A Teaching Guideto Accompany
Transcription
A Teaching Guideto Accompany
7767 BCRemembrance.qx6 10/27/05 6:05 PM Page 2 A Teaching Guide to Accompany QP#4500129217 the Music CD 7767 BCRemembrance.qx6 10/27/05 6:05 PM Page 3 Teaching Guide A A to Accompany accompany the Music CD This teaching guide was prepared by Anthony Steffes to accompany the music CD Remember, produced and arranged by Zane Zalis. The guide suggests ways of using the music as a springboard to classroom learning activities related to Remembrance Day in British Columbia schools. As indicated in the liner notes accompanying the 18-track CD, Remember has been produced in the spirit of using music of the past, imbued with the musical sensibilities of artists from across Canada. The intent of the CD is to evoke thought and emotion as a way of honouring the veterans of World War II and to express gratitude for their sacrifices and those of their families. Design 2005: The Studios of Wendy J., Inc. www.swj.cc In this guide, teachers will find suggested strategies and ideas for • activating learning on the topic of Remembrance Day • using individual songs from the music CD Remember • using the theme of relationships in considering the songs in the context of Remembrance Day • taking a multiple intelligences approach to the songs • finding online sources of information and activity suggestions for further investigation Teachers are encouraged to select and adapt the learning activities from the guide to suit the age, learning styles, and interests of their students. The guide does not include historical content about World War II. Manitoba Education, Citizenship and Youth Cataloguing in Publication Data 394.264 A teaching guide to accompany the music CD, Remember ISBN 0-7711-3496-7 1. Remember (Sound recording). 2. Remembrance Day (Canada)—Study and teaching. 3. World War, 1939-1945— Veterans—Study and teaching. 4. World War, 1939-1945—Songs and music. 5. Remembrance Day (Canada)—Songs and music. 6. War— Study and teaching. I. Manitoba. Manitoba Education, Citizenship and Youth. Copyright © 2005, the Crown in Right of Manitoba as represented by the Minister of Education, Citizenship and Youth. Manitoba Education, Citizenship and Youth, School Programs Division, 1970 Ness Avenue, Winnipeg, Manitoba, R3J 0Y9. Every effort has been made to acknowledge original sources and to comply with copyright law. If cases are identified where this has not been done, please notify Manitoba Education, Citizenship and Youth. Errors or omissions will be corrected in a future edition. Sincere thanks to those who allowed their original material to be adapted or reproduced. This document is also available on the British Columbia Ministry of Education website at: www.bced.gov.bc.ca/resourcedocs/remembercd/. Adapted with permission from a guide produced by Manitoba Education, Citizenship and Youth, © 2005 2 7767 BCRemembrance.qx6 10/27/05 6:05 PM Page 6 Remember his year marks the 60th anniversary of the end of the Second World War. Our surviving veterans are in their 80s and 90s, and some are greatgrandparents of today’s students. For some students, Remembrance Day will conjure up images of poppies being distributed or of veterans laying wreaths. For some, it will mean remembering a line or two of “In Flanders Fields” by John McCrae. And for others, school and public programs will be their only association with those who have given their lives in war. Still, today more than ever before, war presents itself to students of all ages via the media and information technologies. Clearly, most of today’s students will have been exposed to images and ideas about war. Linking “wars” of the present with “remembering the past” is a vital element in students’ understanding of Remembrance Day. T 3 7767 BCRemembrance.qx6 10/27/05 6:05 PM Page 7 etting Started: G G Remembrance Day Activating Learning about An appropriate place to begin considering learning activities for Remembrance Day for any age may be to ask students questions: • What does “war” mean to you? • What are your visual references? • What thoughts, concerns, and anxieties do you have about war? • What resonates from your exposure to the media? • What is on your minds regarding war? A caution related to this discussion is that teachers need to be sensitive to immigrant students who may have had recent experiences with war. These students may find talking about war very emotional and may not be comfortable taking part in this discussion. Alternatively, a classroom discussion may be a positive opportunity for these students to share their experiences and to engage their classmates in dialogue about the ongoing struggle for peace. “Pittance of Time,” the final track on Remember, seems a sensible place to start drawing students into a dialogue about Remembrance Day. Terry Kelly composed the song in response to an actual Remembrance Day experience. While shopping