Musicplay for Kindergarten
Transcription
Musicplay for Kindergarten
Musicplay for Kindergarten by Denise Gagne A complete music curriculum for kindergarten Includes everthing that you need to teach music for the entire school year! 6 CDs Lesson plans Year outline - thematic index Includes * songs for many themes * songs to teach language & early literacy skills * poems and chants * songs to teach math, science, social studies * songs to teach social skills * songs for holidays and special days * movement songs for integration into PE * listening selections * songs from many countries Musicplay for Kindergarten 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 Welcome to School Put Your Finger on Your Lip Count and Go Listen as I Play the Beat Join Into the Game You’ve Got to Sing This is My Speaking Voice Cookie Jar Chant Follow, Follow Me A Smile Goes a Long, Long Way Vivace, Handel Hickety Tickety Loud Voice - Quiet Voice Do You Want to be My Friend? Walk to School Andy Pandy Dr. Knickerbocker Gingerbread Man Color Song I am a Pizza Autumn Leaves Shape Song Hey! Hey! Look at Me We Cook Turkey Air, J.S. Bach Badinerie, J.S. Bach I’m Glad I Have a Nose London Bridge I Get a Happy Feeling Stop! Look and Listen October is Here Pumpkin Stew Alphabet Action Brush Your Teeth Halloween Looby Loo Costume Fun Pumpkin Fat Grumpy Grizzly Can’t Wait to Hibernate Tommy Thumb Sambalele Kumbayah Gavotte, J.S. Bach Take my Little Car Days of the Week 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 Old Navy Rainbow World Old King Glory Bear Teddy Bear Wheat in the Wind Phony Baloney Barnacle Bill ABC Blues Put the Beat in your Feet I’d Go Dancing One Little Candle Germs Parade of the Wooden Soldiers, Jessel Curly Joe S-A-N-T-A Rock Around the Christmas Tree Christmas is Here Play the Bells to Celebrate Jolly Jolly Santa He’ll be Comin’ Down the Chimney Let’s Get on Board The Sewing Machine Ha Ha This-A-Way Snowman Joe Bogannin’ Hill Old Mother Brown Penguin Polka Months of the Year Jubilee Who has the Pencil? Sailor Song Fiddledeedee Button Factory Pretty Princess Cheer for 100! It Takes One to Know One Arroz con leche Page’s Train Chew Chew Down by the Station Groundhog Willowbee Musical Priest 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 Little Airplane Three Wheeled Car Listen to me Play I Like Valentines As Friends We’re Two Kangaroo Wallaby Hop Hey There Friend Head and Shoulders If You’re Happy We Don’t Put Up with Putdowns Alice the Camel A Tisket a Tasket San Severino Dinosaurs Dinosaur Ditty-wa I Wanna Be a Dog The Proud Horseman Connaughtman’s Rambles Burnie Bee A me Limbo Purple Stew Leprechaun March Michael Finnigan Mr. Troll Nanny Goats Don’t Throw Your Junk Move to the Drum 1 Me and my Kite Knees Up Mother Brown Tingalayo Four in a Boat Pass the Shoe Hugs and Grugs Bubble Gum Kids are Cool Easter Bunny Hops Along Easter is Here German Dance, Beethoven Color the Eggs Old Mr. Rabbit Spaceworms Five Green Men Rain Rain Six Inch Boots If All the Raindrops 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 Ame Ame We’ve Got the Whole World Bluebird Grandma Moses Grandma and Grandpa Wear a Helmet Debajo del Boton Moms are Special Frog in my Pocket On a Log Scie le bois The Great Gate of Kiev, Mussorgsky Symphony No. 4, Mendelssohn Chickamy Old MacDonald Welcome to Bermooda Peanut Butter Farmer in the Dell Move to the Instruments Los Pollitos Watch our Garden Grow Listen to the Water Go Round and Round the Village See Saw Uptown Zoo Fireman Circus Parade Naughty Kitty Cat Humpback Whale A Boy and Girl in a Canoe Miss Polly The Mill Hotaru Koi Sammy the Salmon What Shall We Do? Tambourin, J.C. Bach Let Your Light Shine Draw a Bucket of Water She’ll be Comin’ Round the Mountain Move to the Drum 2 Themes & Variations Box 25109 Deer Park PO, Red Deer, Alberta T4R 2M2 Email: tvinfo@telus.net Phone or Fax: 1-888-562-4647 Web Site: www.musicplay.ca Printed in Canada Copyright ©2003 by Themes & Variations revised and reprinted Sept. 2004 ISBN Number: 1-894096-71-1 No copying of any part of this book is allowed! Thousands of hours have gone into the writing, layout and editing of this book. Please do not photocopy! About Musicplay: Musicplay is a play-based music program. Each week in kindergarten a new game is learned from which the musical concepts in the curriculum are taught. Children love music games - this is a text that will have your students really excited about learning music! Pentatonic, or reading songs comprise part of Musicplay. The sequencing of reading songs within the program works very well within both Orff and Kodaly based programs. There are more than 175 songs in kindergarten - action songs, singalong songs, folk songs, multicultural songs, game songs, theme songs and holiday songs. This program was written to be used by a kindergarten classroom teacher who sees the class every day for a half day, or for the music specialist that may see the kindergarten classes only once a week. Each week a specific musical concept is introduced, taught or reviewed. This is the “core” lesson that should be taught by both classroom teacher or music specialist. In addition to the “core” lesson, there are 3-5 supplementary songs. The classroom teacher may want to teach all the supplementary songs that are given. The music specialist that has much less time with the students will have to make choices as to what is most important to teach. The CDs were recorded with separate accompaniment tracks for as many performance pieces as possible. When there are two numbers, the first number refers to the vocal guide and the second, the accompaniments only. Accompaniments are not included for game songs, because traditionally they are sung unaccompanied. The recordings that are by children’s artists do not have accompaniments because they aren’t recorded in this way. The multicultural songs were sung by singers native to the country from which they came. A mix of voices and accompaniments are used on the CDs - children’s voices, classroom singing, choral singing, adult female and adult male, accompanied by piano, Orff instruments, and instrumental tracks. The songs in this program are intended to be taught by rote. Sing the song for your students while they listen, or play the song on the CD in its entirety. Then sing (or play) one phrase at a time, having the students repeat the phrase. Orff accompaniments were used for some songs in the kindergarten program. These use only a simple bordun played on the beat. Listening selections are included on the CDs to teach a specific concept - fast/slow, loud/soft or beat. The listening selections were changed in Sept. 2004 to include orchestral recordings as well as simple piano pieces. If you have an earlier edition, contact the author if you’d like copies of the new listening selections. If you would like to have additional listening selections, you could use the “Listening Resource Kit Level 1”. This has the complete “Carnival of the Animals” and excerpts from “Peter and the Wolf”. See the supplemental resource list on page 136 (end of the guide) for information on this publication. This is not a text that will be out of print in 7 years. There will be upgrades to the text - not reprints. There is a registration form at the end of the teachers guide. Please fill in the registration and fax or email it to us. Original purchasers of the program will be eligible to receive upgrades for free as pdf files or at a nominal cost for print copies. Please email if you have any questions about anything in the program. Email support is always available. (tvinfo@telus.net) Moving Kindergarten Music Curriculum Speaking Singing (1*) Playing (2,6,7*) Listening (6,7*) Reading Notating (5*) Creating (2,3,4*) * develop voice * melodic direction *high-middle-low * tone match: songs with limited range * repertoire songs * melodic direction * play high or low notes on pitched instruments * melodic direction * high-low * size of sound source = pitch * show high-low with arm motions (so-mi) * respond to so-mi hand signals * create answers to teacher questions * create new verses alone or within the group * major/minor experience * sing a song with teacher accompanied ostinato * play a rhythm with * listen to teacher accompanied major/minor ostinato and ask how it makes them feel or what it makes them think of. * experience phrase through movement, teacher labels with shapes * sing songs with sections that may be repeated (same) or different. (AB) * move to show fast-slow, loud-soft, different moods eg. create movement to “Spaceworms”. * sing music that is loud - soft, fast - slow * sing songs