Secondary General Music Course Proposal
Secondary General Music Course Proposal
Secondary General Music Course Proposal
Grades 6, 7, and 8
Ellen Atwood
Course Description:
This course will provide experiences for students to explore different
areas of the arts: music, dance, drama, visual art, literature, and media
arts including photography and cinematography in the context of
history, culture, the human experience, and the relationship between
the arts themselves. Because the arts are often interconnected,
particular areas of art allow for unique connections and segues in
learning. Through this course, students will have opportunities to
explore musical ideas, performance, history, and practice in
conjunction with other art forms. Activities will include composition
through choreographing dances to music and vice versa
through composing music to accompany dances. Activities will
incorporate visual art through painting canvases inspired by students
favorite pieces and painting while listening activities. Music and
cinematography will be explored through analyzing, observing, and
applying the ways in which musical styles and moods in drama are
connected. Finally, students will explore the ways in which art
forms have been connected throughout history through medieval,
renaissance, baroque, classical, romantic, modern, and contemporary
music periods. This course will apply music through singing, playing a
variety of instruments, collaborating with peers, composing, and
listening and will be open to students of all abilities and musical
backgrounds.
Rationale:
This course will fulfill the needs of students to practice creativity
through a wide variety of outlets and make important connections and
transfers between fields of art and other areas of learning. Music can
enhance the learning of many different fields, especially art.
Psychological research frequently cites correspondence of one skill
with another, the ties between musical and mathematical skillsthe
anatomical drawings of Leonardo at once embody scientific
observation and artistic expression (The Hudson River Museum 1982).
All students have a variety of talents in different fields, and every
student is an artist in some way. This course will help students realize
and explore their many talents through a variety of contexts and
experiences. It will give students who are more comfortable in one art
form or another an opportunity to grow in areas they may not have
explored. This course will also allow students to make transfers not
only between the areas of art but the areas of academia, humanity,
and life. Participation in school music and art programs has been
declining and many programs are being cut because there is not
always enough interest amongst students. One primary explanation
for this is that music education has become disconnected form the
prevailing culture (Kratus, 44). Traditional music education programs
no longer align with the musical interests and needs of most students.
Our culture has changed while many of our music education programs
have held the same curriculum and structure. 93 percent of
Americans agree that the arts are vital to providing a well-rounded
education for children. Also, 54 percent rated the importance of arts
education a 10 on a scale of 1 to 10. (Kratus, 44). It is clear that the
arts are vital and provide so many benefits for students. Because of
this, educators must find ways to keep these programs alive. This
class aims to keep the arts alive through reaching a wider range of
students from differing abilities and backgrounds. This class
encourages participation because it is inclusive, engaging, and more
relevant to students interest. It is designed to be accessible to all.
One way that music educators can make their classes more inclusive
and more meaningful is through providing participatory learning
experiences. Participatory in the context of music education means
music that is primarily social, used for bonding with others, and which
aims to involve all through an approach to music that is accessible to
all (Thibeault, 56). In participatory music, every participants
contributions are valued equally so that no student feels incapable or
unimportant. This class is participatory in nature because it is strongly
based in project-based learning, creativity, collaboration, and it is
accessible for students of every background and ability level. Students
will spend most of their time involved with hands on artistic
experiences and working with their peers. Through these activities
students will be exploring their talents in a meaningful way and
developing social, collaborative skills. In addition to reaching larger
demographics, this class can be an important introduction to creative
outlets, hobbies, and coping strategies for students. In a number of
quantitatively oriented studies it is revealed that music is actively
implemented in order (a) to modulate emotions and moods, (b) to
promote the ability to concentrate and focus attention and (c) to
generate or maintain social relationships (von Georgi, Gbel,
Gebhardt, 301). This is true for other areas of art as well. This class
encourages artistry that is life-long and therefore provides life-long
benefits in terms of psychological, social, and emotional health.
Students may leave this class having discovered a talent, skill or hobby
they never knew they had that they can utilize throughout their lives.
Project Outline:
Project Title: The Arts and Everything Else
Project Description:
Students explore the arts in the context of human emotion, culture,
and history through several mini projects and one final project.
Through PowerPoint presentations, personal research, and
collaborative art projects students will gain a better understanding of
how the arts function throughout history, among different cultures, and
in throughout general human experience.
Stage 2 - Evidence
Evaluative Criteria Assessment Evidence
-Students will be PERFORMANCE TASK(S):
assessed based on -Create a piece of visual art to represent a specific
creative efforts for emotion. This art can be created in the form of
both projects. photography, painting, drawing, or collaging and
-Is there clear effort must include elements that allude to an emotion
and intention behind or evoke similar feelings of the viewer.
the product? -Create a piece of art to represent a chosen
-Are students historical event or era. This art can be in the form
collaborating of dance, drama, music, or visual art and must
respectfully with artistically represent emotions or specific
peers? elements of an event or era. Students may
-Are students able to collaborate with peers for this task.
display connections to
another field of
learning through their
art?
OTHER EVIDENCE:
Students will be assessed throughout the unit
through the meaning and depth of their visual art
projects, cultural findings, mini presentations, and
final art projects.
Students will be assessed on their ability to
collaborate with others.
Day 2: Students will portray an emotion with visual art. Before beginning
the project, provide examples of artwork inspired by specific emotions.
Explain that art is subjective but that there are qualities within specific art
that are representative of specific emotions. Provide students with
magazines with which they can cut and create collages displaying an
emotion of their choice. Students may also paint, draw, or use photos from
home to create their emotional visual art. Show students some famous
examples of art that display very specific emotions. Have a discussion
about why the elements of this art evoke these emotions.
Day 3: Look at the arts from different cultural perspectives. Assign student
groups with which to examine one assigned cultural art tradition. Allow
students to do their own research on computers at school about their
chosen cultures. Provide students with examples such as Mariachi Bands,
African dance and drumming, and Bollywood. Students must find the
geographic area/areas in which this tradition occurs, what kind of artistic
elements this tradition entails, how often and for what occasions this
artistic tradition occurs, and the history of this artistic tradition (if known).
At the end of class, have student groups share their findings with the class
and compare and contrast elements from each culture. At the end create a
giant venn diagram with circles to represent each artistic tradition and a
middle section for comparisons between each.
Day 4: Explore the arts and history. Look at the evolution of art throughout
history from The middle ages onward in a PowerPoint presentation. Have
students choose a specific historical event or era throughout history and
find three pieces of art created during that time. Have students compile
these pieces of art into a brief presentation to explain the significance of
these pieces of art to their specific events. Students may be in groups for
this mini project.
Task: 3 2 1 Tot
al:
Budget
Quantit
Use
Item Name (How will this be used by Cost y Overall
(linked to provider) students/teacher?) (per unit) Cost
References/Works Cited: