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Kodály Music Education and the National Standards
The National Standards For Music Education were adopted by MENC and endorsed by OAKE in March, 1994 KODÁLY EDUCATION ADDRESSES THE NATIONAL STANDARDS FOR MUSIC The National Standards are comprised of the following nine Content Standards. 1. Singing, alone and with others, a varied repertoire of music. Singing is central to the Kodály approach to music education. Kodály students sing in every music lesson from pre-school through high school. They sing for the joy of singing. They sing to develop a healthy, expressive voice, the one musical instrument everyone owns. They sing to express and learn about elements of music: melody and rhythm, harmony and form. Songs are chosen from the many cultures represented in the United States, as well as from different eras of history. Singing informs each of the other areas of musical development 2. Performing on instruments, alone and with others, a varied repertoire of music. Kodály students sing while learning to play a musical instrument. Instruments are used throughout Kodály training to extend students' practice and performance of music. IN early training rhythm instruments are used to develop beat and rhythm awareness. Xylophones, and other tonal instruments are also introduced in pre-school and kindergarten. Recorder is often begun in 3rd or 4th grade so that all students can transfer melodic learning to an instrument.
3. Improvising melodies, variations, and accompaniments.
Kodály students sing to improvise and compose. They know hundreds of songs thoroughly, having sung and analyzed them. This body of song provides parameters for improvisation. Therefore, when a student improvises a melody, it is more likely to be musically inspired, rather than mechanically or physically inspired. Improvisation becomes more thoughtful and less a product of chance.
5. Reading and Writing Music Kodály students sing to learn how to read and write music. Solfege is introduced in early training, before letter names. Rhythm syllables are also used to enable children to read rhythms more musically and accurately.
6. Learning to, analyzing, and describing music.
Kodály students sing as part of listening activities. In listening, they apply their growing understanding of musical language within different styles and genres of music. In a Kodály classroom, the music chosen contains elements with which students are familiar. Singing and reading activities frequently precede the listening to prepare students to understand what they will hear.
8. Understanding relationships between music, the other arts, and disciplines outside the arts.
Kodály students sing songs from many cultures and eras. Song, which combines music, language, and culture, is an excellent tool for exploring relationships among the arts. In early learning, the relationship between music and culture is primarily textual, i.e., the text of a song will lead to exploration of the history and culture from which it arose. Similarly, songs from a particular region or time enhance the study of history because they are actual carriers of he language and culture.
Questions? What are the National Standards for music education?The National Standards, drafted by MENC, the Music Educators National Conference provide a collective focus for what American students should be able to do, and know, in music. What is the Kodály approach to music education? It is a philosophy that integrates many of the best ideas, techniques, and approaches to music education. Based on singing, it is a comprehensive program that develops the ability to understand what is heard, then transfer that learning to reading, writing, improvisation, and composition. Who was Kodály? Zoltán Kodály, a Hungarian composer, musician, and teacher, inspired this approach to music education. Concerned for the musical training of teachers and children alike, he encouraged colleagues and students to travel throughout Europe in the 1920s in search of the best models for teaching music. Their findings formed the basis for what is now known internationally as Kodály Music Education. What adaptations have been made for teaching in the US? Hungarian folk songs are replaced by folk songs from all over the world. As Kodály based instructional sequences are derived from selected musical literature, it is only natural that changes have occurred in the order in which rhythmic and melodic elements are introduced. What is OAKE? OAKE, the Organization of American Kodály Educators, was founded in 1975 to bring together music educators across the country who are interested in the Kodály philosophy. Isaac Stern… I am a vocal advocate of the Kodály system. Teachers should be carefully trained in reasons and logic behind words, intervals and how a child can make music sound from the throat. … a proper teaching of musical disciplines to children starting at the age of five, six, or seven in an intellectually applied system by highly skilled and educated teachers results in the areas of memory, logic, understanding of mathematical formulas, and reading abilities going right off the graph. With properly applied music study we would have far better educated human beings, and they themselves would make an audience who would find music necessary. The Instrumentalist, April 1993Reprinted by permission |
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1612 - 29th Avenue South, Moorhead, MN 56560 Phone: (218) 227.OAKE Fax: (218) 227.6254 Email: oakeoffice@oake.org |