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Ideas For Your Music Teacher Sub Tub

10/13/2018

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Planning for a substitute teacher in a music class can be a challenge. You may end up with a sub who has little or no musical training, so what do you leave for them? Four of the CCCAOSA board members have some ideas for you:

Here's a fun book-related activity in my Sub Tub that goes with “Pete the Cat: I Love My White Shoes” by Eric Litwin. The song that goes with the book can be found at http://www.petethecatbooks.com/songs/ but Pete is so popular that chances are, some of your students will already know the song. Along with the book, leave copies of a shoe outline coloring page and crayons. After reading the book, the students can color their shoes and write on their paper what Pete stepped in to make his shoes that color. The class can then make their own new Pete song, inserting each child’s new shoe color into the pattern of the story and singing the song about it...because it’s all good.

-Ann Wells


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If there is one DVD to have in your Sub Tub, it is Peter and the Wolf by the Royal Ballet. This works with any age group and the kids really love it! Supplement it with a listening activity in which the sub plays each theme and the kids try to figure out which character it is, or students could move like the character as the theme plays. You can access the themes on this website http://www.philtulga.com/Peter.html if you do not have recordings. This site also has ideas for writing prompts in which students could write a new endings for the story.

-Colleen Walsh


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Alphabet Soup is a steady beat game I use in the music room with K-2 students.  It’s simple and can be left in your sub tub. You will need a ball (I use a yarn ball) and an instrument to use for the signal (I use a crash cymbal or gong.)

Alphabet Soup, Alphabet Soup,
What shall we put in the alphabet soup?
A, B, C, D, E, (continues until you hear signal)


Students sit in a circle and pass a ball(I use a yarn ball) around the circle to the steady beat.  One student sits outside the circle with a drum or other instrument that everyone can hear. The student outside the circle signals for the ball to stop moving, the students answers with a word that starts with the letter they stopped on.,The student who answered switches with the signal person and the game continues.  Yarn Ball instructions
-Sue Reynolds


This is a super simple emergency sub plan that’s great in a pinch, especially if you have a non-musical, non-tech savvy sub. Get a copy of “Miss Nelson is Missing” by Harry G. Allard. In the story, Miss Nelson goes missing and is replaced by the horrible Miss Viola Swamp. The kids wonder and imagine where in the world Miss Nelson is. This is where your sub comes in. Have them read the story and then pose the question, “So where do you think your music teacher is today?” Students can write a story, draw a picture, or create a comic strip. The stories your students come up with will surprise you!

-Alexis Kagel
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Flip it!

10/3/2018

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PictureTaking a silly selfie is one of my students' favorite Flipgrid features
​I LOVE TECHNOLOGY! I could shout it from the rooftops. I honestly don’t know how I taught before Youtube and iPads. There are a million apps for music, but sometimes we run into a problem. If we’re sharing iPads with classroom teachers, we can’t always get all of the music apps we want and we need to make the classroom teacher's apps work for us. Therefore, I wanted to introduce you to an app that will work for you AND your classroom teachers!

​If you haven’t heard of 
Flipgrid, make it your new best friend. With Flipgrid you create a “grid,” where teachers can pose a question that their students will respond to in videos of 90 seconds or less. Students can watch each other’s responses, “like” their videos, and record video responses. As a music teacher, I saw Flipgrid as a platform for students to create short musical pieces with me and their peers.



In all the excitement of the #firstdayofschool I forgot to post this! We turned the classic name game around and @HCES_5 used @Flipgrid to record their names as repeating rhythms. The buzz around the room was amazing □□❤️ #Hawksdoitdifferent @HortonsCreekES pic.twitter.com/lRXBHyCqpo

— Music w/ Mrs Kagel (@HCESMusic) August 28, 2018
Here’s how I’ve used it so far: my 5th graders created ostinatos using their names. They could use just their first name, their first and last, or their first and middle and last. They repeated their ostinatos and layered them over each other, adding body percussion. This is where Flipgrid comes in. Logged into the 5th grade grid, they recorded their layered ostinatos and took a silly selfie for the thumbnail of the video. If they had extra time, they got to watch other groups’ videos. Even the kid that was rolling his eyes at the beginning of class (you know that kid) was totally enthralled.

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But here’s the real genius of using Flipgrid. The next time each class came, they created self reflection responses to their videos. They used a rubric and shared what they did well and what they could have done better. Later on, I was able to watch their original video composition and their reflections. Such a simple app was turned into a powerful assessment tool.

So how can you do this too? Go to www.flipgrid.com and make a free Flipgrid account. Make a grid. You can have students log in with a password or with QR codes (I just created an account for each iPad, not each student.) That’s it! GET FLIPPING!

​If you have any questions, come see me at the October workshop with James Harding! Like I said, I love technology, and I love helping other people love technology too.

-Alexis Kagel
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    Musings from  CCCAOSA board members.

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