Tag: finale

Free Inquiry #11: Finale!

Well, sometimes good things must come to a (hopefully temporary) end! I have enjoyed getting to learn and gain confidence in the ukulele over the past 11 weeks, and I hope to get to continue playing regularly in the future. For this final post, I thought I would recap what I learned and how it benefits my students in the future.

Originally, I set out to learn more ukulele because I had very limited experience in playing it, only in the fifth grade, which I remember nothing of, with the expectation that I know I was better on the recorder (Maybe it was the clarinet calling me when I was young?) And a few days of classes in university playing, but we did not go in-depth, unfortunately. We did discuss how diverse the ukulele is as an instrument, being able to be played with chords, picking, and in multiple genres and contexts. It is also lighter and smaller which makes it easier for students to physically support, which benefits students prone to wrist and arm injuries. A class set is not horribly expensive (comparatively to other instruments, and you can get deals at conferences often.) There are only 4 strings instead of 6 on the guitar which also makes it a bit easier to get around the instrument.

When I started this project, I had my ukulele tuned in D, which is better for younger students whose voices are in the process or have not begun dropping yet. However, I learned in general that this tuning is all but obsolete in the online ukulele community, where everything is for ukulele in C, so I switched the tuning to my ukulele, having to relearn the chord names that I knew, for example, my D chord was now a C chord, and so on. Fortunately for me at this point, I did not know that many chords, so it was not too difficult.

I began looking up songs I enjoyed listening to and using different websites, I was able to learn many new chords, strumming patterns and songs! I focused on reading through things with fluency, as that is something is something I have always struggled with in my musical career thus far, and teaching students that mistakes happen and it is okay to just keep going if you have a blip is important, and highlighting that ensembles and performers at all levels have to stop and restart or resume at some point in life and that is okay! Emphasizing and modelling this will help build self-efficacy and have the students willing to try things and perform.

I practiced strumming patterns slowly, as I find it challenging to keep on the pattern when singing and playing, and while it is still tricky, I have made progress in that concept.

I thought about assignments and ideas of how to run a ukulele class at the middle or secondary school level, and what assignments would be appropriate and educational for learners. My penultimate post just focuses on the joy of playing, and taking a step away as only an educator and returning to who I am, a musician who is learning something new to enjoy it, not to be the best.

This blog has been an easy way to document my process, and I am sure I will look back on it and smile in the future.

-Katherine

Reflection 11: Final Class

The final class! It is rather remarkable that it is already here, but I am glad to have made some progress in the program. In class, we talked about everyone’s team inquiry projects, which is interesting to see what people chose and how they went about it.

Discussing the future of education in groups was interesting, and I think people’s teachable subjects affect their ideas of education and technology in the future. For music, I don’t think that technology is going to take over the methods we use now, but it can help innovate a western, euro-centric, traditional method. Using technology to assess and individualize learning is very valuable to me and I have been creating options to create using technology for assessments in the units I plan. My group talked about outside as a classroom, and I raised accessibility from a perspective of mobility and hearing, and the importance of keeping diverse learners involved and being proactive.

We also discussed our fears and shifts we see how people younger than us interact with technology and we expressed fear of students being unable to be away from their phones to the point they are unable to work a job after school, collaborate with others and communicate ideas through face to face interaction. I see this already in my younger co-workers who have a lower level of basic professionalism (body language, the wording of conversation, etc) and that has a lot to do with their relationships to technology. They are distracted and feel the need to constantly be talking to everyone they are friends with about whatever topic, and most of them and not important enough to warrant the distraction they cause. Even in their own spelling abilities, the constant use of autocorrect with not make them able to spell, or bother learning. Personally, I love autocorrect because I can not spell, not because of technology, just because I am naturally awful at it and my brain can’t think about it or remember words. I think technology is what we allow it to be as teachers. I will be fairly strict on phones personally, because being on your phone in a music ensemble is ruining everyone’s learning, because everyone’s voice matters in music and it is a team activity.

To be frank, I do not think some things we talk about (mainly cell phones in class) need to be such a frequent topic. Maybe this is a controversial opinion, but as professionals, we are being hired to use our ideas, pedagogies and professional opinion to set rules in our classrooms and teach the students. Use your opinion and knowledge of your subject and class to create policies and stick to them. People trust their doctors to make choices for them that are best for them, and teachers are not different in my opinion. Obviously, students will not die if you do not let them be on TikTok in class but have a policy that is rooted in research and professional opinion.

So, what is the future? It is everything and anything we want it to be, but at the end of the day, my pedagogy is centred around one simple question;

“How much is a student WORTH”

This course has been interesting and I found the most value in the legal side (FIPPA/Privacy, copyright and Creative Commons, etc) of technology in the classroom. So, though not everything in this class is overly applicable to music, there are ideas that are useful, like Kahoot (and how rules change), basic editing, and ways to use technology to collaborate anonymously with peers and give feedback, among other things. I appreciate what we went over and if I TOC in the future I will use more of these methods. So, thank you for this term, and my apologies I couldn’t bring the FM, the flooding has delayed it.

Sincerely,

-Katherine