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middle school

Why Won’t My Middle School Choir Sing Part 4

July 9, 2016 by Dale Duncan 2 Comments

This is part 4 of the series “Why Won’t My Middle School Choir Sing?”

Click here to see the first post in the series!

Reason #4:

We focus too much on technique and not enough on developing their true artistry.

In my 24 years of teaching this age group, I’ve seen lots of middle school choirs who sing proficiently.  By that, I mean, it is evident the teacher taught diction, phrasing, dynamics, etc.

…the basics.

Most of us spend a lot of time on the technical side of music because our middle school beginners NEED it!

However, we can suck the oxygen out of our singers if we relentlessly seek technical perfection.

Working toward it nonstop can become boring to them really quickly.

Why do people love watching Cirque de Soleil?

Screen Shot 2016-07-05 at 1.37.22 PM

It’s not just the incredible athleticism that is displayed which took countless hours of training and technical work to develop.  It’s the unforgettable way our spirits are moved when the athleticism is combined so beautifully with music and lighting and costuming.

If we want athleticism alone, we can simply watch track and field or men’s gymnastics.

In our middle school classrooms, we have to inject more “Cirque de Soleil”.

When I watch the choirs of teachers who have focused entirely on technique, it feels like eating cake that has no butter and sugar.

To quote the famous movie “Sixth Sense”… When I see and hear a technically proficient performance in which it is clear the students are well trained but have no idea about what they are singing, “I see dead people.”

Screen Shot 2016-07-05 at 1.46.58 PM

I feel nothing.

The performance is utterly unmoving.

That is not what music is.

Teachers often ask, “How do I get them to who facial expression?  Raise their eyebrows?  Smile?”

My answer:  From the inside out.

Here is how you DON’T do it.

Don’t say “Raise your eyebrows!  Smile!  Sing with facial expression”.  With this age group, it doesn’t work.

Regardless of the obscurity of the meaning of the song and how it seems to have absolutely no meaning to them in their young lives, we must find a way to help them emotionally connect to a song.  Just talking about the meaning of the song or giving historical context will NOT do it.

We have to be willing to make them think.  We have to help them connect the dots to their own lives in some way.

As part of our teaching priorities, we have to indicate to our singers the importance of singing honestly and serving the music.

I tell my own students that, as choir singers, they are also actors.  Actors must put their personal stuff aside and act the part.

Then, we, the teachers, must guide them through the treasure trove of their life experiences to find a meaning that they can sing for that particular song.   Believe it or not, they notice the fact that WE value their own life experiences enough to ask them to inject them and use them as they sing because, so often in their young lives, their pain and their life experiences are dismissed.

When I’m teaching “Sleigh Bells”, and they are singing with absolutely no energy at all because it is a Wednesday and not a Friday and they are hating school and their boyfriends just broke up with them and they have two projects due….blah, blah, blah…I stop the music, and I say:  “Do you like snow days?”  They usually scream “YES!”   Then, I say, “Pretend that you just found out tomorrow is a snow day and then sing it!”

It changes everything.

When I am able to successfully take them to some sort of internal emotional moment to which they can relate for a particular song, everything changes.  Many of the technical issues we’ve labored over correct themselves.  They breathe bigger.   They sing with truth.  Their faces come to life.  Their tone has energy.

The results must come from inside their hearts. When you are able to help them find it and deliver it in a performance, the energy of the audience is palpable as they receive this truly artistic moment.

…you will get goose bumps…

…and so will your students.

Sharing a “goose bump moment” has major positive impacts on your program.  It’s worth the work to help them get to that emotional place in rehearsal and then to deliver it in performance.

Honestly…I enjoy that part the most!

Click here to go to my YouTube Channel and see “To Do’s and NOT to Do’s of Middle School Chorus!”

Screen Shot 2016-07-05 at 1.39.49 PM
To learn more about Mr D’s S-Cubed Middle School Sight Singing Program, click here!
Click here to purchase the S-Cubed Middle School Sight Singing Bundle.

Dale

Check out my blog!

Filed Under: Music in the Middle, Others Tagged With: American Choral Directors Association, Choral Journal, middle school, sight singing

Why Won’t My Middle School Choir Sing Part 3

July 2, 2016 by Dale Duncan Leave a Comment

Why Won’t My Middle School Choir Sing? Part 3

to do's and not to do's ss

This is the third post in a five-part series from “In the Middle With Mr D” called “Why Won’t My Middle School Choir Sing?”

Link to Reason #1 of “Why Won’t My Middle School Choir Sing?”

Here is Reason #3

We don’t publicly celebrate and recognize the positive things our students are doing.

All it takes is a couple of seconds to acknowledge our singers.  They just want to be noticed, and when you do notice them, all of the children around them work harder so they, too, might be recognized.

1)   “I love your posture Charley.  Everyone turn to page 3, measure 24.”

2)  “Sara!  Your mouth position on that ‘ah’ vowel is nice and tall!  Everyone, pull out the next song on the repertoire list for today.”

3)  “Row three sopranos, you are creating overtones back there!  It’s stunning!  Everyone go back to measure 12 and sing it staccato to correct the rhythm.”

It’s not about playing favorites.  It’s about quick, positive acknowledgement that lets the kids know that you notice how hard they are working.

The minute I make comments like these to my students, the children I acknowledge feel great, and they kids around them start working on the item I’ve just acknowledged in their peer.

It must be quick and clear.  We must make sure every student hears it.  We must keep the lesson moving.

Fewer words = More effective results.

That rule applies whether we are praising or correcting our middle school students.  Nothing sucks the life force out of a middle school classroom and makes our students want to sing LESS than a long “lecture” and/or negative feedback on what the children should be doing.