in a Nova Scotia store on November 11, 1999, Terry Kelly was impressed as an announcement came over the store’s PA system asking customers to be still and silent at 11:00 a.m. as a way of showing respect for veterans who have sacrificed so much for us. As the final announcement for absolute silence came, all but one man, who was with his young daughter, showed their respect. “Pittance of Time” is an expression of Terry Kelly’s feelings about the father and the inappropriate 4 7767 BCRemembrance.qx6 10/27/05 6:05 PM Page 10 example he was setting for his daughter as he persistently tried to engage in conversation with the store’s clerk during this time of silence. Younger students might be able to relate to the experience of the young girl. Have them respond to questions: • How do you think the girl felt about her father ignoring the request by the store management? • Why might the father not take the time to remember? • Whom are the people in the store being asked to remember? • Why is it important to be silent while we remember? In “Pittance of Time,” Terry Kelly acknowledges the bravery and realities of those who went to war, while asking us to “Take two minutes, would you mind?” As well, he raises questions such as: Why do we fight? What do we gain? What were the effects of war on those who remained at home? Older students might gain insight from considering questions such as these: • Who were the “heroes at home”? • Why is there a “price to be paid… if you stay”? A reference near the end of the song to present-day war and peacekeepers provides a starting point for thought and discussion among older students. Asking students to consider phrases such as “your own war” and “someone else’s war,” and to analyze the line “they bring hope to foreign lands that the hatemongers can’t kill” are effective ways of prompting thought about present-day conflicts. 5 7767 BCRemembrance.qx6 10/27/05 6:05 PM elationships: R R Page 11 A Thematic Approach to If students see those involved in war as individuals, they will be more likely to appreciate the significance of what the veterans did for us. One way students may gain this appreciation is by focusing on the relationships described in the song lyrics featured on the CD Remember. Suggested Learning Activities Have students: • Listen to the songs on the CD over a period of a few days. — While listening, respond by jotting down recurring ideas or themes that emerge from the music and lyrics. Examples could be love, loss, freedom, dreams, loneliness, separation, romance, family, and feelings about the future. — Share the ideas among the whole group. — Working in small groups or individually, list themes in terms of relationships. For example, consider the individual soldier’s feelings in relation to past experiences, family and close friends, thoughts of home, and dreams of a future. Another possibility would be to consider the theme of nature as seen through the eyes of the soldier before, during, and after the war. — Select a relationship theme to explore further. Begin the exploration with a “freewriting” exercise. Ten minutes or three full pages are appropriate for Senior Years students, less for younger students. 6 7767 BCRemembrance.qx6 10/27/05 6:05 PM Page 14 Options for Extended Activities Students might consider the following choices for an extended activity related to their chosen relationship theme. Present the option of working in small groups or individually. Have students: • Select pieces of current music that relate to a chosen theme. Compare and contrast the intent and style of the current music selections to those on the CD that relate to the theme. • Explore poetry that relates to the selected theme. Present a reading and interpretation of the poem to the class. Include an explanation of how the poem relates to the selected theme, as well as thoughts and questions that emerge from the poetry. • Create a collage that includes words, images, free drawing, and painting to explore and communicate the selected theme. • Illustrate a song from the CD and a related poem as they might appear together in an illustrated book of poetry. • Prepare a short monologue or script for two actors using the chosen theme. Present this work to the class. • Prepare a mime that illustrates the chosen theme and perform it for the class. • Write a poem exploring the selected relationship theme. An Enrichment Activity Students may recognize that often there is a difference between idealism and reality as they pertain to human relationships and to war. Using their chosen relationship theme as a basis, have students demonstrate the contrast between the real and the ideal. They may choose their own format and materials. 7 7767 BCRemembrance.qx6 10/27/05 6:05 PM Page 15 Multiple Intelligences A A Approach to Renowned author-educator Howard Gardner defines at least eight different “intelligences” that we all have to some degree. Learning strategies across the intelligences are outlined below in relation to the CD Remember. Select strategies appropriate for the specific learning needs of your students or your classrooms, and adapt them as needed. It is appropriate to structure learning experiences so that they offer opportunities to incorporate multiple intelligences. Successful learning occurs both when students use the intelligence area in which they are strong and when they call upon intelligences that they do not usually activate. B B odily-Kinesthetic Learning 8 Have students: • Develop mime interpretations of scenes elicited from the songs on the CD. • Develop a series of tableaux to interpret selected songs. (These may include an opening position, additional tableaux suitable to changes in the music, and a concluding pose.) • Create dance routines based upon selected tracks on the CD. 7767 BCRemembrance.qx6 V V LL 10/27/05 6:05 PM Page 16 erbal-Linguistic Learning Have students: • List words and phrases from the songs on the CD that catch their interest. Brainstorm and expand the list. Use the words and phrases as starting points for original poems or raps. • Write letters from the viewpoint of Canadians during wartime. Listen to songs from the CD (such as tracks 1, 5, 6, 8, 10, or 11) and imagine writing to someone “back home.” • Create and perform Readers’ Theatre in response to themes derived from the CD (for example, a dialogue of soldiers in the trenches). • Research the Canadian recording artists on the CD. Why would they want to be involved in a project such as Remember? ogical-Mathematical Learning Have students: • Put the songs in chronological order and search for trends in terms of style, themes, and so on. • Consider statistical information related to the times and events of Canadian involvement in World War II (tracks 14 to 17). 9 7767 BCRemembrance.qx6 10/27/05 6:05 PM A Multiple Intelligences Approach to II Page 13 (continued) ntrapersonal Learning 10 Have students: • Listen to “Pittance of Time” and “Tribute to Veterans” (tracks 18 and 12), and then imagine and create a “free form” response from the viewpoint of someone presently away from home and involved in one of the war efforts overseas. • Discuss how someone currently involved in a war effort might react to this music compared to someone living a “normal” day-to-day life in Canada. • Identify the positive images of love and hope in the songs. (Much of the music on the CD conjures up images of “looking to a positive future,” “thinking positively,” “knowing there are people who care for and about you,” and knowing “there is someone waiting for you.”) Discuss the role of love and hope in the lives of individuals during war. • Listen to “Les Feuilles Mortes” or “Autumn Leaves” (track 9). What might the leaves symbolize? Consider the parallels of autumn leaves and the effects of war on humankind. Why is it believable that the falling of autumn leaves would inspire such a song? Why would the lyricist “miss their love most of all when autumn leaves start to fall”? What similarities exist in the life cycle of a leaf and that of people involved in war? 7767 BCRemembrance.qx6 II 10/27/05 6:05 PM Page 12 nterpersonal Learning Have students: • Talk to veterans and elderly members of the community. Ask what they think is most important to remember about war. Listen to their stories. Responses could form the basis of writing or art-making. • Arrange a social time with veterans. Using music from the CD as a support, and possibly performing “Tribute to Veterans” (track 12), visit a place where veterans gather (for example, the local Legion, Deer Lodge Hospital, a local seniors’ centre). • Create a dialogue with veterans by considering some of the following questions as starters: — What was your role during the war? — How did you deal with leaving family and friends? — What did you learn about the people in the countries where you were posted? — Did you maintain contact with them or with the people with whom you served? — What was it like coming home? — How were things different when you came home? — What did you try to forget? — What will you always remember? • Summarize and share the experiences in a suitable format. 11 7767 BCRemembrance.qx6 10/27/05 6:05 PM Page 9 A Multiple Intelligences Approach to N (continued) N V aturalistic Learning Have students: • Research and comment on the effects of World War II on vegetation, wildlife, and the landscape. • Note elements from nature incorporated into the song lyrics (for example, “rainbows,” “stars,” “leaves”). Discuss the role these references to nature play in the lyrics. Is nature always used as a positive reference? Why, or why not? Support answers with examples from the lyrics. • Discuss examples of music where nature is portrayed realistically, and where it is portrayed romantically. Students could consider which view is closer to their own. • Listen to “La Mer” (track 6) and visualize the sea. Imagine the sea during wartime. “La Mer” might be described as a melodically lush, romantic, passionate piece of music. Here, the sea represents the temporary distance between two lovers. The song anticipates the day when the separation will end and all will be as before. Discuss the music and the images it evokes in the context of war. isual-Spatial Learning V 12 Have students: • Listen to the various tracks on the CD and sketch symbols and images that emerge. • Share and discuss symbols and images derived from the songs. 