with expression to show the meaning of the song * recognize that a section can be repeated or different when playing instruments R H Y T H M M E L O D Y * Beat - experience, label *short-long patterns, rest experience * accent H A R M O N Y F O R M * move to music that is major/minor and ask how it makes them feel. * experience and label melodic direction * experience and begin to label high-low * Sing songs with a * Beat - experience steady beat in 2/4 and label when 4/4 6/8 playing unpitched instruments * Patterns q qr * Beat - experience and label when listening * Experience and label beat. Tap a beat on a beat chart. * label patterns q qr * Play a beat on a variety of instruments * create patterns on unpitched instruments * experience moving and creating to minor “October is Here” “Halloween Looby Loo” * recognize that a section can be repeated or different when listening * teacher labels and * As a class, decide shows form with on the final form of shapes performances * recognize that music may express our feelings. * loud - soft * fast - slow * timbre * timbre - instruments u/p classify by sound * timbre - voices * Teacher can label songs as fast-slow, loud-soft * create movements that show fast-slow, loud-soft eg. Take my Little Car for fast-slow, Grumpy Grizzly for loud-soft * perform singing * sing songs from a * play instruments * listen to music * Teacher should games and simple variety of cultures representative of from a variety of show the location dances from a * sing simple songs many cultures historical periods of the country or variety of cultures in languages other and a variety of culture on a world eg. Ame Ame, than English cultures map or on a globe. Arroz con leche, eg. Kumbayah, Connaughtman’s Tingalayo, Ramble - Irish Sambalele Tambourin - Bach Relate music to other arts and other subject areas: (8) * Learn songs that reinforce or relate to topics, skills and subjects that are learned in kindergarten. * Have students draw pictures that show the way music makes them feel, or what it makes them think of. * Have students dramatize songs. * Create dances and movements to music. * Learn many poems and chants * Numbers in brackets refer to MENC content standards for music in K-4. * create movements to songs from other cultures eg. Firefly, Japan Little Airplane, China E X P R E S S I O N C U L T U R E (9*) * play the beat on instruments to show fast - slow, loud-soft June May April March Feb Jan Dec Nov Oct Sep Month * accent * loud - soft * fast - slow Page’s Train Chew Chew Down by the Station * loud - soft * fast - slow Head and Shoulders * label patterns q qt * loud - soft * fast - slow Get on Board * Beat - label * loud - soft * fast - slow Put the Beat in Your Feet * Beat - label * loud - soft * fast - slow * short-long patterns Grumpy Grizzly (l-s) Take my Little Car (f-s) * Beat - experience * loud - soft * fast - slow * short-long patterns I Get a Happy Feeling * Beat - experience * loud - soft Listen as I Play the Beat Beat/Rhythm Expression * Prepare la Naughty Kitty Cat * respond to so-mi hand signals Fireman * Prepare la The Mill * respond to so-mi hand signals Bubble Gum Rain Rain * respond to so-mi hand signals Burnie Bee * music can express feelings * show high-low Kangaroo * show high-low with arm motions (so-mi) Old Mother Brown * high-low, tone match Curly Joe - guess * high-low, tone match Teddy Bear Old King Glory * experience high-low * tone match Autumn Leaves Hey! Hey! Look at Me * vocal exploration This is my Speaking Voice Loud Voice - Quiet Voice Melody Harmony * classify by sound * timbre - instruments - sound effects Chickamy Old Macdonald (with inst) Mr. Troll * create sound effects * timbre - voices If You’re Happy (with Inst) * create sound effects * timbre - voices Who has the Pencil? Pretty Princess * create sound effects * timbre - voices Join into the Game (with Inst) * exp phrase * high/low * explore instruments * timbre - voices * phrase * high/low * timbre - voices * experience phrase Gingerbread Man Listening Creating * beat, mime, imitate * A section can be same/different Japan - Firefly * Music can be organized into sections (phrase) Spanish: Los Pollitos En el Arco (animals) * free movement, imitation, mime * singing games Bluebird * singing games Willowbee Purple Stew Tingalayo - Caribbean * mime