and kindergarten aged students in workstations or at home.
Our favorite bottle caps were spray painted gold.  They work great for the sandcastle set and would be awesome for the treasure chest and piggy bank versions I'm working on.

Princesses Don’t Do Math – Number Mat Ideas for a Reluctant Learner.  You’ll love these number mat ideas for getting your reluctant preschooler playing, counting and adding their way to success.  Number mats are great for developing number sense and these mats work with bottle caps!  They can work with playdough, rocks, and more but I think you’ll like how perfectly the bottle caps can work with any theme.  Great for preschool and kindergarten aged students in workstations or at home.

We painted the yellow bottle caps to look like corn cobs.  These were a little trickier to do!  We added the lines with a permanent marker and they look great with the cornstalk set.

Princesses Don’t Do Math – Number Mat Ideas for a Reluctant Learner.  You’ll love these number mat ideas for getting your reluctant preschooler playing, counting and adding their way to success.  Number mats are great for developing number sense and these mats work with bottle caps!  They can work with playdough, rocks, and more but I think you’ll like how perfectly the bottle caps can work with any theme.  Great for preschool and kindergarten aged students in workstations or at home.

Princesses Don’t Do Math – Number Mat Ideas for a Reluctant Learner.  You’ll love these number mat ideas for getting your reluctant preschooler playing, counting and adding their way to success.  Number mats are great for developing number sense and these mats work with bottle caps!  They can work with playdough, rocks, and more but I think you’ll like how perfectly the bottle caps can work with any theme.  Great for preschool and kindergarten aged students in workstations or at home.
For the beehive set we decorated a few of the yellow bottle caps to look like bees.

Princesses Don’t Do Math – Number Mat Ideas for a Reluctant Learner.  You’ll love these number mat ideas for getting your reluctant preschooler playing, counting and adding their way to success.  Number mats are great for developing number sense and these mats work with bottle caps!  They can work with playdough, rocks, and more but I think you’ll like how perfectly the bottle caps can work with any theme.  Great for preschool and kindergarten aged students in workstations or at home.

As you can see in the picture above, the bottle caps aren't always the same height.  As long as the diameter is the same, they will match up with the circles on the number mats.  The fish bowl set would be fun to use with those shiny aquarium rocks too.

Princesses Don’t Do Math – Number Mat Ideas for a Reluctant Learner.  You’ll love these number mat ideas for getting your reluctant preschooler playing, counting and adding their way to success.  Number mats are great for developing number sense and these mats work with bottle caps!  They can work with playdough, rocks, and more but I think you’ll like how perfectly the bottle caps can work with any theme.  Great for preschool and kindergarten aged students in workstations or at home.

We did use the bottle caps for the pizza set, but we had been using play dough earlier, so we made play dough toppings for our pizza mats too.

Princesses Don’t Do Math – Number Mat Ideas for a Reluctant Learner.  You’ll love these number mat ideas for getting your reluctant preschooler playing, counting and adding their way to success.  Number mats are great for developing number sense and these mats work with bottle caps!  They can work with playdough, rocks, and more but I think you’ll like how perfectly the bottle caps can work with any theme.  Great for preschool and kindergarten aged students in workstations or at home.

The bottle caps work regardless of which side they are placed on as scene on the starfish.  Actually, I think they may look better upside down with this set.

Princesses Don’t Do Math – Number Mat Ideas for a Reluctant Learner.  You’ll love these number mat ideas for getting your reluctant preschooler playing, counting and adding their way to success.  Number mats are great for developing number sense and these mats work with bottle caps!  They can work with playdough, rocks, and more but I think you’ll like how perfectly the bottle caps can work with any theme.  Great for preschool and kindergarten aged students in workstations or at home.

Princesses Don’t Do Math – Number Mat Ideas for a Reluctant Learner.  You’ll love these number mat ideas for getting your reluctant preschooler playing, counting and adding their way to success.  Number mats are great for developing number sense and these mats work with bottle caps!  They can work with playdough, rocks, and more but I think you’ll like how perfectly the bottle caps can work with any theme.  Great for preschool and kindergarten aged students in workstations or at home.

The frog set was great fun! We decorated a few of the caps with little flies.  We also used some of the plastic frogs and insect from the party store to count with this one.  In addition to counting with these number mats, we used #5 for "Five Green and Speckled Frogs".

In addition to counting with the mats and arranging them from high to low and vice versa, we've started using them for simple addition problems.  I'll lay out the mats for 1 and 5 and ask "How many all together?" and she can add them up and give me an answer.

You can download all of these mats (400 pages!) or individual sets here:
Princesses Don’t Do Math – Number Mat Ideas for a Reluctant Learner.  You’ll love these number mat ideas for getting your reluctant preschooler playing, counting and adding their way to success.  Number mats are great for developing number sense and these mats work with bottle caps!  They can work with playdough, rocks, and more but I think you’ll like how perfectly the bottle caps can work with any theme.  Great for preschool and kindergarten aged students in workstations or at home.

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Princesses Don’t Do Math – Number Mat Ideas for a Reluctant Learner.  You’ll love these number mat ideas for getting your reluctant preschooler playing, counting and adding their way to success.  Number mats are great for developing number sense and these mats work with bottle caps!  They can work with playdough, rocks, and more but I think you’ll like how perfectly the bottle caps can work with any theme.  Great for preschool and kindergarten aged students in workstations or at home.


My Bloomin' Pencil Problem and a Crafty Solution

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Pencil problems in your classroom? This clever teacher craft may be just the pencil solution that you are looking for. Provide pencils for your students and brighten up your teaching space. Elementary, high school or even in the main office, this handy DIY idea will be popular.

In twenty years of teaching I think that I must have tried twenty thousand different ways to protect my pencil stash.  Once I even bought pencils that said "Stolen from Mrs. King".  My high school kids took it as a challenge.  I've never lost pencils faster than I did that year!

I supply my own pencils because as a music specialist, it can sometimes be a hassle to have students bring a pencil to class.  They forget or I forget to remind them.  Sometimes when they remember they bring an entire pencil box full of everything but the kitchen sink.  It is just easier for me to have my own stash.  That being said, the pencils come out of my grocery budget so I always want to keep them as long as possible.

One of the solutions I loved the most was to turn the pencils into classroom decorations.  It isn't the perfect solution, but it might be the prettiest!  When turning the pencils into flowers you give up the ability to use the eraser.  This actually works really well because the erasers usually only last about two weeks anyway.  (If I am lucky!)  I always have a small tub of erasers that students can use if they need them.

With the flower pot pencils, Once they are sharpened to the green, I retire them from the flower pot and put in a pencil can.  About mid-year (or whenever all my flowers have been used up) I'll whip out the can of used pencils that magically have FULL erasers!  With this can of pencils and a hope and a prayer I can coast right into summer!

So, let me introduce you to an old project to introduce you to my newest project.
Pencil problems in your classroom? This clever teacher craft may be just the pencil solution that you are looking for. Provide pencils for your students and brighten up your teaching space. Elementary, high school or even in the main office, this handy DIY idea will be popular.

A few years ago  I painted several flower pots with a keyboard theme.  I stuffed them with flowers and put them on a shelf in the teacher corner of my classroom.  They made me smile each time I saw them!  After a couple of years, I decided to retire them.  Now, they hold my bloomin' pencils.

Pencil problems in your classroom? This clever teacher craft may be just the pencil solution that you are looking for. Provide pencils for your students and brighten up your teaching space. Elementary, high school or even in the main office, this handy DIY idea will be popular.
For this project, you'll need a flower pot (painted or not), some fake flowers a pack of dried beans, green masking tape or floral tape and pencils.

Pencil problems in your classroom? This clever teacher craft may be just the pencil solution that you are looking for. Provide pencils for your students and brighten up your teaching space. Elementary, high school or even in the main office, this handy DIY idea will be popular.

The green floral tape works really well, but for this batch I only had green masking tape, so that is what I used.  I snipped the individual flowers from the bundle and using the masking tape adhered them to the pencils.

Pencil problems in your classroom? This clever teacher craft may be just the pencil solution that you are looking for. Provide pencils for your students and brighten up your teaching space. Elementary, high school or even in the main office, this handy DIY idea will be popular.
Put a couple of pieces of tape over the hole in the bottom of the flower pot and fill with dried beans.

Pencil problems in your classroom? This clever teacher craft may be just the pencil solution that you are looking for. Provide pencils for your students and brighten up your teaching space. Elementary, high school or even in the main office, this handy DIY idea will be popular.
The beans hold the pencils up so that they look like a bouquet of flowers and they are gentle on the lead so that it doesn't break each time a pencil is replaced.

Pencil problems in your classroom? This clever teacher craft may be just the pencil solution that you are looking for. Provide pencils for your students and brighten up your teaching space. Elementary, high school or even in the main office, this handy DIY idea will be popular.

If you look closely in the picture above, you'll notice that a few pieces of the masking tape are starting to curl up a bit.  This happens with the floral tape too.  I secure them with a piece of clear, Scotch tape and they stay put.

Pencil problems in your classroom? This clever teacher craft may be just the pencil solution that you are looking for. Provide pencils for your students and brighten up your teaching space. Elementary, high school or even in the main office, this handy DIY idea will be popular.

This finished product is a bright and cheery addition to your classroom and a solution for your pencil problem!  Eventually I moved the flower pots to several places around my classroom.  This made it easier for students working at workstations to have supplies close to them.  It also looked pretty!

Pencil problems in your classroom? This clever teacher craft may be just the pencil solution that you are looking for. Provide pencils for your students and brighten up your teaching space. Elementary, high school or even in the main office, this handy DIY idea will be popular.


Pencil problems in your classroom? This clever teacher craft may be just the pencil solution that you are looking for. Provide pencils for your students and brighten up your teaching space. Elementary, high school or even in the main office, this handy DIY idea will be popular.

Last year I spent my summer posting crafty projects that you may enjoy for your classroom.  You can see those posts HERE.   Join me this summer!
1.  Grab the Summer Project Sundays picture above.
2.  Link to this blog post.  
3.  Add your link below.  
I can't wait to see your projects!




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Music Freebies Round Up

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Music teacher freebies?  Got ‘em!  This list features free resources that you can download now and use tomorrow in your classroom.  Music history, composers, rhythm, melody, instruments and more downloads await!  Most of the resources are geared towards elementary classes, but several would work well in middle school and high school general music classes.

Let's face it, most music teachers spend hundreds (I've even heard thousands!) of their own money each year on resources for their classroom.  It is one of the reasons that I am so glad that I found TeachersPayTeachers.  I love the affordable resources that were created by teachers like me.  

I've compiled a list of some great freebies that I think you'll love in this post.  I hope that you'll try them out and follow all of these amazing music educators there.  You can follow them (and me!) by clicking the green star by the name of the store.  When you do this you'll get occasional notifications via email when they add new resources.

History and Composers

The Big Apple Dance Craze of 1937 by Sally Utley of Sally's Sea of Songs
How did I live this long without knowing about the Big Apple?  Your students will be just as delighted as I was!  This PowerPoint file is linked to several amazing videos.  You'll want to add this to your yearly lesson plans.

John Williams Foldables by Kim Maloney from Music Teacher Resources
I am such a fan of John Williams and so are students that are introduced to the magic of his music.  This set of foldables is perfect for the classroom or private studio.  With ample opportunities for research and writing, this freebie is great for cross curriculuar integration.

Favorite Folk Songs: Looby Loo (Teacher Toolkit) by David Row of Make Moments Matter
I love, love LOVE David's amazing collections of folk songs.  They make great bulletin boards and great tools for introducing songs.  After using several of them, my students were more than disappointed to learn that our next song did not have the "cool slide show" to go with it.  LOVE that!

Composer of the Month Johannes Brahms  by The Bulletin Board Lady-Tracy King
I love celebrating composers of the month with my students and I created this series of composer bulletin boards and writing activities to use.  Since I used the kits for Kindergarten through 6th (and for a few years 7th and 8th grades), they were designed to used accordingly.  Grab this one (normally $5.99) for free!

Music teacher freebies?  Got ‘em!  This list features free resources that you can download now and use tomorrow in your classroom.  Music history, composers, rhythm, melody, instruments and more downloads await!  Most of the resources are geared towards elementary classes, but several would work well in middle school and high school general music classes.