7767 BCRemembrance.qx6 10/27/05 6:05 PM Page 8 • Imagine colours, shapes, lines, and textures that the music evokes. Use these to create artworks in different media. • While listening to the music, draw images, shapes, and lines to communicate the negative effects of war and possible reactions to it. Alternatively, draw images, shapes, and lines to communicate the positive effects of “hard-won” peace. Combine and contrast these images in an original artwork. M M usical-Rhythmic Learning Have students: • Listen to earlier versions of songs covered on Remember, especially those first recorded during the war years. Compare and contrast the different styles. Discuss how both the effect and the intended audience vary between versions. • Listen to “Liberation of Paris” (track 16). Imagine preparing this piece for a radio or theatrical presentation, and consider choices of background music and sound effects that would make this piece more effective. Do the same for “Mackenzie King— Surrender” (track 17). Prepare a tape recording that can be played as a radio piece, or perform the piece as a monologue for an audience. The Remember CD provides students with a musical context for considering a range of ideas related to war and remembrance. As students listen to, interact with, and/or perform the music through any of the above learning activities, they will have opportunities to activate their musical-rhythmic intelligence. 13 7767 BCRemembrance.qx6 10/27/05 6:05 PM uestions Q Q Students Page 5 for 14 of All Ages • Our national anthem “O Canada” contains the line “We stand on guard for thee.” Why do we stand on guard? • What is it that we must “remember” on Remembrance Day? • What is worth fighting for? • Is war “bullying” at a world level? • Is there a hidden purpose to war? • Who is most negatively affected by war? • What are the positive results of war? • Why does mediation break down and war persist? • What do cultural values have to do with war? • What roles have religion and politics played in war? • What can individuals do to prevent war? 7767 BCRemembrance.qx6 10/27/05 6:05 PM Page 4 Online Information and Activity Suggestions • Terry Kelly’s Website: <http://www.terry-kelly.com/>. At this site, students can view a video of the song “Pittance of Time,” find the lyrics in English and French, and become aware of a musical/theatrical production “Two Minutes of Silence—A Pittance of Time” written for the stage. • Astraweb Lyrics Search: <http://lyrics.astraweb.com>. Lyrics to many of the songs on the Remember CD are available for viewing through this search engine. • The Centre for Distance Learning and Innovation, Newfoundland and Labrador Department of Education. Elementary Themes: <http://www.cdli.ca/CITE/remembranceday.htm>. This site contains a wealth of Early and Middle Years activities ready for classroom use, as well as information about the wars, peacekeeping, “In Flanders Fields,” poppies, and so on, along with links to many other websites. • Halsall, Paul, ed. “There’ll Always Be an England and Other War Music.” Internet History Sourcebook Projects. Fordham University: <http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/ww2-music-uk.html>. This site contains information about World War II songs. • Library and Archives Canada. Canadian War Artists: <http://www.collectionscanada.ca/war-artists>. This site provides information regarding Canadian war artists. • The Royal Canadian Legion:<http://www.legion.ca>. This site contains a wealth of information, including facts, statistics, song lyrics, poetry, music, and ideas for classroom activities and school programs. • Syracuse University Library. “World War II Songs from the Belfer Audio Laboratory and Archive, Syracuse University Library.” Digital Projects: <http://libwww.syr.edu/digital/images/b/Belfer78/titles.htm>. This site contains World War II songs, organized by title and by topic. Acknowledgements Manitoba Education, Citizenship and Youth gratefully acknowledges the following for their contributions to this guide: • Anthony Steffes, writer • Zane Zalis, producer and arranger of the music CD Remember. Mesa Music Co., and Veterans Affairs Canada, 2005. • The Studios of Wendy J., Inc., design of CD Remember (image used on the cover of this guide) 15 10/27/05 6:04 PM Page 1 QP#4500129217 7767 BCRemembrance.qx6