Sunday, February 26, 2012

New Tech Standards and Requirements

Teachers are now required by law to implement technology to familiarize students to our ever changing society. At first, I thought this would be a struggle- then I realized that as a musician, I use technology all the time. 
            The first technology standard that stood out to me was number 1) Creativity and Innovation. In this standard, students use technology while applying existing knowledge to generate new ideas, processes, and possibilities, create original works to express themselves or a group, and develop models/simulations to explore issues, trends, and systems. The first thing that popped into my mind when I read the description were the programs "Finale" and "Sibelius". These are MIDI programs where students can enter in notes and values for instruments to create a piece of music. Once information has been entered, you can play it back to hear how it sounds. The programs already have sounds for all woodwind, string, brass, percussion, and vocal sounds and attributes. It will even transpose for you so you can write everything in concert key- which simplifies the process tremendously. I have used "Sibelius" and "Finale" for music theory homework, original compositions, arrangements, writing warm-ups, and preserving parts that no longer exist in my library. Students use their knowledge of music theory and instrument color, tone quality, and sound to create their own piece of music. 
       The Second standard that stood out to me was number 2) Communication and Collaboration. Students are required to share ideas/wprk and collaborate as a group. The program "Sibelius" mentioned above has an affiliated website similar to google docs where students can post their work, get feedback from others, and (if you have the permission and password) work on other people's compositions. This is a great way to get input from a wide audience and receive constructive criticism from other composers/arrangers who have the program. 
      The third standard I liked was number 6) Technology Operations and Concepts. This standard says students must use technological concepts and tools to learn. To satisfy this standard, students simply need to use a digital tuner and metronome. Another great online resource is jazzpracticeloops.com. This ties in with number one since you need to have prior knowledge of musical scales to perform and improv solo. Being a solo jazz performer, I need to practice my improvisation- the musician is given chord or figured bass symbols and improvises their own rhythms and notes (within the chords) to make a solo. jazzpracticeloops.com has hundreds of sound samples the musician can play along with. They used a program like "Sibelius" or "Finale" to make a digital rhythm section (drum set, bass, and piano) that plays any key signature, tempo, style, or length you could imagine. If I knew I had an improv solo for a song in say, A major, 12 bar blues, I could go to the website, search the criteria, and practice my solo with the digital rhythm section for as long as I wanted. That way, during the performance, I am familiar with the chord changes and can focus more on expression than notes- which will be far more interesting. Another great online tool is imslp which is an online database of sheet music. When preparing for my senior capstone, I composed an original work based on German composers of the romantic era. For my piece to sound like music of the time period, I needed to study the scores of composers I wanted to emulate- Beethoven, Brahms, Wagner, etc. To avoid buying scores to their symphonies, I studied them on imslp. This also ties in with number one because I had to have prior knowledge of Romantic History, composers, instrumentation, and the ability to read/write music. 
       The biggest problem with using technology in a  music class is that it is often expensive. A program like "Finale" costs around $150-$200, and a good tuner/metronome is anywhere between $15-$100. Many students cannot afford to buy proper equipment, and many music programs can't afford it either. Since most musicians have added expenses like strings, sticks, reeds, valve/slide oil and have difficulty saving up for these technologies. Many students will never get to use them unless the school provides it. Funding for public school music programs has been cut significantly in the past few years, and many programs have been cut all together. Many music instructors are more focused on buying new sheet music, stands, microphones, percussion, or spending on repairs than asking administrators for new equipment - assuming there is at least one computer in the music room (if there even is a consistent music room). Also, so many music directors are being pressured to focus on marching band or pep band and to do well at festivals and competitions that they don't have time to teach basic music theory and history- much less an entirely new thing like technology programs. Something like a tuner/metronome or jazzpracticeloops could and should be used every day (given the funding), but instructors are reluctant to ask for cash for new programs that do not directly benefit the school. 

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Analyzing Student data in a Spreadsheet

At first, this task was a little daunting since I don't get along with technology or math, but I did the assignment with the tutorial, so I think I got the hang of it. I think the most important piece of this data is the "student growth". If your students are not improving academically, then something is wrong. This could be that you are not teaching them effectively, they are not understanding content, or they are simply failing to meet requirements. Only one student (Joel) has a negative growth rate- which is concerning since he is a senior. This could be due to a number of things- he might be preoccupied and therefore not applying himself, he could be stressed, struggling, etc. As his teacher, I would look back over his body of work as a student and see if this is at all typical, perhaps talk with his other teachers and see how he is doing in their classes, and see if something can be worked out to get him caught up.
I have shared a link to the data- included with the spreadsheet are graphs comparing the data.

data sheet

Sunday, February 5, 2012

screener- tinyurl

here's the tinyurl from the tutorial if anyone is interested in the resources: http://tinyurl.com/7cfgnmd





Personal Productivity Tools

Tinyurl: makes annoying, incredibly long url's into short ones. You go to the website, copy a long url into the white bar, then it makes a short one that you can paste into an email or document. I've shared a tiny url that leads to a video/article about music education and the national funding crisis: http://tinyurl.com/78vm4u6

Dropbox: you have to download this one, but it prevents you from carrying a flashdrive or emailing documents to yourself to access from different computers. Once downloaded, login with your email, save documents in your dropbox folder and access it on getdropbox.com from any computer.

Teamviewer: this is another one you have to download, but is free. If two or more people are logged in to teamviewer, you can share a document that you can all work on at the same time as if you were right next to each other. So, if you are working on a group presentation and can't meet up, you can all log in to teamviewer and do it wherever you'd like.

Each of these could greatly enhance teaching and learning methods. Tinyurl makes sharing websites that much easier. It saves time and space when copying and pasting, and there is less likely of a chance that something will be left out of the long url when sharing website information. Dropbox makes it easy for teachers and students to work on homework, lesson plans, presentations etc. from anywhere without wondering where your flash drive is or worrying about emailing yourself. But, I think teamviewer increases productivity the most. This way, you can assign group presentations or activities without having to worry about how students will meet up to work on it. It also allows you (the teacher) to help them when you are not able to physically be with them. With each of these programs, we are not only teaching students to utilize technology in a positive way, but we are encouraging the sharing of knowledge.

week 3- technology class

As a continuation of my (hopeful) expansion of technology knowledge, I have to attempt to explain Cloud computing and Web 2.0.
Cloud computing simply seems to be shared computer resources over the internet. They are apps and programs that you can access without downloading and installing on your computer. You have access to programs like google docs, adobe connect, teamviewer.com, yodio, and the list continues to expand. Most of the services are free and you can access them from any computer with internet.