Instruments

My Book of Instruments by The Bulletin Board Lady-Tracy King
I'm always looking for ways for my youngest learners to write in music class that don't take up our entire time together.  This book is my solution!  We can do a page or two on an instrument that we are studying and continue to add to it as the year goes along OR I can leave it for a sub and they leave with a beautiful book to take home.

Rainbow Ukulele Starter Kit by Shelly Tomich of Pitch Publications
So, a few years ago in the midst of 20 snow days at home, I ordered a ukulele.  I did not do well.  LOL.  I think that Shelly may have convinced me to try again!  This is a great way to get started with the uke.  You'll probably want to check out her post about choosing a great instrument too.

Recorder Black Belt System by Linda Seamons of Floating Down the River
Learn about Linda's recorder program and get tons of music to use with your learners.  She starts with C and A instead of the traditional BAG.  This freebie is filled with many great ideas for teaching and organizing.  I wish I had this twenty years ago!

Brass Instrument Races (Aural Identification) by Chrissy Hutzel from Hutzel House of Music
This is such a great idea!  In this freebie your students are asked to listen to an unidentified instruments (sound files included) and then race to identify it by retrieving a card.  FUN!

Orff Instrument Labels by Stacie Bates of The Bates Clef (I love that name!)
Do you love the look of camo?  You are going to love this set of Orff instrument labels!  Make sure your instruments are decked out with these free printables.


Melody and Singing Activities

Fishin' for Melody by Linda McPherson
I am a BIG fan of centers in music class and this free download sets you up for four (Yes.  I said FOUR!) recorder stations.  It's easy.  It takes little explanation.  It's brilliant.  Did you hear me? Go get it!

Kindergarten Music Lesson Plan Day 1 by Lindsay Jervis
I've said this for years and years "I knew how to teach music after graduating from college, but no one taught me what to do on that first day!" This detailed and engaging lesson plan does just that.  Songs and activities and a great sequence are laid out in detail.  Try this freebie and you may want the entire year!

The Adventures of Sophie Solfege - Sophie Climbs the Ladder by Angie Kelton of i heart teaching music.
This is a clever (and quite adorable) way to introduce lines/spaces and solfege to your students.  You are probably already acquainted with Sophie Solfege, but if not this is the place to start.

First Grade Music Lesson by Aileen Miracle
This is a fun and engaging lesson for first grade!  It is actually a sampler from a much larger work, but this is a stand alone lesson plan with great ideas, a detailed plan and several songs and activities.

Fall Vocal Explorationsby Anne Newman
Warm up with these fall vocal explorations.  These slides are laid out in beautiful autumnal colors and would be a great way to start class.

Copy, Transfer, Transpose (sol mi set) by Debbie O'Shea from Crescendo Music
Such a difficult skill, such a great freebie to help!  With these worksheets, students transpose sol and mi to different places on the staff!  Although this is probably intended for younger students who have just learned sol and mi, I can see it being handy for older students too!

"Come Along and Sing with Me" (2 part round) by Sandra Hendrickson of Sing Play Creatively
This catchy little round is laid out perfectly for your Kodaly classroom.  You get the sheet music, solfege and pitch names version as well as a file to introduce it.  WOW!

Peter and the Wolf Vocal Explorationsby The Bulletin Board Lady-Tracy King
This is a great set to use for vocal explorations at workstations (or as part of your Peter and the Wolf workstations).  It's a great way to warm up a group before singing and it is a fun (and silly!) way to review the characters in PatW and the instrument that plays their theme.

Music teacher freebies?  Got ‘em!  This list features free resources that you can download now and use tomorrow in your classroom.  Music history, composers, rhythm, melody, instruments and more downloads await!  Most of the resources are geared towards elementary classes, but several would work well in middle school and high school general music classes.


Rhythm

Rhythm Whack-a-Mole by Cara Coffey of MiscellaneousMe
Okay I must admit that I haven't played this game with students yet, but I have about 20 different props for whacking!  LOL.  Cara has put together a simple, but ridiculously fun game that you'll want to download today.

Engine Engine Number Nine by Anne Meleski of Anacrusic
Working with ta and titi?  You'll enjoy this bright and colorful download of "Engine Engine Number 9" that works on quarter notes and barred eighth notes.  Working from lyrics, then steady beat and then rhythm, this is a great plan.

16th Note Worksheets by Jamie Parker
I'm always looking for print and go worksheets to use with my students.  This sampler of 16th note worksheets is great!  You'll get worksheets for "Dinah", "Old Brass Wagon" and one that works great for ear training.

Rap It, Clap It, Music Match It  by The Bulletin Board Lady-Tracy King
This has to be one of my primary students' favorite activities!  Students say (or rap) the pictures, clap them and them match them with rhythms.  The worksheets make assessment a breeze!  This is a freebie, but be sure to check out the entire line of Rap It, Clap Its in my store.

Rhythm Clap Backs by Jennifer Foxx of Music Educator Resources
What's a rhythm clap back?  Well, you know.  It's a rhythm that you clap back!  This freebie has 5 different rhythms represented iconically and a worksheet.  Such a smart idea!

Measure Tiles by Nancy Otto of The Rested Musician
This game is essentially music dominoes and it's FREE!  A great resource for music workstations or to use during a reward day, you'll want to print and laminate this one and use it for many years.


Don't have time to grab all of these fabulous freebies now?  PIN this list and grab them later!
Music teacher freebies?  Got ‘em!  This list features free resources that you can download now and use tomorrow in your classroom.  Music history, composers, rhythm, melody, instruments and more downloads await!  Most of the resources are geared towards elementary classes, but several would work well in middle school and high school general music classes.


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DIY Dry Erase Pockets

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DIY Dry Erase Pockets – Learn how to create cute, colorful and durable dry erase pockets for less than 20 cents each!  You’ll love this easy to follow tutorial and your students will love using dry erase markers in class.  Save your classroom budget and save time at the copier.  This is a great teacher hack!

I am such a big fan of working in a paperless classroom.  It is not completely possible, but I love to find ways to save paper AND save myself from hours at the copy machine.  For the last 10 years or more I've been using lap packs.  Lap packs are copies of the treble staff in various sizes, a blank piece of paper and other sheets that I used every day in class.  I pop these into a thick page protector and students can use these with a dry erase marker.  Because I've copied everything on cardstock, they are firm enough to use without a clipboard or table.

This led me to thinking about other ways to save paper and eliminate stacks to grade.  If we are doing a simple assessment, I can walk around the classroom and quickly mark the seating chart with a score while students are working.  This is MUCH faster than grading stacks of paper.  I started using dry erase pockets for such activities.

You've probably seen the pockets on Amazon, Oriental Trading or even in the dollar spot at Target.  LOVE them, but since most of my classroom budget comes out of my grocery budget, I needed a less expensive option.  Project time!  I was able to make an entire classroom set for six dollars.  WAHOO!

DIY Dry Erase Pockets – Learn how to create cute, colorful and durable dry erase pockets for less than 20 cents each!  You’ll love this easy to follow tutorial and your students will love using dry erase markers in class.  Save your classroom budget and save time at the copier.  This is a great teacher hack!
Here's what you'll need:
Thick report covers (I like the kind with that little plastic binder edge that you slide on.)  This pack was $ .97 at Walmart.
Duct Tape -I prefer to use the smaller roll so that less of the cover is covered with the tape.  The larger rolls work, but may cover some of the sheets that you put in them.  You can also use clear packing tape.  It isn't as pretty, but it works well.  I had several rolls on hand as I assume most teachers do.
Scissors

DIY Dry Erase Pockets – Learn how to create cute, colorful and durable dry erase pockets for less than 20 cents each!  You’ll love this easy to follow tutorial and your students will love using dry erase markers in class.  Save your classroom budget and save time at the copier.  This is a great teacher hack!
I rolled the tape out flat so that I could set the report cover on it.  This let me line it up a little better than putting the tap onto the report cover.

DIY Dry Erase Pockets – Learn how to create cute, colorful and durable dry erase pockets for less than 20 cents each!  You’ll love this easy to follow tutorial and your students will love using dry erase markers in class.  Save your classroom budget and save time at the copier.  This is a great teacher hack!
Place the report cover so that it covers about half of the tape.  Fold the tape up to seal the edge.  Trim the edges with your scissors.

DIY Dry Erase Pockets – Learn how to create cute, colorful and durable dry erase pockets for less than 20 cents each!  You’ll love this easy to follow tutorial and your students will love using dry erase markers in class.  Save your classroom budget and save time at the copier.  This is a great teacher hack!

I only taped three of the sides (including the side that isn't open).  At the top I wanted to create a little flap so that my youngest learners would be able to load the pocket themselves.  Instead of running the tape all the way across, I just created a tab that is a couple of inches long on ONE piece of the report cover.  In this way, students can use the tab to open the pocket without my help.  It is much trickier than it seems for some of my younger students.

DIY Dry Erase Pockets – Learn how to create cute, colorful and durable dry erase pockets for less than 20 cents each!  You’ll love this easy to follow tutorial and your students will love using dry erase markers in class.  Save your classroom budget and save time at the copier.  This is a great teacher hack!
LOVE the way they turned out!  I popped some handwriting sheets in so my daughter could try them out.  They were definitely easy to use and pretty durable.  I had tried using page protectors for this project but did not like that they had holes in them.  The holes are for using in a binder, which is handy, but my students liked to poke their pencils in the holes and they tore and looked bad.  The report covers keep this from happening.  

DIY Dry Erase Pockets – Learn how to create cute, colorful and durable dry erase pockets for less than 20 cents each!  You’ll love this easy to follow tutorial and your students will love using dry erase markers in class.  Save your classroom budget and save time at the copier.  This is a great teacher hack!
I like to use these small dry erase markers that have an eraser on the end.  When I don't have them available for workstations I put regular dry erase markers and paper towels or cotton balls there for students to use to erase.
DIY Dry Erase Pockets – Learn how to create cute, colorful and durable dry erase pockets for less than 20 cents each!  You’ll love this easy to follow tutorial and your students will love using dry erase markers in class.  Save your classroom budget and save time at the copier.  This is a great teacher hack!

I've seen teachers that hot glue a pom pom on the end of the dry erase marker lid and students use those for erasers, but haven't tried that.  If you have, I'd love to hear any tips or ideas you might have for keeping them usable all year.

DIY Dry Erase Pockets – Learn how to create cute, colorful and durable dry erase pockets for less than 20 cents each!  You’ll love this easy to follow tutorial and your students will love using dry erase markers in class.  Save your classroom budget and save time at the copier.  This is a great teacher hack!DIY Dry Erase Pockets – Learn how to create cute, colorful and durable dry erase pockets for less than 20 cents each!  You’ll love this easy to follow tutorial and your students will love using dry erase markers in class.  Save your classroom budget and save time at the copier.  This is a great teacher hack!

These worksheets are from my No Prep Music Worksheets -Summer.  They are great examples of worksheets that I would use in workstations.

DIY Dry Erase Pockets – Learn how to create cute, colorful and durable dry erase pockets for less than 20 cents each!  You’ll love this easy to follow tutorial and your students will love using dry erase markers in class.  Save your classroom budget and save time at the copier.  This is a great teacher hack!DIY Dry Erase Pockets – Learn how to create cute, colorful and durable dry erase pockets for less than 20 cents each!  You’ll love this easy to follow tutorial and your students will love using dry erase markers in class.  Save your classroom budget and save time at the copier.  This is a great teacher hack!


I hope you enjoy this teacher hack and can use it to save some money and create a more functional classroom! Enjoy!


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Brag Tags in Music Class

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Learn to use Brag Tags in Music Class or any special area class.  Brag tags are an incredible student behavior incentive and can be used in older students as well as Kindergarten and other young learners.  You’ll find ideas for using these printable sanity savers even if you only see your students once a week.

What are brag tags?  They are tiny little awards that look similar to dog tags.  They are used as a classroom management tool and are insanely motivating for student when used consistently.  When I used these in my music and computer classes, my entire school was using them as student incentives.  We actually just called them "reward tags" instead of "brag tags" which sounds MUCH cooler!

