Friday, July 25, 2014

Finally! A Music Plan!

As some of my internet acquaintances are aware (because I was pestering them to death with questions earlier this spring about music appreciation resources, curricula, and plans), I have been searching for just the right music curriculum. Or lesson plan. Or even broad outline with notes... Anything, really, so long as it met a few criteria:
  1. I wanted something that covered more than just the classical composers. Yes, I like Beethoven as much as the next person, and as a Catholic mama I have a soft spot for Bach's masses, but I feel they would be so much more impressive and interesting in a larger historical context.
  2. It had to be chronological. What's the point of covering more than the classical composers if you don't do it in order? That's sort of the point, but a point it seems most music curricula completely ignore.
  3. I'd prefer it be something I could align to our 4-year history cycle of Ancient, Medieval & Renaissance, Early Modern, and Modern. Though since we're starting year two it's less important to me that we cover anything before the Middle Ages. When we get back around to the ancients we can always use that year to study instruments, the set up of the orchestra, musical notation, or whatever comes our way.
Want to know what I've found so far? What the dozens of wonderful ladies online scoured the internet and suggested? Did i find anything wonderful???



What did I find? A whole lot of nothing that met those criteria. I was bummed. I felt let down by the educational community. Surely, I thought, if I'm interested in something like the then some homeschool mom out there had gotten fed up and created it already! The need is there! Somebody get on that!

Oh there are tons of great resources. Wonderful CD and MP3 collections (some even with accompanying picture books of works like Peter and the Wolf), beautiful biographies that bring the composers to life, even some excellent coloring books of composers! There's also plenty of information on the instruments and arrangement of the orchestra, lessons in reading musical notation and the like. But most formal curricula or lesson plans I found seemed to focus only on the great composers, big names like Bach, Beethoven, Tchaikovsky, even Chopin. Harmony Fine Arts has some wonderful art and music plans that supposedly align to the 4-year classical history cycle, and while the art portion does, the Medieval and Renaissance level starts with Vivaldi. Vivaldi, who wasn't born until the 1670s. In the Medieval and Renaissance book. 



Many others just sort of jumped around, unit study style, between musical notation, composers, and types of instruments in a way I found incoherent. It just wasn't what I wanted. Nothing fit. I could not find a single curriculum that laid out the history of music, from at least the Middle Ages onward, in one chronological, continuous set of lessons. Forget breaking it up into four years, I couldn't even find any plans for teaching music appreciation that way at all, not even crammed into one year! 

Until now! 


Today I happened across a post by Valerie over at Seven Times the Fun where she shared exactly that - a set of chronological, comprehensive lesson plans covering Medieval through Modern music, as well as details of the orchestra. She lists pieces to listen to, books to read, video clips to watch (who doesn't love the What's Opera, Doc? episode of Looney Tunes?! Something's wrong with you!), coloring books to utilize, projects to work on, websites to visit, the whole shebang! She even has options for all three stages of the classical education: Grammar, Logic, and Rhetoric (roughly corresponding to elementary, middle school, and high school students). It's set up as a one year, 35 week set of lessons. And do you know what's even more amazing? She's offering the plans totally free! How unbelievably generous! I. Am. So. Excited! I knew I couldn't be the only homeschool mom out there that's been searching for something like this! 

In all honesty, I'm still considering breaking it up over multiple years for our kids. We already have a much heavier course load planned this year than last and I'm also taking on my first year attempting to juggle multiple students, as our middle child starts kindergarten work. Our plate is pretty full and I'm a bit concerned I may be biting off more than I can chew already. So I'm considering stretching out the first twelve weeks of material, which covers the orchestra, Medieval, and Renaissance music, to spread it out across a whole year. It would mean just a few minutes here and there reading, coloring, and discussing things on our "Art Day" each Friday, and maybe looking up more pieces to listen to on YouTube. I'm betting we can handle that. Sometimes taking it slowly is the way to go! Finally, I feel like we're nearing that Holy Grail of a "well rounded" education!

Check out Valerie's Multi-Level Music a Plans over at Seven Times the Fun!

6 comments:

  1. Thanks for the kind words. I hope you enjoy the suggestions! I also graduated with a degree in philosophy after dropping out of music school. :)

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    1. That's awesome, Valerie! I suspect there are more philosophy majors out there in the world, but as you're only the second I've known that didn't actually go to college with me, we must be rare!

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  2. I have Harmony Fine Arts for 2nd Grade, and I agree that I'd like to see more focus on music for the time period we wish to study. I haven't had a chance to really go through things, since music and art tend to take a back seat sometimes, but looking through this plan, I agree with you that I may spread the first two units out over the year...

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    1. I purchased Harmony a Fine Arts for my kids as well (our oldest will be starting 2nd too!) and the ART portion looks fantastic, but I was so disappointed the music portion didn't coincide with the time period AT ALL. What we might do (and I haven't decided yet, even though we start school tomorrow - eek!) is simply replace their music study with this one, at least until the art catches up to the Classical music period. Then we'll reassess.

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  3. Hi Krystal, I hope your year is going well so far! I was just wondering what you ended up doing for music this year. I finally have our art stuff organized based on Harmony Fine Arts and Artistic Pursuits, which means I can get to the music stuff. I am looking at this outline from Valerie Malott--which is awesome--but I'm wondering how to stretch it out for the school year, what to buy, etc. I'm just getting started, but thought I'd touch base to see what you ended up doing. I am ok with starting music and art later in the school year because it gives us time to get settled with the other subjects, plus we do some art-related SOTW activities and my daughter takes piano, but I'd like to start fleshing out some music appreciation related to the middle ages. I'd love to hear about any of your ideas as I pull things together!

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    1. Hi, Joanne! It sounds like you're getting things pretty well organized over there! I've decided how we are going to divide our music appreciation lessons but we've been slacking (see our Make-Up Day post from today!) and haven't actually started. I will try to post about how I intend to break up the material either tonight or tomorrow, but the short answer is I plan to cover Valerie's Orchestra, Medieval, and Rennaisance lessons using the materials she suggests as well as plenty of music on YouTube.

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