animals etc China: * free movement, imitation, mime Barnacle Bill * mime animals * free movement, imitation Hanukkah * exp phrase * free movement, imitation Sambalele - Brazil Barnacle Bill * exp phrase * free movement, imitation * high/low * define open space * imitation - action songs Andy Pandy Dr. Knickerbocker Form/Culture Movement * Insects: What Shall We Do? Firefly Watch Our Garden Grow Color the Eggs (colors) Wear a Helmet A me Limbo Months Dinosaurs T-Rex is Coming Months of the Year 100 Day Song Germs ABC Blues Days of the Week Shape Song Stop! Look and Listen Alphabet Action Brush Your Teeth Color Song Put Your Finger on Your Lip Count and Go Teaching Songs Kindergarten Year Plan Miss Polly Pass the Shoe Draw a Bucket of Water On a Log Old Navy Old Mr. Rabbit Easter Bunny Hops Along Easter is Here Grandma Moses Leprechaun March Mr. Troll (colors) Four in a Boat We Don’t Put Up with Putdowns A Tisket a Tasket Ha Ha This-A-Way Christmas is Here Button Factory Tommy Thumb Phony Baloney October is Here Costume Fun Pumpkin Fat Halloween Looby Loo Hickety Tickety Follow, Follow Me Cookie Jar Action/Game Songs Let Your Light Shine A Boy and a Girl in a Little Canoe Circus Parade Chew Chew Moms are Special Old MacDonald Uptown Zoo Frog in my Pocket If All the Raindrops I’d Go Dancing Grandma and Grandpa Don’t Throw Your Junk Me and my Kite Billy Goats Gruff Hugs and Grugs Michael Finnigan Groundhog As Friends We’re Two I Like Valentines I Wanna Be a Dog ‘Bogannin’ Hill Michael Row Penguin Polka Sailor Song Rock Around the Christmas Tree S-A-N-T-A He’ll be Comin’ Down the Chimney Jolly Jolly Santa Hanukkah Bear Kumbayah - Peace Rainbow World Wheat in the Wind I’m Glad I Have a Nose We Cooked Turkey Pumpkin Stew It Takes One to Know One Welcome to School You’ve Got to Sing Do You Want to be My Friend? A Smile Goes a Long, Long Way Theme/Repetoire Songs Kindergarten Thematic Song List Action/Game Songs: Song # Colors/Shapes: Song # High-Low Songs: Song # Song # Knees Up Mother Brown 119 Color Song 19 Old King Glory 124 48 Bubblegum Purple Stew 111 Mr. Troll 114 Autumn Leaves 60 21 Curly Joe Dr. Knickerbocker 17 Shape Song 22 Snowman Joe 159 70 See Saw Go Round and Round 58 Counting Songs: Hundred Day: A Tisket a Tasket 102 Ha Ha This-A-Way 69 Barnacle Bill 53 Cheer for 100! Safety / Health Songs: 81 Willowbee 88 Alice the Camel 101 Insects - Bugs: Stop! Look and Listen 30 Four in a Boat 121 Count and Go 3 What Shall We Do? 58 170 Germs Naughty Kitty Cat 163 Days/Months: Burnie Bee 141 109 Wear a Helmet Bluebird 138 Days of the Week 45 Instrument Exploration: Brush Your Teeth 34 Who has the Pencil? 76 Months of the Year 74 Chickamy Space: 149 Phony Baloney 52 Dinosaurs: Listen to me Play 131 92 Spaceworms Button Factory 79 Dinosaur Ditty-wa 105 Japan: Five Green Men 132 Pass the Shoe 122 Dinosaurs 104 Hotaru Koi Spanish: 168 London Bridge 28 Easter: Ame Ame 155 136 Los Pollitos Draw a Bucket of Water 173 Color the Eggs 129 Lineups: Arroz con leche 83 Old Navy 46 Easter Bunny Hops Along 126 Follow, Follow Me 103 9 San Severino Miss Polly 166 Easter is Here 127 Walk to School 142 15 Debajo del boton Join Into the Game 5 Old Mr. Rabbit 130 Put Your Finger on Your Lip Speaking/Singing Voice: 2 If You’re Happy 99 Earth Day: Loud/Soft: This is my Speaking Voice 7 Tommy Thumb 40 We’ve Got the Whole World 137 Grizzly Bear game 13 38 Loud Voice - Quiet Voice The Mill 167 Families: Loud Voice - Quiet Voice Spring/Rain: 13 Peanut Butter 152 Rainbow World 47 Mothers Day: Ame Ame 136 African Songs: Don’t Throw Your Junk 116 Moms are Special 118 143 Me and my Kite Kumbayah 42 Farms: Frog in My Pocket 134 144 Six Inch Boots Alphabet: Old MacDonald 150 Multicultural: If All the Raindrops 135 ABC Blues 54 Farmer in the Dell 153 Ame Ame (Japan) 133 136 Rain Rain Alphabet Action 33 Watch our Garden Grow 156 Arroz con leche (Spanish) St. Patricks Day: 83 A me Limbo 110 Fast/Slow: Debajo del Boton (Sp) 112 142 Leprechaun March Animals: Take my Little Car 44 Hotaru Koi (Japan) 113 168 Michael Finnigan I Wanna Be a Dog 106 Down by the Station 86 Kumbayah (African) Stories with Songs: 42 Naughty Kitty Cat 163 Chew Chew 85 Los Pollitos (Spanish) 80 155 Pretty Princess Australia: Let’s Get on Board 67 Sambalele (Brazil) 18 41 Gingerbread Man Wallaby Hop 96 Page’s Train 84 San Severino (Spanish) 114 103 Mr. Troll Bears: French Songs: Scie le Bois (French) 115 146 Nanny Goats Can’t Wait to Hibernate 39 Scie le bois 146 Tingalayo (West Indian) Thanksgiving: 120 Teddy Bear 50 Friends: Names/Beat/Welcome: I’m Glad I Have a Nose 27 Bear 49 Fiddledeedee 78 Listen as I Play the Beat 24 4 We Cook Turkey Beaches: Do YouWant to be my Hickety Tickety Train Songs: 12 A Boy and a Girl in a Canoe 165 Friend? 