After a year of using this system, administration changed and the incentive system wasn't a top priority.  Some teachers continued to use them, others dropped them.  Can brag tags work in special area classes even if classroom teachers don't use them?  You bet!  

Learn to use Brag Tags in Music Class or any special area class.  Brag tags are an incredible student behavior incentive and can be used in older students as well as Kindergarten and other young learners.  You’ll find ideas for using these printable sanity savers even if you only see your students once a week.

I introduce brag tags on the first day of class, but don't really get too detailed about them until day two of music.  During this class period, I'll show them some of the tags that I keep on hand and why they might be rewarded.  This is also when I introduce my two brag tag rules.
1.  There are no replacement tags.  You are responsible for your tag once it is given to you.
2.  Don't ask for a tag or you will not get one.
Pretty simple, right?  I bet I repeated rule #2 a million times!  

Learn to use Brag Tags in Music Class or any special area class.  Brag tags are an incredible student behavior incentive and can be used in older students as well as Kindergarten and other young learners.  You’ll find ideas for using these printable sanity savers even if you only see your students once a week.Learn to use Brag Tags in Music Class or any special area class.  Brag tags are an incredible student behavior incentive and can be used in older students as well as Kindergarten and other young learners.  You’ll find ideas for using these printable sanity savers even if you only see your students once a week.

I used reward tags to recognize many different behaviors, achievements and special event sin music class.  I loved giving out tags for concert attendance and performance.  I also used them to recognize singing in tune, keeping steady beat, singing solos, performing difficult rhythms, leading small groups and more.

Often I would take 3 or 4 tags and put them up on the board.  Then I would remind students that I would be looking for people who were exhibiting that skill or characteristic to reward.  This immediately focused student energy to what was happening in class.

When the entire school was using reward tags, I would just give out the tags as the students left my room.  They would take them back to their classroom and add them to whatever their home room teacher had set up for them.  For most classes it was a necklace that hung on their desk or on a bulletin board.  For other classes they used a jump ring (as shown in the first picture above). 

When classroom teachers stopped using them, I had to get a little creative with how students were rewarded and what they did with the tags.

Learn to use Brag Tags in Music Class or any special area class.  Brag tags are an incredible student behavior incentive and can be used in older students as well as Kindergarten and other young learners.  You’ll find ideas for using these printable sanity savers even if you only see your students once a week.

My favorite way was to attach the brag tags with a safety pin.  This worked great!  The older students could put them on by themselves and the younger students were easy enough to pin on their way out of class.

Learn to use Brag Tags in Music Class or any special area class.  Brag tags are an incredible student behavior incentive and can be used in older students as well as Kindergarten and other young learners.  You’ll find ideas for using these printable sanity savers even if you only see your students once a week.
A student favorite for displaying brag tags was to string them onto their shoe strings.  I thought this was pretty clever!  They looked great until...well...until they didn't.  *giggling*  Imagine recess just after the rain stopped.  Yep.  Some of the tags didn't last very long.  When that happened, I happily referred students to rule #1.

Some students did not want to wear their tag in any fashion, so they would just slip it into their pockets.  I was fine with that.  Some of them put them in their backpacks, taped them into folders or books.

I experimented with giving students library pockets to store their brag tags, but found with hundreds of students that was a little too much for me to keep up with.  I kept a box of small envelopes at my desk that students could request if they didn't want to wear them.  Most students wanted to wear them, so the envelopes were not used very often.  They were also seriously plain, so that might have deterred them as well. 
Learn to use Brag Tags in Music Class or any special area class.  Brag tags are an incredible student behavior incentive and can be used in older students as well as Kindergarten and other young learners.  You’ll find ideas for using these printable sanity savers even if you only see your students once a week.
My favorite use for brag tags was as an immediate reward for singing.  With my younger classes I would give them out liberally to students who sang by themselves, match pitched or performed a solo for the class.  For older students I used tags to recognize good singing posture, enunciation, eyes on the conductor, etc...

Learn to use Brag Tags in Music Class or any special area class.  Brag tags are an incredible student behavior incentive and can be used in older students as well as Kindergarten and other young learners.  You’ll find ideas for using these printable sanity savers even if you only see your students once a week.   Learn to use Brag Tags in Music Class or any special area class.  Brag tags are an incredible student behavior incentive and can be used in older students as well as Kindergarten and other young learners.  You’ll find ideas for using these printable sanity savers even if you only see your students once a week.

Preparing the Tags
I have a HUGE collection of music brag tags in my store that you may be interested in.  Click HERE to take a look at the Music Class Set with has 75 tags.  They were designed to be used with a color printer, but a low in version with no background is included as well.

To use them you'll need to print them, trim the edges and then laminate the whole sheet.  After they have been laminated, cut them apart.  At the beginning of the year, I punched holes at the top of every tag to save class time.  When I printed more copies during the year I usually skipped this step and just kept a whole punch near the tags in my classroom.

The start up time can seem a little overwhelming.  If you have a teaching assistant, school print shop or a parent volunteer, this would be a great job to pass off!  For me, I just picked a show to binge watch on Netflix and laminated the night away.


Learn to use Brag Tags in Music Class or any special area class.  Brag tags are an incredible student behavior incentive and can be used in older students as well as Kindergarten and other young learners.  You’ll find ideas for using these printable sanity savers even if you only see your students once a week.
  There are brag tags for recorders too!  Color tags are included (but do not reference "karate") for white, yellow, orange, red, green, blue, purple, brown, black, pink, turquoise and a master tag with several colors.

I use the Peripole Halo recorders with the neck strap so it was easy to thread them on.  Students with different recorders used a jump ring to attach them to their cases or backpacks.

Learn to use Brag Tags in Music Class or any special area class.  Brag tags are an incredible student behavior incentive and can be used in older students as well as Kindergarten and other young learners.  You’ll find ideas for using these printable sanity savers even if you only see your students once a week.
You can get the recorder set of brag tags HERE.  

Learn to use Brag Tags in Music Class or any special area class.  Brag tags are an incredible student behavior incentive and can be used in older students as well as Kindergarten and other young learners.  You’ll find ideas for using these printable sanity savers even if you only see your students once a week.

There are many ways to organize brag tags.  I must admit that my way is not very creative.  I used index card boxes.  I put singing tags in one box, recorder tags in another and so on.  There are many other more innovative ideas out there including pocket charts, photo storage boxes and some brag tag tackle boxes.

Learn to use Brag Tags in Music Class or any special area class.  Brag tags are an incredible student behavior incentive and can be used in older students as well as Kindergarten and other young learners.  You’ll find ideas for using these printable sanity savers even if you only see your students once a week.

I encourage you to consider adding this fun and motivating behavior incentive system in your classroom this year.  Do a little.  Do a lot.  Do what works for you and your classroom.

You can get my set of Brag Tags for Music Class HERE and the Recorder Set HERE.

Learn to use Brag Tags in Music Class or any special area class.  Brag tags are an incredible student behavior incentive and can be used in older students as well as Kindergarten and other young learners.  You’ll find ideas for using these printable sanity savers even if you only see your students once a week.

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Music Classroom Tour 2016

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Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!

I am in a new classroom this year and would LOVE to take you on a tour of my new space.  This year I'll be teaching 3rd through 5th grade music.  My room is much smaller than all of the rooms that I have taught in before, so I've had to reconsider what things are the most important to me and arrange my room accordingly.

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!
 This is one view of my classroom from the door at the back of the room.  I have chairs arranged in a style that Fred Jones would be proud of.  This arrangement lets me be near any student in class with just a few steps.  It also makes dividing for singing parts or creating small groups pretty easy.
Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!
 This is the other side of my room.  I've set up a teacher corner where I have my teaching supplies, office supplies, filing cabinets and some personal space.  There are more pictures of this area below.

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!
On many of the storage cabinets I have placed sets of posters.  To some, it may look like there is just TOO much stuff up, but I have a plan.  I am a big fan of workstations and I plan to set workstations up near the posters sets so that students will be able to use them as a reference.  For example, this awesome set of elements of music posters (by Sara Bibee) would be a great place for students work if they are completing listening journals.

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!
I'm using a rock star theme in my classroom as our school theme is "stars".  This is a set of tempo posters (love that glitter!) and below are some notation posters.  They are part of my music symbols set.  This would be a great place for a workstation that focuses on rhythm or composition.  The notation posters will be a great reference.
Get the tempo posters HERE.
Get the music symbol posters HERE.

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!
Also on the storage cabinets is a set of dynamics posters and these ensemble posters in a rock star theme.  The kids generally giggle at "sextet" and open house even a few parents!  This is a great reference for students as we discuss vocal and instrumental ensembles.  Get the dynamics posters HERE and the ensemble posters HERE.

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!

I'm loving this set of Rockin' the Standards posters using the new national standards.  They are color coordinated so that even if I didn't place this in these obvious columns that you would be able to see which "I Can" statements go with each action.  These may be more of a reminder for me. than my students at first, but I am okay with that.  These are near my teacher's corner so they will be a great reference for me as I do my lesson planning.  I'll also use this area to set up workstations so students will have more of an opportunity to read them then.

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!

This is my teacher corner.  The bookshelf that has the rainbow material covering stores my office supplies (paper, binders, blank CDs, etc...) as well as a few teaching resources.  The open part of it is where I have some supplies that students will use occasionally like bean bags, hole punches, scissors, etc...  I don't want to put them in my writing center unless they need them to keep that area tidy.  On my desk are two large rockers.  These are from a set of clipart from Melonheadz.  I used BlockPosters.com to create them at this size thanks to a great tutorial by Jena at Sew Much Music.

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!

Around my windows are some framed watercolor quotes about music.  They were created by Melody Payne.  The frames are inexpensive frames from the dollar store and are attached with Command Strips.

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!
On the side of my tall filing cabinet I attached some textured wrapping paper.  The flower pots are a Pinterest project and are filled with fake flowers because I have a brown thumb.  My collection of flyswatters is stored in a coffee can that I've covered in contact paper.  We only use them occasionally so I didn't want them to be in a prominent place in the classroom.  It is hard for kids to resist touching them.  Okay...me too.  

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!

Also in my teacher corner is a mini-fridge and microwave. All the comforts of home!  I keep lots of water and Diet Mt. Dew in there.  It is also night for evenings when I have to stay late for events.

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!

This is the front of my classroom.  "Think Like a Musician" is a growth mindset bulletin board with a music twist.  The other bulletin board is "In Music We Rock"which could double as classroom rules.

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!
This big pink flower was created with pink, paper bags and a bit of hot glue.  

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!
Near this bulletin board is where I keep some of my more frequently used props, pointers, scarves, etc...  The pool noodles are my steady beat swords.

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!

My daily points and performance assessments in music all use 3-4 point rubrics.  These posters have the descriptions of what I'm looking for.  Right now they are in the corner of the room, but I think I may end up moving them to a position that is a little closer to the students so that they can read them from their seats.  You can get the small versions of these posters HERE.

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!
This is the first classroom that I have had that has had one of those long, skinny bulletin boards above the whiteboard/chalkboard area.  Turns out that my music symbol posters look great there! They are also in a great position for me to use when teaching.

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!
A close up of those posters.  The cool, black, disco looking balls are actually a border that I found at the teacher store.

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!
This is my PAWS corner.  PBS expectation posters and my PAWsitive Effects of Music bulletin board go here.  This will also be one of the areas that I use for setting up centers.  

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!

This is one of my favorite bulletin boards!  This is Music Rocks and is basically a music advocacy bulletin board.  I used some pink, zebra striped wrapping paper as part of the background to add more interest.  The sparkles that you see here and in other parts of the room were all part of a collection of 70s themed decorations I found at the teacher store.  

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!

Outside my door is this cute little sign.  It is created with disco ball paper plates (from the party store), some purple mesh (the kind that crafters use to make wreaths), letters I printed from my computer and tape.  Simple, but eye catching!

Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!

I hope that you've enjoyed this classroom tour.  Share your classroom tour below! 
Music classroom set up and decorating ideas galore! Check out this article for ideas for decorations, bulletin boards, classroom organization, music class management, room set up strategies and more.  It is definitely more than just pictures of music classrooms and bulletin boards.  It is inspiration!

 Here's how:
1.  Grab the picture above and place it in your classroom tour blog post linking back to this post.
2.  Blog about your awesome classroom.  Be sure to share lots of pictures and tell us where we can find any resources that you use.
3.  After you've link the picture and posted, come back here and join the linky.

Have a great school year!!!






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Back to School DIY Project -BTS Blog Hop

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I am joining with 5 other music teachers for a Back to School Music Blog Hop!  There are six stops in all and you'll get to read about some solutions to make your back to school time a breeze.  I'm going to share a DIY project.

Make some rockin’ and unique hall passes for your classroom with this DIY classroom tutorial.  Grab an empty CD case and download this free file to get started.  Follow the Back to the School Blog Hop for even more great ideas for this busy time of the year.

I love projects.  Just ask my husband or anyone that knows me.  I love projects.  Small projects, big projects, craft projects, tech projects...I love projects.  This means that back to school time is full of them!  Today I'm going to share with you one of my favorites from this school year.  I hope that you will love these rock star hall passes!
Make some rockin’ and unique hall passes for your classroom with this DIY classroom tutorial.  Grab an empty CD case and download this free file to get started.  Follow the Back to the School Blog Hop for even more great ideas for this busy time of the year.

Why rock star?  Well, for me it always seems to work in a music classroom and specifically it matches my rock star themed classroom this year!  Each of the CD covers is designed to fit in side a traditional CD jewel case.  The slim ones that are often sold with blank CDs or DVDs will work with some adaptions, but the traditional ones work better.  

I like to use hall passes that I don't have to fill out each time a student needs to use them.  Actually, I prefer NOT to use the 50 tiny minutes that I have each week for student errands, bathroom breaks, or whatever.  I love these signs that David Row from Make Moments Matter has posted in his store. This freebie reminds students (and their teachers!) to take restroom breaks BEFORE special area classes start.  Click the picture to grab one for yourself!

These rock star passes go great with my classroom theme that you might have seen in my last post, Music ROCKS!  You can get that bundle by clicking on the picture below.

Make some rockin’ and unique hall passes for your classroom with this DIY classroom tutorial.  Grab an empty CD case and download this free file to get started.  Follow the Back to the School Blog Hop for even more great ideas for this busy time of the year.

They would also go with the rock star decor bundle for a computer lab or IT room that I have posted in my store too.  Check it out by clicking on the picture below.
Make some rockin’ and unique hall passes for your classroom with this DIY classroom tutorial.  Grab an empty CD case and download this free file to get started.  Follow the Back to the School Blog Hop for even more great ideas for this busy time of the year.

To get started you'll need to download the free printable hall passes from my Teachers Pay Teachers store.  I printed my on standard weight paper with a color printer and then trimmed them.
Make some rockin’ and unique hall passes for your classroom with this DIY classroom tutorial.  Grab an empty CD case and download this free file to get started.  Follow the Back to the School Blog Hop for even more great ideas for this busy time of the year.

After they were trimmed, I folded the spine so that it would fit inside the CD case.

Make some rockin’ and unique hall passes for your classroom with this DIY classroom tutorial.  Grab an empty CD case and download this free file to get started.  Follow the Back to the School Blog Hop for even more great ideas for this busy time of the year.

Make some rockin’ and unique hall passes for your classroom with this DIY classroom tutorial.  Grab an empty CD case and download this free file to get started.  Follow the Back to the School Blog Hop for even more great ideas for this busy time of the year.
 After the covers were placed inside the CD case I closed the case and then taped it closed.

Make some rockin’ and unique hall passes for your classroom with this DIY classroom tutorial.  Grab an empty CD case and download this free file to get started.  Follow the Back to the School Blog Hop for even more great ideas for this busy time of the year.

If you were going to create a lanyard or some kind of strap for hanging these, you should attach it to the inside of the CD case, secure it with hot glue or tape and then close the case.  I tape it closed, because students always want to open it to see inside.  

Make some rockin’ and unique hall passes for your classroom with this DIY classroom tutorial.  Grab an empty CD case and download this free file to get started.  Follow the Back to the School Blog Hop for even more great ideas for this busy time of the year.

On the back of each case there is a list of fictitious song titles related to that pass.  The restroom pass has song titles that remind students to wash their hands, hurry back to class and put things in the trash can.

Make some rockin’ and unique hall passes for your classroom with this DIY classroom tutorial.  Grab an empty CD case and download this free file to get started.  Follow the Back to the School Blog Hop for even more great ideas for this busy time of the year.
The nurse's office pass contains silly songs with themes about not feeling well and some things they might hear in the nurse's office like "Weren't you just in here?" and "Catch you cough!"Make some rockin’ and unique hall passes for your classroom with this DIY classroom tutorial.  Grab an empty CD case and download this free file to get started.  Follow the Back to the School Blog Hop for even more great ideas for this busy time of the year.
 The hall pass contains a variety of themes that relate to what students might need to do outside the classroom.

My plans are to hang these near my classroom door.  I'm going to post Lindsay Jervis' Rock Star Music Rules (picture below) near my door and these passes near by.  
Make some rockin’ and unique hall passes for your classroom with this DIY classroom tutorial.  Grab an empty CD case and download this free file to get started.  Follow the Back to the School Blog Hop for even more great ideas for this busy time of the year.

Make some rockin’ and unique hall passes for your classroom with this DIY classroom tutorial.  Grab an empty CD case and download this free file to get started.  Follow the Back to the School Blog Hop for even more great ideas for this busy time of the year.
I hope this is a DIY project that you will enjoy!  Don't forget to grab the free hall passes HERE.

Keeping hopping to the next blog in our Back to School Blog Hop.  Learn some great ways to communicate with parents from David Row at Make Moments Matter.



Make some rockin’ and unique hall passes for your classroom with this DIY classroom tutorial.  Grab an empty CD case and download this free file to get started.  Follow the Back to the School Blog Hop for even more great ideas for this busy time of the year.


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Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers

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Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.

Like most teachers I am such a fan of dollar stores.  I can shop there to organize my classroom, create new workstations and add a little flair to my bulletin boards.  I'd like to share with you just a few of my favorite finds!

Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.
Flyswatters
My kids are always a little in awe when they see my collection of flyswatters. (This pictures shows most of my collection.)  I sometimes use them as pointers when projecting things on my white board, but most often these are used for Swat the Staff or Swat the Rhythm games.  With Swat the Staff, I use masking tape to create a large staff on my board.  Two students (from two different teams) stand at the board.  I call a pitch name and the first person to correctly swat where that pitch should be gets a point for their team!  Fun!  You can check out some of my Swat the Rhythm games in my store.  


Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.
Plastic Fruit, Veggies and Food
I try to do all of my singing assessments with my primary students in a game like setting.  "Doggie, Doggie, Where's Your Bone" and other singing games help them relax and I can assess their ability to match pitch, sing in head voice or whatever we are assessing that day.  The plastic fruits, veggies and food are great for this kind of thing.  

The teacher sings "Who has the lemon?" (sol mi la sol mi)
The student with the lemon sings back "I have the lemon!" (sol mi la sol mi)


Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.
Little Cars
At one time I'm pretty sure I had a thousand of these little cars in every nook and cranny of my house!  It wasn't quite that many, but it certainly seemed like they were constantly multiplying.  Now, they are a music workstation!  I added stickers to them and used the Music City Parking Center file to create an interactive activity that my kiddos really enjoy.  I've used this fabulously with 2nd and 3rd graders.  At some dollar stores you can get 3 little cars for $1.  Score!


Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.
Clothespins

I love using clothespins for assessment.  Yep.  Assessment.  I painted some wooden clothespins, drew rhythms in various meters and had students pin them to a piece of paper that I had drawn a 2, 3 and 4 on.  If the pattern had four beats, they pinned it to the side of the paper with the 4 and so on.

Another GREAT activity for assessment is Clip It.  I have several of these sets that you might be interested in:  Animals,  Camping, Careers, Christmas, Presidents, Thanksgiving and Instruments.

Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.
Students match the syllables of each picture with one of the rhythms by clipping them.  

Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.
Balls
I like to use balls to bounce to the beat and for workstations like Note Toss (click to learn more) and Snowball Scoop (click for more details).

Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.
Alphabet Puzzles
These inexpensive alphabet puzzles are great manipulatives for Kindergarten and First Grade.  We sing the alphabet song while touching each letter.  Then I'll pick a letter and we will all remove that piece.  Next we sing through the alphabet song again but when we get to the missing letter we say "shh".  Later this knowledge translates to a quarter rest.  

In first grade, the students can handle this activity on their own in small groups and I set it up as a workstation.

Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.
Craft Sticks
Craft sticks are handy for many reasons.  Two of my favorite uses are creating groups and rhythmic dictation.  To learn more about how to create classroom groups with craft sticks read THIS post.
For rhythmic dictation, I show students how to create quarter notes and barred eighth notes with the sticks.  I clap patterns and the students "notate" them with the craft sticks.  When they have mastered that we figure out how to create a quarter rest with the craft sticks.  I've found that students are really creative with this!

Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.
Pipe Cleaners
My pal, Kristin Lukow, introduced me to this idea and I LOVE it!  The kids do too!  We listen to some soothing music while fashioning pipe cleaners into different notes.  For some notes or symbols students really have to use their problem solving skills to create them with only a pipe cleaner.  This activity gives students a chance to identify notes and symbols in a new way.


Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.
Flashlights
I have just started to experiment with using flashlights as manipulatives for listening activities and movement.  I've used them in performance before (see THIS rendition of "Fireflies") and I've been in workshops with the aaahhhmaaazing Artie Almeida who used them during listening activities.  Artie calls if flashlight painting and it is an amazing way to keep 100% of your students engaged.  Here's a video that might explain a little more.

Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.
Play Dough
There is just something about play dough that makes me smile.  The kids love to have the opportunity to use it in music class.  I use THESE play dough mats as a workstation.  The mats name each symbol or note and contain and brief definition.

Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.
Styrofoam Coolers
Weird, right?  These little coolers are PERFECT for creating the Snowball Scoop workstation I've described in a previous post.
They are also great for decorating a winter/snow themed concert.  At a buck each you can by dozens and create a wide variety of "snow" structures.

Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.
Dip and Veggie Trays
Once I started creating workstations with these dip and veggie trays it was pretty hard to stop!  Check out:
Dip and Chip Workstations


Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.
Pool Noodles
If you are a regular reader of my blog, you know that I am a big fan of using pool noodles in creative ways.  Noodle ponies, steady beat swords and unique bulletin board displays are just some of the ways that I have used them.  You might like to check out these pool noodle posts for more information:


Dollar Store Deals for Music Teachers –Learn about 13 must have dollar store finds for your music classroom.  Ideas for assessment, workstations,  DIY crafts, singing games and manipulatives are discussed in this post by a veteran music teacher.


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Clip It Clothespin Activities for Music Class

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Assessments in music class are quick and painless with clothespin activities.  Learn how to use these fun activities to assess students’ rhythmic understanding in this blog post.  Tips for organizing the supplies in your classroom are also included as well as links to download the sets.

I have a confession.  As a teacher who only sees her students once a week for 50 minutes I struggle with assessment.  When 500 students file in and out of your classroom each week it is hard to plan and carryout meaningful assessments.  I would much rather be joyfully making music than testing.  

What I've discovered is so stinkin' easy that I wish I would have known about it twenty years ago!  My secret assessment weapon?  Clothespins.

Assessments in music class are quick and painless with clothespin activities.  Learn how to use these fun activities to assess students’ rhythmic understanding in this blog post.  Tips for organizing the supplies in your classroom are also included as well as links to download the sets.
Yep.  Clothespins.  I usually place these Clip It sets in my workstations rotation.  I include a sheet for students to use and check themselves.  The Clip It sets are quite easy to put together.

Assessments in music class are quick and painless with clothespin activities.  Learn how to use these fun activities to assess students’ rhythmic understanding in this blog post.  Tips for organizing the supplies in your classroom are also included as well as links to download the sets.

I laminate each sheet as a whole on my personal laminator.  Then I cut then out.  This saves me lots of extra cutting time and gives them a sturdy finish.

Assessments in music class are quick and painless with clothespin activities.  Learn how to use these fun activities to assess students’ rhythmic understanding in this blog post.  Tips for organizing the supplies in your classroom are also included as well as links to download the sets.