“2nd period was able to master this content in 10 minutes.  Why is it taking you 20 minutes?”

The students don’t care that it’s taking them longer than the previous class.   If it’s taking longer, it’s our fault.  It could mean that we haven’t realized how to reach this specific group of children as well.   It is also highly possible that one particular group isn’t as capable as the other.   That’s ok too.    Whatever the reason is that these children are learning at a slower pace, it doesn’t make a middle school beginner want to sing if we are comparing them negatively to another group or criticizing them in some other way.

It’s our job to take each group of our singers as far as they can go, and to keep the journey as positive as we can.

When we praise what our choir students are doing well, the energy snowballs.

Singing comes from deep inside the souls.  We’ve got to do everything we can to keep our little middle school beginner’s spirits filled with light.

Click here to see a fun video called “To Do’s and NOT to Do’s of Chorus”.

All of the philosophies that have worked for me are reflected in the program I created called S-Cubed: Successful Sight Singing for Middle School Teachers and Their Students.

Click here to see what teachers are saying about S-Cubed.

Click here to see a video description of S-Cubed!

Next Saturday, I’ll post Reason #4 right here!

Filed Under: Music in the Middle Tagged With: ACDA Membership Benefits, American Choral Directors Association, choir, Choral Journal, Chorus, Dale Duncan, middle school, sight singing, Teaching

Why Won’t My Middle School Choir Sing? Part 1

June 18, 2016 by Dale Duncan 3 Comments

“Why won’t my middle school choir sing?”

I saw the above comment a while back on a Facebook Music Group, and it reminded me of my early years of teaching this very unique age group.

It’s frustrating, and I believe it’s quite commonly experienced in middle school choral classrooms across America.

You ask yourself, “Why are these kids in choir if they don’t want to sing?!”

They are sitting in your room taking up the air space, but contributing nothing.  It’s a terrible feeling to try to teach singing to children who won’t sing.

What do you do about it?  How do you fix it?  Should you threaten to lower their grade?  Should you call their parents?

Before I share how and why I think some middle school teachers face this scenario, you need to be prepared!  The answers aren’t easy to hear.

After having faced this scenario in my own middle school classroom, I had to do some deep soul searching that included all of the items I share in this article.  I’ve been through this, and I survived!  So can you!

The good news is that there ARE solutions to this scenario and many of those ideas will help grow your middle school program in many ways in addition to helping you get your children to sing! The changes will take time, but we can cause positive change to occur and begin working toward having a classroom of motivated students who want to sing and who enjoy the process of learning.

So, here is what I believe is the answer to why the children won’t sing.

It’s our fault.

Ouch.

It’s difficult to hear, but when I, myself, decided to take responsibility for the lip-syncing, unmotivated middle school children who were sitting in front of me each day, everything began to change, and it is the reason that I am still teaching today.

Ok…now that’s over.

What are some ideas that will help us make this experience a thing of the past?

During my 23 years teaching, I’ve heard all sorts of reasons for why middle school choir programs often struggle.   In this article, I’m going to share some of those common reasons in hopes that I might help other choir teachers work toward solutions so they can create a positive learning environment in which your children not only WANT to sing, but can’t WAIT to sing.

Screen Shot 2016-06-18 at 5.37.08 AM

Reason #1:

They don’t understand the information.

It took me a while to realize how little my middle school students knew when they walked into my door at the beginning of the year.   Most of my students come from strong elementary feeder programs, but most have had music only two times a week for 30 minutes during that time.  It is not possible to teach the details that I was expecting of my students in that amount of time.

I needed to change my expectations and meet them where they were when they arrived.  I needed to work to find fun, interesting ways to deliver the material to that they not only learned it, but enjoy the process of learning it.

In the early days of my career, I’d hand them a piece of music and they would look at the page with complete puzzlement.  I failed to recognize it, and I’d get frustrated with them and say “Why isn’t anyone singing?!?  If you don’t sing, I’m going to go down the line and make you sing by yourself!”

Well, I quickly learned that certainly doesn’t inspire anyone to want to sing.

I realized that most of them didn’t have any idea what a staff or system or measure is.  Sing alto? What’s that?   Sing forte?  What is that and how am I supposed to know when or how to do it without singing out of tune?!   It became clear that most of them were simply following the words, and even THAT didn’t make sense because, when they were looking at a 2-part or 3-part piece, they didn’t understand where to go when they reached the last measure of a system.  …Not to mention the fact that many 6th graders not only don’t understand how to follow a score, but also, many of them still struggle with basic reading skills.  They can’t even read most of the words!  …Especially when the words are written like this:

Screen Shot 2016-06-18 at 5.31.18 AM

To-mor-row is go-   ing to be a bea-      ti-    ful day.

And I had the audacity to ask why no one was singing?

Recognizing and empathizing with what our beginning middle school students don’t know is so very important.  Here is an analogy:  When they look at a 2 or 3 part piece of music that includes dots, curved lines, fractions, grids and symbols they don’t recognize, they feel the same we would feel if someone asked us to read aloud a book that is written in Arabic.

It’s a vicious cycle, and the only way to break it is to teach them one concept at a time steadily, creatively and deliberately each and every day and to do it in a way that they thrive and enjoy the process of learning.

Does that mean you might teach from rote sometimes?  Sure!  We must.  Four year old children can speak and use words that they cannot possibly write or define.  It’s the same for beginning singers.

Next Saturday, I’ll post reason #2!

Dale Duncan

From the creator of S-Cubed Middle School Sight Singing Program for Beginners

Click here to go to my YouTube channel!

Filed Under: Choral Potpourri, Music in the Middle Tagged With: choir, Chorus, classroom management, middle school, sight singing

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