14 Welcome 75 1 Jubilee Welcome to Bermooda 151 As Friends We’re Two 94 Cookie Jar Chant 67 8 Let’s Get on Board Beat/Instruments: Frogs: Oceans/Beaches: Down by the Station 86 I Get a Happy Feeling 29 On a Log 145 Sammy the Salmon Valentines: 169 Put the Beat in Your Feet 55 Frog in My Pocket 144 Humpback Whale 93 164 I Like Valentines Body Awareness: Graduation: Listen to the Water 97 157 Hey There Friend Head and Shoulders 98 I’d Go Dancing 56 Peace - Getting Along: Singalong/Repetoire Songs: Brazil: Let Your Light Shine 172 We Don’t Put Up 77 100 Sailor Song Sambalele 41 Kids are Cool 125 Hugs ‘n Grugs 123 A Boy and a Girl in a Canoe 165 Celtic Music: Grandparents Day: Wheat in the Wind (peace) 20 51 I am a Pizza Connaughtman’s Ramble 108 Grandma and Grandpa 140 It Takes One to Know One 156 82 Watch our Garden Grow Musical Priest 89 Grandma Moses 139 Penguins: She’ll Be Comin’ Round the China: Groundhog Day: Penguin Polka 174 73 Mountain Three Wheeled Car 91 Groundhog 87 Reading songs A Smile Goes a Long, Little Airplane 90 Halloween: (sm, lsm): Long Way 10 Christmas: Pumpkin Fat 37 Kangaroo 71 95 Bogannin’ Hill Jolly Jolly Santa 65 Costume Fun 36 Fireman 6 161 You’ve Got to Sing Rock Around the Christmas Tree 62 Halloween Looby Loo 35 Hey! Hey! Look At Me Zoo: 23 Christmas is Here 63 Pumpkin Stew 32 Old Mother Brown 160 72 Uptown Zoo S-A-N-T-A 61 October is Here 31 Pumpkin Fat 37 He’ll be Comin’ Down 66 Hanukkah: Rain Rain 133 Circus: One Little Candle 57 Andy Pandy 16 Circus Parade 162 Burnie Bee 109 Curriculum Specific Songs and Topics: # Language Arts Songs: 33 Alphabet Action 54 ABC Blues 12 songs are given as stories in the “Big Story Book” and “Reproducible Take-home Stories”. # 3 81 101 124 Math Songs: Count and Go Cheer for 100! Alice the Camel Bubble Gum Science topics: (see thematic index) Bears Dinosaurs Autumn Gardens (seeds, plants) Whales Salmon Rain Insects # 30 34 58 98 141 Health Songs: Stop! Look and Listen Brush Your Teeth Germs Head and Shoulders Wear a Helmet # 45 74 Basic Skills: Days of the Week Months of the Year # 14 51 82 94 100 137 Social Skills Songs: Do You Want to be my Friend? Wheat in the Wind It Takes One to Know One As Friends We’re Two We Don’t Put Up with Putdowns We’ve Got the Whole World Social Studies topics: Families Jobs Japan Brazil Africa China Spanish songs Australia Caribbean # Poems and Chants: 6a 7 8 10a 11a 11b 14a 28a 28b 29a 31a 31b 32a 40a 41a 45a 47a 55a 59a 59b 64a 66a 78a 79a 79b 83a 86a 104a 109a 132a 133a 133b 133c 134a 140a 148a 156a 170a 170b Open Shut Them Speaking/Singing Cookie Jar The Sitter Poem Pussycat Pussycat One Two Three Order in the Court Criss Cross Applesauce Autumn Jelly in the Bowl Hey Ho for Halloween Witch Witch Where do you fly? Peter, Peter Pumpkin Eater Two Little Dicky Birds Lady Bugs Slowly Slowly Galloping Chant Once I Caught a Fish Alive Here is the Chimney Five Little Bells Chubby Little Snowman Bundles The Train Snow Winter Bate Bate Chocolate The Taxi Dinosaurs Here is a Beehive Zoom, Zoom, Zoom Clouds Rain Clouds Dr. Foster These are Grandma’s Glasses Monkeys On the Bed Fishy Fishy Lady Bugs Flutterby # Listening Examples: 11 25 26 43 59 68 89 107 108 128 147 148 171 Vivace, Handel Air, JS Bach Badinerie, JS Bach Gavotte, JS Bach Parade of the Soldiers, Kessel The Sewing Machine, Melanie Bonis Musical Priest The Proud Horseman, Robert Fuchs Connaughtman’s Rambles German Dance, Beethoven Great Gate of Kiev, Mussorgsky Symphony No 4, Mendelssohn Tambourin, JC Bach September Week 1 Concept to teach: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. *Following Directions Theme: Following Directions Welcome to School CD1:1 Put Your Finger on Your Lip CD1:2-29 Count and Go CD1:3 Listen as I Play the Beat CD1:4 Join Into the Game CD1:5 You’ve Got to Sing CD1:6-30 1. Welcome to School CD1:1 Big Book pg. 2 j j c œ & œ œ œ Leader Wel- come Leader & œ Hope j & œ œ œ you Leader Now is to school ev - 'ry - one. mu - sic œ œ have the time to & œ œ œ œ have a Œ œ œ œ Œ class echoes lot j œ œ œ of sing ‹ (Wel- come class echoes œ œ œ a Leader Hope you œ œ œ Œ œ j j œ œ œ œ class echoes and œ (clap) great fun. play. œ day! Œ œ (Hope j œ œ œ you (Now is to school œ ev - 'ry - one.) mu - sic œ œ have j œ œ a of fun.) œ œ œ Œ to œ œ œ œ have lot œ the time Œ œ œ œ a class echoes (Hope you œ œ œ Œ D. Gagne sing ‹ and play.) œ œ (clap) great day.) Œ Teaching Process/Suggested Activities: The classroom Kindergarten teacher can use this song to welcome the children to school. For the music specialist that sees the Kindergarten students only 1-2 times a week, this is a song to welcome the children to the music classroom. In either case, echo songs are a good way to have students hear and model a singing voice. You could say to the students that “I will sing, and then you echo me.” An alternate way might be to have a pop-up puppet in your classroom. Tell the children that “I will sing, and then you sing with Pop-up.” When it’s the children’s turn, bring the pop-up puppet out of his cone. If you give the pop-up Puppet a name such as “Melody” or “Sammy the Singing Puppet”, the puppet becomes a friend to the children. Children who are shy will often sing to a puppet even if they won’t sing to their teacher! Following Directions: The concept to teach for the first week of school is that of following directions. If your students have had experience with play school or a structured day care, they may already be used to following directions and listening to a classroom teacher or a music teacher. However, it isn’t unusual to have Kindergarten students without any prior classroom experience. These students really need to learn to listen to and follow directions. All of the songs in this first week include lyrics that give the child directions. The first song is an echo, so the child learns to listen and repeat. The other songs give the child an action to perform. This concept is crucial to success in school, and will be reviewed in many songs throughout the school year. The music specialist may want to consider purchasing or making colored dots for children to sit on. A formal seating plan is hard to implement for kindergarten, but it’s easy for them to understand when you say “Sit on a dot”. 2. Put Your Finger on Your Lip CD1:2-29 Big Book pg. 3 # c & & & # # œ Put œ hand œ œ. hand your œ. fin œ. œ œ on your hip, œ. œ œ on your hip œ œ. - œ œ ger on œ. œ on your your lip, œ hip. Œ œ œ. on Œ your your fin - ger on lip! Œ œ. œ œ. œ œ. œ Put your œ. œ œ. œ œ. œ œ put Œ œ As sung by Barb Leslie/arr. C.C. your lip, fin - ger on on your lip. Put and ‹ ‹ Zip your œ. œ œ your lip œ. œ œ œ. œ your zip! Teaching Process/Suggested Activities: This song is a song to teach children how to walk through the hallways of the school. With one finger on their lip indicating “sh” or quiet, they should remember not to talk in the hallway. The other hand on their hip is so they remember not to touch the walls or poke another student as they walk through the hallways. If this is your expectation, practice the behavior until the students have the behavior mastered. Re-teach and practice if the students get forgetful as the year goes on. If you are walking down the hall and students don’t meet your expectations, take them back to the classroom and explain that since they forgot the correct way to walk down the hall, they need to practice it. The music specialist might see 25 different classes in a week. Each of these classes has a classroom teacher with a little different expectation. It is the specialists job to teach his or her expectations to all 25 classes. Rote Teaching Process: In the rote teaching process, the teacher breaks the song into phrases (short musical sections) and sings them one at a time, with the class echoing each one. If a phrase is not echoed correctly, repeat it. After the class can echo each phrase, sing two phrases and have the class echo. Then sing four phrases and have the class echo. Finally, sing the entire song and have the class echo. Don’t sing with your students - listen to them so you can hear if they need to practice one phrase again. For the classroom teacher that isn’t confident singing alone, use the pause button on the