I keep a basket (or two) of clothespins for activities like this.  I used to buy pretty colored ones, but have discovered that no one fights over the ugly, wooden ones.  

Assessments in music class are quick and painless with clothespin activities.  Learn how to use these fun activities to assess students’ rhythmic understanding in this blog post.  Tips for organizing the supplies in your classroom are also included as well as links to download the sets.
Students take a card and say the name of the object or person pictured.  Then they identify the rhythm pattern that most closely matches the syllables in the word and clip it.  Students can use the enclosed answer sheet to check their answers.  

If I am using this as an assessment activity, I'll walk around the room and take notes.  I usually use a 4 point scale for this kind of activity.  The scoring guide looks something like this:
4-consistently displays evidence of mastering the skill
3-displays evidence that the skill is mastered most of the time
2-displays evidence that the skill is still being learned and practiced
1-displays evidence that the skill is not mastered
It is also possible for a student to get a zero for this activity.  If they refuse to do anything, there is no evidence so there are no points awarded.

Assessments in music class are quick and painless with clothespin activities.  Learn how to use these fun activities to assess students’ rhythmic understanding in this blog post.  Tips for organizing the supplies in your classroom are also included as well as links to download the sets.
The cards in these sets are about a fourth of a page.  They fit PERFECTLY into photo boxes!  I printed out a little label for mine and then sorted the cards into individual boxes.  Each themed set is in a different box.

Assessments in music class are quick and painless with clothespin activities.  Learn how to use these fun activities to assess students’ rhythmic understanding in this blog post.  Tips for organizing the supplies in your classroom are also included as well as links to download the sets.
I keep the answer sheets in a folder near this box.  Sometimes I don't include the answer sheet and ask students to check each other.  These boxes are inexpensive.  You can find them HERE.  (Not an affiliate link.)
Assessments in music class are quick and painless with clothespin activities.  Learn how to use these fun activities to assess students’ rhythmic understanding in this blog post.  Tips for organizing the supplies in your classroom are also included as well as links to download the sets.

I printed the cover page of each set at 25% and used it to label the individual boxes.  I can pull out one set to use as a station during our workstation rotations or I can pull them all out and have students work in small groups.

Here are some sets that you might find handy.  Click each picture to learn more.  The Presidents Edition includes sixteenth notes and eighth note/16th note combinations.  The others are mostly quarter notes, barred eighth notes and quarter rests.

 Clip It Presidents Edition   Clip It Instruments Edition
 Clip It Camping Edition   Clip It Careers Edition   Clip It Animals Edition   Clip It Christmas Edition    Clip It Thanksgiving Edition

I hope that you'll enjoy these activities as much as I do!  I love the simplicity and I love the way a simple clothespin can keep students SO engaged.  It's almost like magic!
 Clip It Animals Edition
This picture is from Clip It Animals Edition.


Assessments in music class are quick and painless with clothespin activities.  Learn how to use these fun activities to assess students’ rhythmic understanding in this blog post.  Tips for organizing the supplies in your classroom are also included as well as links to download the sets.

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Books You Need in Your Music Classroom - Upper Elementary List

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Picture books and chapter books for the music classroom are essentials.  Explore this list of books appropriate for upper elementary that cover instruments, composers, careers, history and more.
I love incorporating books into my music lessons and I am adamant that I have a classroom library of books that teach about music history, explore music genres and dance, serve as a reference and more.  This year I moved to a new classroom that had NO music classroom library.  None.  Zilch.  Since I use a reading station in almost of my workstation rotations, I new I had to do something.

I have my own library of books that I've purchased during the last 20 years, so I had a few things to start with but soon realized most of my books were for primary aged students.  I'm currently teaching 3rd, 4th and 5th graders and most of the books that I had were for Kindergarten through 2nd grades.

Off to Amazon I went!  I would love to say that I researched for hours and consulted a stack of teacher resources, but I already had a wishlist a mile long for this age group!   Below you'll find a list of the books I have in my library that are appropriate for upper elementary classes.  

This list is not even CLOSE to being comprehensive.  There are hundreds of books that I could add to this list and more being published every year.  This list may be a good starting point for you if you are building a library for your music classroom.
Picture books and chapter books for the music classroom are essentials.  Explore this list of books appropriate for upper elementary that cover instruments, composers, careers, history and more.
Charlie Parker Played Be Bop      Chris Raschka
Leaf Man             Lois Ehlert
Max Found Two Sticks   Brian Pinkney
Thump Thump Rat-a-Tat-Tat       Gene Baer
Abiyoyo               Pete Seeger, illus by Michael Hays
The Music Teacher from the Black Lagoon            Mike Thaler
We All Went on Safari:  A Counting Journey through Tanzania     Laurie Krebs and Julia Cairns
Chalk     Bill Thomson  (This book is GREAT for introducing opera.  Students sing an improvised story to this book.)
M is for Music    Kathleen Krull

Dance
Dictionary of Dance         Liz Murphy
My Many Colored Days  Dr. Suess
The Story of the Nutcracker Ballet   Deborah Hautzig

Sing the Book
America the Beautiful    Scholastic

Blowin' in the Wind         Bob Dylan, illus John J. Muth
Don't Laugh at Me           Steve Seskin and Allen Shamblin
Froggie Went a-Courtin'                Iza Trapani
Grandma's Feather Bed     Christopher Canyon (lyrics by John Denver)
Puff the Magic Dragon      Peter Yarrow, Lenny Lipton
Senor Don Gato     illustrated by John Manders
Take Me Home, Country Roads    Christopher Canyon (lyrics by John Denver)
Take Me Out of the Bathtub and Other Silly Dilly Songs  Alan Katz
There Was a Cold Lady Who Swallowed Some Snow        Lucille Colandro
There was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Bat      Lucille Colandro
There was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Bell     Lucille Colandro
There was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly       Simms Taback
There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Shell  Lucille Colandro
What a Wonderful World             Tip Hopbood
Possum Come a-Knockin'             Nancy Van Laan

Picture books and chapter books for the music classroom are essentials.  Explore this list of books appropriate for upper elementary that cover instruments, composers, careers, history and more.
 Biography and Careers in Music
Some of these books are chapter books, so students may only get to read a portion of the book during workstation rotations.  My room is used as a bus room and so students also have the opportunity to read during bus room.  I do not lend my books out, but if something is quite popular I let our school librarian know.
Who Is Dolly Parton?      True Kelley
Who Was Elvis Presley? Geoff Edgers
Who was Michael Jackson? Megan Stine
Who Were the Beatles?  Geoff Edgers
There are more titles in this series that you might like.  Elton John and Bruce Springsteen are a few more musicians you can find.
Picture books and chapter books for the music classroom are essentials.  Explore this list of books appropriate for upper elementary that cover instruments, composers, careers, history and more.
Marvin Makes Music      Jim Madsen
When the Beat was Born:  DJ Kool Herc and the Creation of Hip Hop        Laban Carrick Hill
 
Picture books and chapter books for the music classroom are essentials.  Explore this list of books appropriate for upper elementary that cover instruments, composers, careers, history and more.
Composers
Aaron Copland (Getting to Know the World's Greatest Composers)         Mike Venezia
Duke Ellington (Getting to Know the World's Greatest Composers)          Mike Venezia
George Gershwin (Getting to Know the World's Greatest Composers)   Mike Venezia
George Handel (Getting to Know the World's Greatest Composers)        Mike Venezia
I, Vivaldi               Janice Shefelman
Johann Sebastian Bach (Getting to Know the World's Greatest Composers)         Mike Venezia
John Philip Sousa (Getting to Know the World's Greatest Composers)    Mike Venezia
Ludwig van Beethoven (Getting to Know the World's Greatest Composers)         Mike Venezia
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart         Mike Venezia
Young Mozart    Rachel Isadora
Famous Composers Reference Book      Usborne

Picture books and chapter books for the music classroom are essentials.  Explore this list of books appropriate for upper elementary that cover instruments, composers, careers, history and more.
Patriotic
I teach a "Star-Spangled Banner" unit and like to have a few books on hand for students who finish early.  These are a couple of my favorites.
By the Dawn's Early Light, The Story of the Star-Spangled Banner    Steven Kroll
Can You Sing "The Star-Spangled Banner"?          Martha E.H. Rustad

History
Do Re Mi:  If You Can Read This Thank Guido A'rezzo       Susan Roth
Everyday History: Song and Dance          John Malam
The Rock and Roll Alphabet         Jeffrey Schwartz
V is for von Trapp:  A Musical Family Alphabet    William Anderson
We Shall Overcome:  The Story of a Song              Debbie Levy
When Marian Sang          Pam Munoz Ryan
Before John Was a Giant              Carole Boston Weatherford
John Henry         Julius Lester, illus Jerry Pinkney

Instruments
I Know a Shy Fellow Who Swallowed a Cello        Barabara S. Garriel
Lemony Snicket The Composer is Dead  Nathaniel Stookey
M is for Melody                Kathy-jo Wargin
Never Play Music Right Next to the Zoo John Lithgow
The Remarkable Farkle McBride       John Lithgow
Zin! Zin! Zin! A Violin       Lloyd Moss
Moses Goes to a Concert             Isaac Millman

Getting Your Library Ready
Picture books and chapter books for the music classroom are essentials.  Explore this list of books appropriate for upper elementary that cover instruments, composers, careers, history and more.

Every teacher has to find what works best for them, but here are some things that I do to keep my classroom library in good shape:
1.  I put my name on the inside of the front cover, on the back cover and inside the book.  I use a permanent marker and a paint pen on books with a dark cover.
2.  Some of the books have CDs inside of them.  I prefer to keep the CDs in the book, so I tape them in and write "Do not remove." in permanent marker in an obvious place.  I must admit that this works great for every class except Kindergarten.  *giggle*  They rip the CD out and bring it to me so it doesn't get broken.  
3.  I usually keep my library on a shelf, but you could use milk crates, a rolling cart or even a book bag if you were only going to use them during workstations.

I hope that this list is helpful and would love to hear other suggestions for books to add to my library.  Leave the title of your favorites for upper elementary classes in the comments.  If you liked these ideas, pin this post for later!
Picture books and chapter books for the music classroom are essentials.  Explore this list of books appropriate for upper elementary that cover instruments, composers, careers, history and more.

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Music Workstations for Fall

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Music workstation ideas for fall include playing instruments, pumpkin matching games, candy corn puzzles and more! High engagement, active learning, high level conversations and smiles are all part of these centers for October and November in music class.
I LOVE workstations!  If you are a frequent reader, you probably have read many of my posts about centers.  If you are just getting started using workstations in your music classroom check out these three posts:
Music workstation ideas for fall include playing instruments, pumpkin matching games, candy corn puzzles and more! High engagement, active learning, high level conversations and smiles are all part of these centers for October and November in music class.
This year I am teaching in a room that is much smaller than the rooms I have been in for the last 20 years or so.  Centers still work perfectly!  This is a picture of some of my groups working on centers this fall.

Music workstation ideas for fall include playing instruments, pumpkin matching games, candy corn puzzles and more! High engagement, active learning, high level conversations and smiles are all part of these centers for October and November in music class.
Candy Corn Puzzles
At this workstation, students put together candy corn puzzles as a group.  Once they have assembled the candy corns they fill out a simple chart.  This set is the dynamics set so they are recording the symbol, the Italian term and the definition.  You can find these sets in my store:  Dynamics /  Notes and Rests /   Recorders    /   Symbols

Music workstation ideas for fall include playing instruments, pumpkin matching games, candy corn puzzles and more! High engagement, active learning, high level conversations and smiles are all part of these centers for October and November in music class.
For some centers I put down a large throw rug.  Students can sit on it or do their activity on it.  Sometimes using the rug just helps define the space you have designated for the workstation.


Music workstation ideas for fall include playing instruments, pumpkin matching games, candy corn puzzles and more! High engagement, active learning, high level conversations and smiles are all part of these centers for October and November in music class.

Clip-It Rhythms
At this workstation, students say/clap the name of the picture on the card.  They decide with rhythm matches the syllables of the picture and clip-it.  Each set comes with an answer sheet, but most groups use peer checking successfully.