CD player to do the same thing. Play a phrase and pause the CD so children can echo. Using the CD might also be an option for a classroom teacher who sings lower than the students. Children shouldn’t sing below middle C. The healthiest range for children to sing is above middle C. Some teachers sing very well in a lower range - but this isn’t where the children should be singing. (Children can develop vocal nodes if they misuse their v Accompaniment Tracks: There are two CD tracks listed for this song. It is found on CD 1:2-29 The first track has singers on the CD. The second track has just the accompaniments, like a Karaoke CD. The accompaniment track is given for songs that you might want to perform in a program or assembly, or for songs that are frequently used as piggy-back songs. In this case, the accompaniment is given, because this melody is often used as a piggy-back song - a song where the melody is well known and new words are written to teach students a particular concept. In this case, the concept is lining up. You may want to use this melody for other teaching purposes, and you can use the accompaniment for your new songs. For example: Use the same melody to teach all the long vowels. When letter A is long it says its name - A A When letter A is long it says its name - A A When letter A is long it says its name out loud and strong When letter A is long it says its name - A A This is the melody that was used for all the long vowels in “Alphabet Action Songs”. Email tvinfo@telus.net if you want more information on the collection of alphabet songs. 3. Count and Go CD1:3 Big Book pg. 4 Count and Go Here’s a game that’s fun to play We’re going to count in a special way I will tell you what to do Do what I say and freeze when you’re through! March in place and count to 6 123456 Clap your hands count to 13 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13.... Jump in place count to 15 Pat your knees and count to 11 Pull your ears and count to 12 Stick your tongue out and count to 5 Pat your behind and count to 16 Shoulder shoulder - head head and count to 19 Hip hip - elbow elbow - count to 14 Stamp stamp - clap clap - count to 17 Jumping Jacks and count to 20 Teaching Process/Suggested Activities: This song is included to have the children learn to count to twenty. It is also a very good way to have them learn to listen and follow directions. When having students do any kind of movement activities, give them your expectations for behavior before you begin. I show them the boundaries of where they are allowed to move with my “laser” finger. (My finger isn’t really a laser - I just tell them that it is to get their attention.) I tell the students that they are to keep their eyes wide open so they don’t bump into anyone. I tell them that anyone who bumps into someone - even if it’s accidental - will sit down. Then I do exactly what I’ve said. We begin the movement activity. If anyone is behaving inappropriately or bumping into other children, I go right up to them and tell them that they’ll have to watch for a while until they can remember to use their own space. Curriculum Connections: Math: Counting to 20 Concept to Teach: October Week 2 *Fast-Slow Theme: Thanksgiving 24. We Cook Turkey CD1:24-37 25. Air, J.S. Bach CD1:25 26. Badinerie, J.S. Bach CD1:26 Other Songs: 27. I’m Glad I Have a Nose CD1:27 28. London Bridge CD1:28-38 24. We Cook Turkey CD1:24-37 ## c D & œ & ## œ We D œ We œ cook œ cook œ œ tur - key œ œ tur - key œ nice œ œ nice and œ and A œ hot. œ hot œ We A œ on œ cook œ œ tur - key œ œ Thanks - giv - ing œ nice œ and D œ Day. A7 œ D. Gagne hot. Œ 2. We eat turkey for a week, we eat turkey for a week. We eat turkey for a week - we eat it every day. 3. Turkey sandwich, turkey soup; turkey sandwich, turkey soup; turkey sandwich, turkey soup; then some turkey pie. 4. Sandwiches and soup are fine. Sandwiches and soup are fine. By the way - would you like mine? I think I’ve had enough. 5. We cook turkey nice and hot. We cook turkey nice and hot. We cook turkey nice and hot on Thanksgiving Day. Teaching Process/Suggested Activities: This song was included as a Thanksgiving activity, and to demonstrate how music can be fast or slow. As the person in the song gets tired of eating turkey, the song slows down. Teach the song as a listening activity. Listen to a verse and ask questions about it. Verse 1 ask: “Why did the person in the song cook turkey?” Verse 2 ask: “What did they eat every day?” “Have you ever eaten the same food every day?” “How do you feel about that?” Verse 3 ask: “What kind of food does your Mom make out of turkey?” Verse 4 ask: “Why do you think the music has slowed down?” Since the song uses a familiar melody, the melody will be easy for the children to remember. The words are repetitive, so they should be easy to teach as well. 25. Air, J.S. Bach CD1:25 26. Badinerie, J.S. Bach CD1:26 Fast-Slow: These two listening selections are included to have children experience listening and moving to music that is fast and music that is slow. Play the first selection and have the children move to the music. After they have listened and moved to the music ask them what the music makes them think of. Ask them how the music makes them feel. Then, listen and move to the second selection and do the same. Ask the children how the second selection was different than the first. (faster) This is an easier concept for Kindergarten children to grasp than high-low. Some may grasp the concept the very first time you talk about it. However, there may be some children in the class that need to experience this more than once to understand fast and slow. When you’re learning or listening to other songs, ask the students if they are fast or slow. Not only will you ensure that all students have understood the concept, you will help all the students to develop better listening skills. Discuss concert behavior with your students. If they were listening to these two pieces in a concert, how would they behave? Discuss what instruments they hear in the two recordings. In #26 they hear a flute. Ask the students if they know someone who plays a flute. Can they identify a musician that they know? 31. October is Here CD2:3-29 j œ œ œ œ Œ J b &b c œ œ œ œ Hey there kids b &b œ œ œ œ Skel - e - tons will b b & œ œ œ œ Black cats show b &b ‹ 1 Oc - to - ber us ‹ 2 is here. œ œ œj ˙ J come to say, œ œ œj ˙ J what you ‹ 3 Teaching Process/Suggested Activities: j œ œ # œ œ œj ˙ œ œ do. ‹ 4 Spook - y things are œ œ œ œ "Hope you have œ œ œ œ Count to ‹ 5 8 and ‹ 6 a far and j #œ œ scar - y j œ #œ you'll ‹ 7 be D. Gagne near. j œ ˙ day." j œ ˙ through. ‹ 8 2. Pumpkins 3. Spiders 4. Blank - teacher can fill This song is included to provide an opportunity for the children to create movement. In verse 1, they are to move for eight beats like “black cats”. In verse 2 they are to move for eight beats like “pumpkins” and in verse 3 like “spiders”. Verse 4 is left blank so the children can think of something else that they can move like. You may want to insert a Halloween type character in verse 4 - witches, goblins or ghosts. If Halloween is not celebrated at your school, insert a character or animal that is not related to Halloween - bunnies, elephants or monkeys. The song is in a minor key and sounds kind of like a “Halloween” song, but does not include any actual pagan characters, so all children, regardless of beliefs, can participate. The eight beats are included to keep the activity fun and creative, but to prevent chaos from breaking out. They move only for eight beats and then sit down and sing again. Curriculum Connections: PE - creative movement Poems/Chants 31a. Hey Ho for Halloween Hey ho for Halloween All the witches to be seen, Some black, some green, Hey ho for Halloween 31b. Witch,Witch Where do you fly? Witch, witch where do you fly? Under the clouds and over the sky. Witch, witch what do you eat? Little black apples from Hurricane Street. Witch, witch what do you drink? Vinegar, blacking and good red ink. And witch, witch where do you sleep? Up in the clouds where the pillows are cheap. * Hey Ho is a good poem for practicing keeping a steady beat. Move to the beat while the students recite it - walk, stomp, jump, hop. Transfer the beat to body percussion - pat legs. * Say the poem using different dynamics and voice levels. Line 1-loud; line 2-soft; line 3-medium; line 4 - loud. * Witch Witch is an excellent poem for using a variety of vocal expression. * Divide the children into two groups - one to ask the question and the other to give the witches answer. Have each group use a different kind of voice.