Music workstation ideas for fall include playing instruments, pumpkin matching games, candy corn puzzles and more! High engagement, active learning, high level conversations and smiles are all part of these centers for October and November in music class.
Jazzy Jack-O-Lanterns
This is actually a bulletin board set that I have used for many years.  See it HERE.  At this station, students get a blank pumpkin and must use only music symbols to create a face on it.  I have sometimes just provided blank paper, but students seem to take so much time drawing their pumpkin that they don't get to using the music symbols.  A blank template gives them more time for that.

Music workstation ideas for fall include playing instruments, pumpkin matching games, candy corn puzzles and more! High engagement, active learning, high level conversations and smiles are all part of these centers for October and November in music class.
You can get the bulletin board HERE.  It doesn't come with a blank template, but you can find one online or in a bulletin board book you may already have on your shelf.


Music workstation ideas for fall include playing instruments, pumpkin matching games, candy corn puzzles and more! High engagement, active learning, high level conversations and smiles are all part of these centers for October and November in music class.
Pumpkin Patterns
I found these packs of foam pumpkins at the dollar store about five years ago.  I've seen similar ones at Hobby Lobby and Joann's that might work.  On the back of each pumpkin I drew a four beat rhythm and on another pumpkin the exact same rhythm.  Essentially, this is a memory game.  Students turn over a pumpkin, clap the rhythm they see and then try to find its match.  If they get it right, they keep the match and if they don't they turn them back over and it is someone else's turn.

Music workstation ideas for fall include playing instruments, pumpkin matching games, candy corn puzzles and more! High engagement, active learning, high level conversations and smiles are all part of these centers for October and November in music class.
Reading Station
I love to incorporate a reading station during workstation days.  I include books that we may have used for classroom activities, books about musicians and instruments, songs made into books and biographies.  Some of my favorites for October and November are:
Blowin' in the Wind by Bob Dylan
There was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Bat by Lucille Colandro
There was an Old Lady Who Swallowed Some Leaves by Lucille Colandro
What Does the Fox Say by Svain Nyhus
Pete the Cat Five Little Pumpkins by James Dean
Leaf Man by Lois Ehlert
The Itsy Bitsy Pumpkin by Sonali Fry
The Spooky Wheels on the Bus by Elizabeth Mills
The Little Old Lady Who Was Not Afraid of Anything by Linda Williams
Dem Bones by Bob Barner


Music workstation ideas for fall include playing instruments, pumpkin matching games, candy corn puzzles and more! High engagement, active learning, high level conversations and smiles are all part of these centers for October and November in music class.
Rhythm Stick Reading
If at all possible, I like to include a workstation that includes singing or playing an instrument.  This  was the first time my 3rd graders had worked at centers and I wanted to choose something with which they could have immediate success.  The rhythms in this file are easy.  It includes ta, titi and sh.  Actually, the notes aren't used.  Icons of rhythm sticks are used instead.
Music workstation ideas for fall include playing instruments, pumpkin matching games, candy corn puzzles and more! High engagement, active learning, high level conversations and smiles are all part of these centers for October and November in music class.

Rhythm sticks are also a nice instrument to start with because they are not particularly loud and annoying.  With a classroom full of learners in a small space, this is important!  They did a great job and demonstrated a great deal of self control.

You can find the Rhythm Stick Reading set HERE.  You might also like the one for several different rhythm instruments, maracas, tambourines, hand drums, triangles or cowbells.



Music workstation ideas for fall include playing instruments, pumpkin matching games, candy corn puzzles and more! High engagement, active learning, high level conversations and smiles are all part of these centers for October and November in music class.
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Christmas Music Workstations

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Christmas Music Workstations that are fun, engaging and easy on you are discussed in this blog post.  Puzzles, dabbers, snowballs and ice cube trays can all become awesome centers for the students in your music classroom.

I am thrilled to introduce a few new workstations to my classes this week.  December is such a fun time and I love that I can present such fun ways to assess their skills before winter break and then end of the quarter.  Keep reading for ideas for Christmas music workstations that really work!

Christmas Music Workstations that are fun, engaging and easy on you are discussed in this blog post.  Puzzles, dabbers, snowballs and ice cube trays can all become awesome centers for the students in your music classroom.
You probably know from previous blog posts that I am a big fan of Clip-It activities and so are my students.   This set of Christmas Clip-It cards contains both sacred and secular images including Santa, the nativity, the twelve days of Christmas and more.  Students clip the rhythm that matches the syllables in the picture.  I have an answer sheet that I include, but sometimes I just let the students check each other's answers.  Read more about Clip-It games HERE.

Christmas Music Workstations that are fun, engaging and easy on you are discussed in this blog post.  Puzzles, dabbers, snowballs and ice cube trays can all become awesome centers for the students in your music classroom.

I have a set of Christmas Workstationsin my store and this Swat the Rhythm game is from that collection.  Students lay down the cards and two students choose a flyswatter.  Another student claps one of the rhythms on the card and the first one to swat the correct rhythm is the winner. FUN!

Christmas Music Workstations that are fun, engaging and easy on you are discussed in this blog post.  Puzzles, dabbers, snowballs and ice cube trays can all become awesome centers for the students in your music classroom.
Also from the Christmas Workstations set is this Frozen Instrument Families word find.  I have found that it helps to mix up the stations so that students are physically active at some and rest and work quietly at others.  This quiet center is a great way to review instrument spellings and instrument families.

Christmas Music Workstations that are fun, engaging and easy on you are discussed in this blog post.  Puzzles, dabbers, snowballs and ice cube trays can all become awesome centers for the students in your music classroom.

Nutcracker activities are also wonderful to include in workstation rotations this time of year.  Although this Rap It, Clap It, Music Match It Set could be used any time of year, it works well in this rotation.  Students match the cards with the number of syllables in each picture and then complete a worksheet to show what they have learned.   You can download it HERE.

Christmas Music Workstations that are fun, engaging and easy on you are discussed in this blog post.  Puzzles, dabbers, snowballs and ice cube trays can all become awesome centers for the students in your music classroom.

Cool Composition is a workstation that I use periodically all year long.  Sometimes we use it to composer, take rhythmic dictation or in this case, decipher the rhythm of a familiar song.  The little cubes are foam cubes from Dollar Tree.  Each side has a 1 beat note/rhythm written on it with a permanent marker.

The ice cube trays are made by Rubbermaid.  I had to look quite some time to find trays with 16 cubes.  This makes the perfect vessel for composing in four-four time.  Most ice trays come in 14 cube size.  I never really knew that until I started teaching music!  

At this station, students are asked to notate the rhythm to "Jingle Bells".

Christmas Music Workstations that are fun, engaging and easy on you are discussed in this blog post.  Puzzles, dabbers, snowballs and ice cube trays can all become awesome centers for the students in your music classroom.

Ornament Puzzlers are the next stop in the Christmas music workstation rotation.  This activity has students put together simple, 2 piece puzzles and then write down the information they have pieced together.  This is a great way to reinforce note values without being to difficult for special learners.  You can get these HERE in my store.


 Christmas Dabber Activities for Music Class

My students LOVE using dabbers and I love how easy and quick assessment can be when they use them!  Check out this Dabber Activities Christmasset for many great print and go worksheets to include at a workstation.  Students tend to go through these quick so you should probably plan to have 2-3 sheets for them to complete.  Learn more about using dabbers in music class in this previous blog post.

Christmas Music Workstations that are fun, engaging and easy on you are discussed in this blog post.  Puzzles, dabbers, snowballs and ice cube trays can all become awesome centers for the students in your music classroom.
Speaking of previous blog posts, you might want to revisit THIS post about my Snowball Scoop center.  It is such a novelty that students hardly realize they are learning!

More ideas for Christmas Workstations:

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Christmas Music Workstations that are fun, engaging and easy on you are discussed in this blog post.  Puzzles, dabbers, snowballs and ice cube trays can all become awesome centers for the students in your music classroom.



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Note Value Bowling Music Workstation

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Note Value Bowling is a fun music workstation that reinforces note values and causes lots of smile!  Use a toy bowling set and the free Note Value Bowling score sheets to bowl your students over to reading music!

Bowling in music class?  You bet! It may be your students' favorite music workstation!  Read on to find out how to create the fun and functional workstation for your classroom.

Note Value Bowling is a fun music workstation that reinforces note values and causes lots of smile!  Use a toy bowling set and the free Note Value Bowling score sheets to bowl your students over to reading music!

I have several sets of bowling pins at my house.  I know that sounds weird, but I've been working on and then perfecting a bowling workstation for several years.  The set that I used in the pictures is a wooden set.  It is a nice size and weight and the pins make a lovely sound when they fall down.

This set was on sale for 75% off when I picked it up.  Music teacher WIN!  I've picked up some at discount stores and yard sales too.

From experience with Layton Music's Music Yahtzee, I knew that putting a single eighth not or a dotted quarter note would up the difficulty of this game to the point where not all of my students would be able to play and successfully record their score.  I decided to use notes that would not utilize fractions, or their mathematical brothers, decimals.  I used quarter note, barred eighth notes, 4 sixteenth notes, half note, dotted half note and whole note.  I drew one of these on each of the six pins.  I used a permanent marker, but you could also use a paint pen.

Note Value Bowling is a fun music workstation that reinforces note values and causes lots of smile!  Use a toy bowling set and the free Note Value Bowling score sheets to bowl your students over to reading music!

I have a plastic set of pins.  I used a white paint pen and a silver Sharpie to draw on the notes.  They have held up quite well.  Although you could store the pins in their original box or container, I haven't found a set that holds up well.  I buy plastic storage containers and place everything in them.
Note Value Bowling is a fun music workstation that reinforces note values and causes lots of smile!  Use a toy bowling set and the free Note Value Bowling score sheets to bowl your students over to reading music!

Before introducing the game to students I spent some time practicing.  (Turns out I'm a pathetic bowler!)  I experimented with how far apart to place the pins and how far back I needed to stand to roll the boll.  If the pins are too far apart, they won't all fall down even with a perfect throw.  If they are too close together, they will all fall down every time.  I ended up finding the perfect distance for my set of pins and marking their placement with a piece of masking tape,  I also drew the note on the masking tape to help them set up as quickly as possible.

After much experimentation, I decided that my students needed to stand 4 floor tiles away from the pins.  (That's somewhere between 4 and 5 feet.)

If you don't have a bowling set, you can create your own pins with 20 ounce soda or water bottles.  You could even use empty 2-liter bottles.  Spray paint them before drawing the notes on and add about a third of a bottle of beans or sand to steady them.  Small Nerf balls would work great with these DIY pins. 
Note Value Bowling is a fun music workstation that reinforces note values and causes lots of smile!  Use a toy bowling set and the free Note Value Bowling score sheets to bowl your students over to reading music!

To complete the workstation, I include a score sheet on a clipboard and a pencil.  One version of the score sheet contains a "cheat sheet" and shows students the note value of each pin.  The other version does not.  My goal in using this workstation is to reinforce note values, so I don't mind if students use the score sheet with the references.  They still gain practice in adding them all together.

Note Value Bowling is a fun music workstation that reinforces note values and causes lots of smile!  Use a toy bowling set and the free Note Value Bowling score sheets to bowl your students over to reading music!
You can download both of the sheets by clicking on the picture above or by clicking HERE.  I hope that your students enjoy this activity!

Note Value Bowling is a fun music workstation that reinforces note values and causes lots of smile!  Use a toy bowling set and the free Note Value Bowling score sheets to bowl your students over to reading music!


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Dealing with Teacher Burnout

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Tips for dealing with teacher burnout.  How do you know you're burning out?  Things NOT to try (but are pretty awesome) and solutions to save your sanity and your school year.

Some days when I’m greeted with an enthusiastic “Good morning!  How are you?”  I just want to growl and say “I’m tired.”  I hate being that person, because would much rather be happy and cheerful.   How about you?  Let’s face it, teaching can be exhausting and burnout can happen to the best of us. How do you avoid burnout?  How do you know if you’re there?  What does burnout look like?  Read on, my weary teacher friends.

How do you know that you’re burning out?

You are overwhelmed.  You know there’s a lot to do and you are wondering how you will be able to add one more thing.  Maybe you are thinking that you should compromise your values and expectations just so you can mark things off your to do list.  You may even consider prioritizing but tell yourself it just won’t be enough.

You are anxious. You’ve got that nagging feeling that you should be doing more.  You may even realize that you actually need to do LESS, but still feel like you could do more and you should do more.

You are tired.  Maybe tired isn’t the best description.  You are exhausted.  Weary.  You sleep, but don’t seem to rest.  It’s the kind of tired that makes you want to crawl in bed at 6:30 and wake up in 3 days.  For me, I know I’m experiencing burnout when I sit down at lunch and daydream about going to bed that night.

You just aren’t any fun.  How long has it been since you laughed?  Really laughed?  Belly laughed?  Maybe you just don’t laugh or smile as much as you used to.  I hate unfunny me!  It makes the days feel longer than usual.

You just aren’t up to daily challenges like you used to be.  You may not feel as creative, patient or enthusiastic as you once did.  You may feel like you have just lost your edge.

You just want to be left alone.  Do you just want to find a big cozy blanket and hide under it?  You may be experiencing burnout if you are craving a place to hide, a place where you aren’t tried and tested and no one will question you.  A place that is just…quiet!

Ways I’ve Tried Dealing with Burnout

Tips for dealing with teacher burnout.  How do you know you're burning out?  Things NOT to try (but are pretty awesome) and solutions to save your sanity and your school year.1.  Look at that teacher or administrator that is really getting on your nerves.   Close one eye and put your pointer finger and thumb in front of your other eye and pretend you are pinching their little heads.  Incredibly satisfying.
2.  Harry and David’s has these magic little bags of happiness called Moose Munch.  Buy. Eat.  Eat some more. Cry when it is gone.  Buy more.  Repeat.
3.  Gallons of Diet Mt. Dew.

I don’t really recommend any of these, but they are things that I have tried!

How to Deal with Burnout 

1.  Get physical.   I know, it’s not what I usually think of when I am tired and stressed, but exercising can give you quiet time, gets your endorphins popping and will make you rest better.  You don’t have to go to the gym either.  Take a walk, dance to a YouTube video with your kids, get a little romantic with your spouse, take a swim or even play a game of ping pong.
2.  Be a list maker. Sometimes I get stressed because I am trying to remember everything that I need to do and inevitably forget something.  Now, I make a list of things that I need to do and then stop worrying about it.  My lists usually in three parts:  Today, This Week and Sometime.  The Today list includes things that need to be done before I go home.  This week means as soon as I can and the Sometime list is for those great ideas that I want to do, but can’t do right now.  Sometimes I copy things from list to list for weeks until I get to them.  While that might sound crazy, if it is on the list I spend less time thinking about it.
3.  Plan your quiet time.  Schedule a time for a massage or a pedicure.  Plan an afternoon where you have no responsibilities and turn your phone off.  Schedule time to relax.  Make it as much of a priority as you do your tasks at work.  Your family and your students will thank you for it!
4.  Get some rest.   No, really.  Go to bed a little earlier.  End your evening with a hot shower, a favorite drink and perhaps meditation or prayer.  Don’t research online, grade papers, catch up on emails or even make a grocery list.  Just go to bed.
5.  Get to work earlier.  Feeling rushed and stressed can start right away.  Is there a way that you can get to work 15 minutes earlier?  A few minutes of extra time before things get busy and noisy can go a long way in starting your day off feeling prepared and refreshed.  If you can find those minutes in the morning, plan to stay 15 minutes later and get everything ready for the next morning.  (That includes stacking up papers to grade and leaving them there until tomorrow.  Don’t take them home!)

Tips for dealing with teacher burnout.  How do you know you're burning out?  Things NOT to try (but are pretty awesome) and solutions to save your sanity and your school year.

6.  Be thankful.  Sometimes when I am feeling overwhelmed and stressed it helps to count my blessings.  Be thankful for your family, friends and co-workers.  Be thankful for the things that are going right.  Be thankful for the little things like outside recess and no bake cookies for lunch.  Be thankful.  You have the greatest job in the world!

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Tips for dealing with teacher burnout.  How do you know you're burning out?  Things NOT to try (but are pretty awesome) and solutions to save your sanity and your school year.


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Flashlight Routines that Teach Form

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Flashlight routines in music class can be used to reinforce form and keep students engaged and excited about learning.  This post shares routines for "Cantina Band" by John Williams and "March" from the Nutcracker as well as tips and tricks for using them successfully in your music classroom.

The first time I experienced using flashlights to demonstrate musical form was in a workshop by the talented and genius, Artie Almeida.  I love using them to keep students engaged and my students love them for their novelty.
Flashlight routines in music class can be used to reinforce form and keep students engaged and excited about learning.  This post shares routines for "Cantina Band" by John Williams and "March" from the Nutcracker as well as tips and tricks for using them successfully in your music classroom.
For most flashlight routines that I have used in class I use two or three colors.  I use a large permanent marker and color in the lens. Depending on the marker, you may want to let it dry and then color it again.
Instead of using permanent markers, you could use colored plastic wrap and rubber bands.  I didn't like how often my rubber bands disappeared and turned into weapons, so after a time or two I decided this was not a good choice for me.

Flashlight routines in music class can be used to reinforce form and keep students engaged and excited about learning.  This post shares routines for "Cantina Band" by John Williams and "March" from the Nutcracker as well as tips and tricks for using them successfully in your music classroom.
Flashlights
I chose inexpensive flashlights from the dollar store about bought about 10 more than my largest class because I expected some of them to break easily.  The batteries were pretty expensive, but with the help of a regional grant I was able to get enough to fill every flashlight.  

When using the flashlights sitting down, you get a large light on the ceiling.  It's pretty, but not very distinct or clear if your room isn't completely dark.  In the picture above you can see what it looks like when students are sitting.  In the picture below students were standing.  That produced a smaller, cleaner look to their light and it looked much better when we were all working together.

You could always buy smaller flashlights with a stronger beam to get the same effect.

Flashlight routines in music class can be used to reinforce form and keep students engaged and excited about learning.  This post shares routines for "Cantina Band" by John Williams and "March" from the Nutcracker as well as tips and tricks for using them successfully in your music classroom.

Teaching Form
Before putting flashlights in their hands we listen to the piece of music.  We either follow a listening maps or we listen and create our own listening map.  This gives students the experience they need to be successful when they get the flashlights.

We label each section with a letter name and decide on an action for the flashlight.

Flashlight routines in music class can be used to reinforce form and keep students engaged and excited about learning.  This post shares routines for "Cantina Band" by John Williams and "March" from the Nutcracker as well as tips and tricks for using them successfully in your music classroom.

Flashlight routines in music class can be used to reinforce form and keep students engaged and excited about learning.  This post shares routines for "Cantina Band" by John Williams and "March" from the Nutcracker as well as tips and tricks for using them successfully in your music classroom.

This video is of one of my 5th grade classes and their first attempt at a flashlight routine to "Cantina Band".  This is an unedited, imperfect, completely authentic look at how this works in my classroom.  I love how at section D they are in awe of their own awesomeness!



Flashlight routines in music class can be used to reinforce form and keep students engaged and excited about learning.  This post shares routines for "Cantina Band" by John Williams and "March" from the Nutcracker as well as tips and tricks for using them successfully in your music classroom.

I hope this inspires you to try using flashlights in your classroom.  Do you have any favorite pieces that would work well with flashlights?  I would love to learn about them.  Let me know in the comments.

Flashlight routines in music class can be used to reinforce form and keep students engaged and excited about learning.  This post shares routines for "Cantina Band" by John Williams and "March" from the Nutcracker as well as tips and tricks for using them successfully in your music classroom.


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A Handy Way to Teach Treble Clef Names

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Teach the treble clef lines and spaces with this "handy" trick that involves gloves!  Students leave with a crafty project that helps them read treble clef pitches!

You've probably heard of using your hand as a visual aid for learning the names of pitches on the treble clef staff.  With five fingers....err...four and your thumb to represent lines and 4 spaces, it is perfect!  I wanted to take that idea just a little bit further with my students.  This is what we did.

Teach the treble clef lines and spaces with this "handy" trick that involves gloves!  Students leave with a crafty project that helps them read treble clef pitches!
Using plastic gloves and permanent markers we wrote the names of the lines at the tips of our fingers.  To solidify the concept that our fingers represented the treble clef lines, we drew lines on our fingers too.  Some of my students claimed they were drawing their bones!  

Next we found the spaces between our fingers and labeled them with the treble clef space names. 

Teach the treble clef lines and spaces with this "handy" trick that involves gloves!  Students leave with a crafty project that helps them read treble clef pitches!

With my students this year I used very thin, clear gloves that you might see food service workers use in your cafeteria.  They were pretty inexpensive but were quite large for some of my smaller students.  They were a safe choice for students with an allergy to latex.

Another time I used latex gloves (pictured above).  These gloves allowed us to write more clearly, but were MUCH more expensive.  I bought a box of large and a box of small and they fit better than the plastic gloves.  I would only recommend these if you were working with a pretty small class or were able to secure donations.

Teach the treble clef lines and spaces with this "handy" trick that involves gloves!  Students leave with a crafty project that helps them read treble clef pitches!
Permanent markers dried pretty fast during this project.  I experimented with several other writing utensils include ink pens, flair pens and paint pens.  Permanent markers are definitely the way to go.

After we finished our gloves we practiced using them with Music K-8's songs "Every Good Boy Does Fine" and "FACE" on YouTube.   I also love Quaver Music's "Lines and Spaces" for this activity.

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Teach the treble clef lines and spaces with this "handy" trick that involves gloves!  Students leave with a crafty project that helps them read treble clef pitches!



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Books You Need in Your Music Classroom - PRIMARY LIST

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Books in the music classroom can be used for singing, dancing, composing, history and more! Check out this huge list of children's literature that should be on the shelves of your music classroom.

In my music education college classes, way back in the day, it never occurred to me to invest in children's books for my music classroom.  I guess that it never occurred to my instructors either because I didn't hear about it until a few years into my teaching career.  It sounds crazy doesn't it? 

There are so many amazing pieces of children's literature that lend themselves to teaching musical concepts and enhance lessons in history, movement, composition and more.  This is a list of some of the books that I like using with Preschool through 2nd grades.  This list is in no way complete, but hopefully it will provide you with inspiration when shopping for your classroom.

If you are interested in my list of books for upper elementary, you'll want to check out THIS post with a long list of books that I keep for 3rd through 6th graders.

Add Sound Effects
Polar Bear, Polar Bear What Do You Hear? Bill Martin Jr.
Caps for Sale Esphyr Slobodkina
Goodnight Moon by Margaret Wise Brown 
The Little Old Lady Who Wasn't Afraid of Anything Linda Williams
The Napping House Audrey and Don Wood
Tiptoe Joe Ginger Foglesong Gibson
This is the House That Jack Built Simms Taback
Where the Wild Things Are Maurice Sendak
Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good Very Bad Day Judith Viorst
In the Tall, Tall Grass Denise Fleming
Mortimer Robert Munsch

Great for vocal exploration or incorporating classroom instruments, this list of books is just a few of the books that work well for adding instruments.  Each book uses a repetitive and sometimes cumulative format that makes it easy for students to follow along.
Looking for an easy way to get started with this kind of activity?  Start with This is the House That Jack Built.  At the beginning of the book, there is a cast list.  Have your students brainstorm sounds they can make that would represent each character.  Next, read the book adding those sound effects.  So much fun!
Books in the music classroom can be used for singing, dancing, composing, history and more! Check out this huge list of children's literature that should be on the shelves of your music classroom.

Instruments

Berlioz the Bear Jan Brett
Carnival of the Animals John Lithgow
Dan, The Taxi Man Eric Ode
Never Play Music Right Next to the Zoo John Lithgow
The Remarkable Farkle McBride John Lithgow
Tubby the Tuba Paul Tripp
Zin! Zin! Zin! A Violin Lloyd Moss

In my classroom, we don't really plunge into naming instruments and classifying instruments by family until 3rd grade. That being said, we learn about individual instruments and classroom instruments in K-2.  In addition to identifying instruments in pieces we listen to, exploring the music of Peter and the Wolf and Carnival of the animals, I like to use these books about instruments in class.

Books in the music classroom can be used for singing, dancing, composing, history and more! Check out this huge list of children's literature that should be on the shelves of your music classroom.

Rhyming Books for Rhythm Work
Chicka Chicka Boom Boom Bill Martin Jr.
Commotion in the Ocean Giles Andreae
Farmer Joe and the Music Show Tony Mitton
'Possum Come a-Knockin'by Nancy Van Laan
Moo Bah La La La by Sandra Boynton
Goodnight, Goodnight, Construction Site by Sherri Duskey Rinker
Room on the Broom by Julia Donaldson
Llama Llama Red Pajama  by Anna Dewdney

There are thousands of rhyming books that have strong rhythm and repetition and work well for rhythm work.  I've listed just a few and know that you probably have several books in your library that aren't on this list.

With rhyming books, I often read them and have students keep the steady beat by patting or with non-pitched percussion instruments.  You could have them isolate rhythms from the book and decipher their rhythm, play them on Orff instruments, create body percussion sections and more.

Max Found Two Sticks by Brian Pinkney is great for rhythm work too, but isn't a strong rhyming book.  I pass out drumsticks (or chop sticks!) and have students echo the drumming phrases in this book.  This is a fun way to introduce this great book to a class.

Movement
My Many Colored Days Dr. Suess
What a Wonderful World Theile and Weiss
My Many Colored Days and What a Wonderful World are excellent books for adding movement with scarves and ribbons.  Read the book, assign students a color or another key word in the story.  When students hear that word or phrase, they move with their scarf.  I use the Louis Armstrong version of "What a Wonderful World" to play while we move too.

Giraffe's Can't Dance by Giles Andreae is such a delightful rhyming book!  I love to cue up music to match the specific genres mentioned in the book and play it on our second reading.  I challenge students to dance in the same style too.

We're Going on a Bear Hunt by Michael J. Rosen is a great way to introduce the Bear Hunt activity most music teachers use in music class.  I also like to keep this in my library so students can read and move during center time.
Books in the music classroom can be used for singing, dancing, composing, history and more! Check out this huge list of children's literature that should be on the shelves of your music classroom.
 Sing the Book
Baa Baa Black Sheep Iza Trapani
Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? Bill Martin Jr.
Cat Goes Fiddle-I-Fee Paul Gaidone
Coat of Many Colors  Dolly Parton
Don't Laugh at Me Steve Seskin and Allen Shamblin
Five Green and Speckled Frogs  Priscilla Burris
Footloose Kenny Loggins
Grandma's Feather Bed John Denver
Groovy Joe Ice Cream and Dinosaurs Eric Litwin and Tom Lichtenheld
He's Got the Whole World in His Hands  Kadir Nelson
How Much is that Doggie in the Window Iza Trapani
Hush Little Baby Brian Pinkney
I Ain't Gonna Paint No More Karen Beaumont
I'm a Little Teapot Iza Trapani
Itsy Bitsy Spider Iza Trapani
Jennie Jenkins John Feierabend
Mary Had a Little Lamb Iza Trapani
My Favorite Things Renne Graef
Oh Where, Oh Where Has My Little Dog Gone? Iza Trapani
One Love Bob Marley
Pete the Cat and His Four Groovy Buttons Eric Litwin
Pete the Cat Rockin' in My School Shoes Eric Litwin
Row, Row, Row Your Boat Iza Trapani
Sing and Dance in Your Polka Dot Pants  Eric Litwin and Tom Lichtenheld
Sunshine on My Shoulders John Denver
Take Me Home, Country Roads John Denver
The Seals on the Bus Lenny Hort
This Land is Your Land Woody Guthrie
Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star Iza Trapani
What Does the Fox Say Svein Nyhus
Wheels on the Bus Raffi

Books in the music classroom can be used for singing, dancing, composing, history and more! Check out this huge list of children's literature that should be on the shelves of your music classroom.

Miscellaneous
Introduction to Opera
Chalk Bill Thomson
This book is pictures only and makes the perfect introduction to opera!  I explain to students that an opera is a play that is sung, not spoken.  Then I sing questions and they sing their answers before we "read" this book.  I sing what I think is happening on the first few pages and then invite students to take over the story in the same way.  It is so fun to hear their creative improvisations!

Vocalizations
How to Speak Moo Deborah Fajerman
So fun for vocal warm ups, this book has students "mooing" in all sorts of ways!

Dynamics
Harold Finds a Voice Courtney Diemas
Ruby Sings the Blues Niki Daly
Looking for a great way to introduce dynamics to your primary learners?  These books are perfect!

Let me know what books you love to use with your primary students in the comments or on Facebook.  If you liked this list PIN IT for later!
Books in the music classroom can be used for singing, dancing, composing, history and more! Check out this huge list of children's literature that should be on the shelves of your music classroom.
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Instruments of the Orchestra Workstations

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Instruments of the Orchestra Workstations can be the perfect addition to your student of instruments and instrument families.  Learn about a few easy centers to implement into your classroom and woo your students to success.

My third graders due a huge unit on instruments of the orchestra.  In Kindergarten through Second grades we discuss instruments as they come up in pieces we are listening too.  We spend time learning to identify classroom percussion instruments and classify them.  Third grade we really hit it hard and work to learn instrument names, their correct spelling, instrument families and how to identify them aurally.

This year I chose Instruments of the Orchestra as the content for the SLOs that I am recording.  SLOs are student learning objectives.  We are required to pretest and post-test and record the data for analysis.  After spending a week on each instrument family, my students work in centers to review and prepare for their test at the end of the unit.  Here are the workstations they completed.

Clip It-Instruments


Instruments of the Orchestra Workstations can be the perfect addition to your student of instruments and instrument families.  Learn about a few easy centers to implement into your classroom and woo your students to success.

Instruments of the Orchestra Workstations can be the perfect addition to your student of instruments and instrument families.  Learn about a few easy centers to implement into your classroom and woo your students to success.

At this station, students review instruments and their names as they determine how many syllables are in each instrument name.  Then they take a clothespin and pin the note or rhythm that most closely matches the syllable of the instrument.  This is mostly rhythm work, but this is an opportunity for students to see a picture of the instrument and the instrument name.  You can get this Instrument Clip It here.

Instrument Dabbers

Instruments of the Orchestra Workstations can be the perfect addition to your student of instruments and instrument families.  Learn about a few easy centers to implement into your classroom and woo your students to success.


I think that I may love dabbers more than my students!  I am always looking for ways to incorporate them into center time.  At this station students had four worksheets to complete (one for each instrument family).  Students dabbed instruments belonging in each family.  So fun!  You can get this dabber set HERE.

Instruments of the Orchestra Workstations can be the perfect addition to your student of instruments and instrument families.  Learn about a few easy centers to implement into your classroom and woo your students to success.Instruments of the Orchestra Workstations can be the perfect addition to your student of instruments and instrument families.  Learn about a few easy centers to implement into your classroom and woo your students to success.

Some of the dabber pages needed a little bit of time to dry.  We laid them on our seats and by the time most students had rotated through all of the stations, their papers were dry and ready to go home to hang on the fridge.
Instruments of the Orchestra Workstations can be the perfect addition to your student of instruments and instrument families.  Learn about a few easy centers to implement into your classroom and woo your students to success.

Instrument Guess Who

Instruments of the Orchestra Workstations can be the perfect addition to your student of instruments and instrument families.  Learn about a few easy centers to implement into your classroom and woo your students to success.
This fun workstation was created by Chrissy at Hutzel's House of Music.  You need to purchase the regular Guess Who game and then purchase her insert, trim it and slide it into the case.  Students compete against each other to figure out a selected instruments.  They can only ask yes and no questions.  Here's a few of the GREAT thinking and learning questions I heard from this workstation;
"Is it a member of the brass family?"
"Does it use a reed?"
"Do you scrape it to make a sound?"
"Is it bigger than my arm?"
How awesome is that?  I love that this center allows them to really think about what each instrument looks like and helps them come up with ways to describe their characteristics.


 Instrument Family Punch Cards

 Instruments of the Orchestra Workstations can be the perfect addition to your student of instruments and instrument families.  Learn about a few easy centers to implement into your classroom and woo your students to success.

Instruments of the Orchestra Workstations can be the perfect addition to your student of instruments and instrument families.  Learn about a few easy centers to implement into your classroom and woo your students to success.

This station is SO much fun!  I have a collection of hole punches.  Some have stars, hearts, music notes or the original circle.  At this center, students complete four punch cards (one for each family).  On each card they are asked to punch the instruments for a specific family.  You can download the cards HERE.

In my classroom, this station worked out best to be a standing station.  I used an empty cart and placed supplies on it.  Students stood around the cart to complete their center work.  Most students really enjoyed this opportunity to stretch their legs.  I will definitely add more standing stations in the future.

Instruments of the Orchestra Workstations can be the perfect addition to your student of instruments and instrument families.  Learn about a few easy centers to implement into your classroom and woo your students to success.  Instruments of the Orchestra Workstations can be the perfect addition to your student of instruments and instrument families.  Learn about a few easy centers to implement into your classroom and woo your students to success.

  Rap It, Clap It, Music Match It

Instruments of the Orchestra Workstations can be the perfect addition to your student of instruments and instrument families.  Learn about a few easy centers to implement into your classroom and woo your students to success.
 Similar to Instrument Clip It, the instrumental version of Rap It, Clap It, Music Match It asks students to sort instruments by the number of syllables in their name.  You can grab this set HERE.
Instruments of the Orchestra Workstations can be the perfect addition to your student of instruments and instrument families.  Learn about a few easy centers to implement into your classroom and woo your students to success.

Reading Station

Instruments of the Orchestra Workstations can be the perfect addition to your student of instruments and instrument families.  Learn about a few easy centers to implement into your classroom and woo your students to success.

 I always like to include a reading station if time and space allow.  At this station students sat on the carpet and read books.  I really wanted to include only books about instruments, but just don't feel like I have enough in my library yet.  I included books about composers and a few seasonal books too.

Other Instrument Workstations
There are many great instrument workstations that I could have used for this activity, but had to narrow them down based on the number of students in each class and our limited time together.  You might enjoy reading about Instrument Family Dip and Chip Tray Workstations from a previous blog post or click through some of these ideas:

Mystery Instruments  A brown paper bag, a classroom instrument and a detective sheet.
Instruments of the Orchestra Workstations can be the perfect addition to your student of instruments and instrument families.  Learn about a few easy centers to implement into your classroom and woo your students to success.


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Music Inspires Bulletin Board

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Music Inspires Bulletin Board. This music advocacy bulletin board is a great way to included EVERYONE in your building! Read about how to put this display together and inspire your school from the Bulletin Board Lady.

At one of the first schools I taught at I was inspired greatly by the elementary secretary.  Each quarter she designed a bulletin board that featured the names of every student in the elementary building.  I loved her creativity and I loved that she worked to make every student feel special.  Students would search for their names, the names of their friends and brothers and sisters.  It was truly a way to multiply joy in the building.

Music Inspires Bulletin Board. This music advocacy bulletin board is a great way to included EVERYONE in your building! Read about how to put this display together and inspire your school from the Bulletin Board Lady.
This colorful bulletin board is my attempt to do the very same thing.  Although that creative secretary worked with about 100 names, I took on around 450 students plus teachers and staff.  I used the message "Music inspires our minds to bloom." This incorporates Nafme's "Music Inspires" theme and speaks to our outrageously warm March.  It feels like spring around here!

Music Inspires Bulletin Board. This music advocacy bulletin board is a great way to included EVERYONE in your building! Read about how to put this display together and inspire your school from the Bulletin Board Lady.

The tree is created with hundreds of small paper flowers.  I created the trunk to look like a person, inspired by the Nafme promo image.  I made time during each class period to talk about Music In Our Schools Month and to lead a discussion about the power of music in our lives.  Students them wrote their names on a flower and I put them up as time allowed.  

Music Inspires Bulletin Board. This music advocacy bulletin board is a great way to included EVERYONE in your building! Read about how to put this display together and inspire your school from the Bulletin Board Lady.
I used the Fiskars 3 inch Punch Pretty Scallop paper punch to make all of the flowers.  This would be fun to do with a music note punch too!

Students and staff have enjoyed finding their names and this display is a huge explosion of color in the hall. I love that!

Want to save this inspiration?  PIN IT for later.



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