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EdTech for Music

A Framework for EdTech Music Teaching

July 2, 2022 by EdTech for Music Leave a Comment

  • Know your “why”: Why are you using EdTech music teaching resources? Finding the “why” is the logical starting point for lesson planning. Once the “why” is clear, the “how” will emerge.
  • Student-centered approach: Use EdTech tools to serve the unique needs and learning styles of your students. Vary the tools and extent of use for each student if possible.
  • Keep it simple: You don’t always need to create a complex lesson plan or embark on large-scale EdTech music projects right away. Introduce EdTech tools gradually, with a focus on building trust and facilitating positive experiences for your students.
  • Allow time for play and exploration: Sometimes the best way to teach using EdTech tools is to simply provide access to these resources, let them explore, and assist as needed. You can also create focused yet open-ended projects (such as recording a track on Garage Band and converting it into an mp3 file, for example) and compare notes when meeting synchronously.
  • EdTech resources are a tool, not an outcome: While teaching students how to use EdTech tools is important, what is even more important is that students can apply these tools to making and learning music.

Filed Under: College and University, How To, Insights, K - 12, Private and Group Lessons

Metronome Online Review

November 17, 2021 by EdTech for Music Leave a Comment

When we think of exciting EdTech tools, our minds often turn to the latest device, technology, recording, notating, or video conferencing software. Perhaps the last tool we might think of would be the humble metronome. Steady, repetitive, producing that precise, possibly annoying click that instantly conjures up memories of practicing our instrument or completing a teacher’s assignment, the metronome appears at first glance to be the exact opposite of innovative. Important, necessary, sure. But not exactly exciting.

Enter Metronome Online, a web browser-based metronome that is also available as an app. A metronome that is more than a metronome. Its basic features are free to use, and there is also a paid version with more advanced features. Its aesthetically pleasing and user-friendly interface almost immediately creates an atmosphere of calm and focus, and the metronome itself is extremely easy to use. With one click of the mouse, the tempo is selected and the metronome starts its pleasing yet clear click. If you want to customize the time signature, adjust the tempo manually through tapping, adjust the volume, or even change it’s the pitch of the click or the color of its interface, that is also only one click away.

However, this is just scratching the surface of its powers. Each tempo is indicated by both its metronome marking and tempo indications as they would appear on a musical score (for example, the metronome marking 92 is also listed on the metronome as “Andante”). The metronome also tracks the amount of time spent using it, and the user can set practice goals and daily progress can be compared in different time increments (daily, weekly, monthly, and yearly). Teachers can also create lesson plans for their students, and the program includes several detailed lesson plan templates.

With the paid version (currently priced at $8.99 per month), teachers can also (in addition to the features of the basic version) create and track individual and group goals, tasks, and monitor progress for an unlimited number of students. However, Metronome Online has recently made the decision to offer full access to the paid version at no cost to teachers. As they state here on their website, “At this difficult stay-at-home period for musicians, we offer all teachers that sign up for a teacher plan full access to the plan at no cost. Indefinitely. Simply sign up for a trial and if you like the plan, send us an email. We will upgrade you to a full membership.”

Further showing their commitment to offering music teachers and learners high quality and easily accessible services, their website and app includes “featured artists” and “articles” sections. The “featured artists” section showcases a wide variety of notable artists and their approaches to practicing with a metronome, while the “articles” section includes numerous articles on various aspects of musicianship, such as how to practice, how to use a metronome, and glimpses into the lives and work of professional musicians.

In short, Metronome Online is a highly accessible, reliable, and inspiring online resource that is so much more than a metronome. Instead, it’s services, features, design, and publications transform what seems at first glance to be a humble metronome into a fully-fledged practicing and musicianship resource for teachers and learners of all ages, levels, and abilities. If you are looking for a metronome that you and your students will actually look forward to using, consider exploring Metronome Online.

Filed Under: EdTech Tool Reviews Tagged With: EdTech, Learning, Metronome, Music, Music Education, Reviews, Teaching

EdTech Music Education Resources

September 4, 2021 by EdTech for Music Leave a Comment

Please see below for a list of EdTech music education resources that I use and/or recommend. This list will likely be updated as I continue to learn and explore new EdTech resources. Feel free to share your thoughts and recommendations in the comments below!

Video Conferencing Software:

Zoom

Skype

Whereby

Music Notation Software:

Finale

Noteflight

Musescore

Flat.io

Music Recording Software:

Logic Pro

GarageBand

Reaper

Soundtrap

Apps:

forScore

Notability

TouchCast Studio

Symphony Pro

Naxos Music Library

Decibal X

Theory Lessons

Tenuto

Audio Interface:

Scarlett 2i2

Headphones:

Grado Headphones

Microphones:

AKG P420

Shure Microphones

Classical Guitar:

Classical Guitar Corner

This Is Classical Guitar

Classical Guitar Magazine

Classical Guitar Shed

Classical Guitar School

Guitar Solo Publications

Strings By Mail

Acoustic Guitar

Justin Guitar

Acoustic Guitar Magazine

Fretboard Journal

FretSource

Guitar Habits

Applied Guitar Theory

Piano:

Bitesize Piano

Pianote

Online Piano Coach

Susan Paradis Piano Teaching Resources

Piano Playing Resources

Piano Puzzler

Electric Bass

StudyBass

Mandolin

SimplyMandolin

Mandolintab.org

Tergal14 Mandolin YouTube Channel

MandoLessons

Mandozine

Ukulele:

Justin Guitar Ukulele Beginner Course

Ukulele Corner

Ukulele Go

Music Theory:

Musictheory.net

Teoría.com

Open Music Theory

Music Theory Online

Society for Music Theory

SMT-V: The Society for Music Theory Videocast Journal

A Corpus Study of Rock Music

12tone YouTube Channel

Music History:

American Musicological Society

Musicology Now

Journal of Music History Pedagogy

The Music History Globetrotting Project

Music History Course notes

World Music Textbook

Institute for Popular Music Studies

Journal of Popular Music Studies

Metronome:

Metronome Online

General Resources:

The Online Music Teacher

Technology in Music Education

Field Notes on Music Teaching & Learning

The Bulletproof Musician

iCadenza

Berklee Online Handbooks

IMSLP

Mutopia Project

Filed Under: College and University, EdTech Music Education Resources, K - 12, Private and Group Lessons Tagged With: EdTech, Learning, Music, Music Education, Resources, Teaching, Tools

EdTech and Music Education: When, Why, and How

September 2, 2021 by EdTech for Music Leave a Comment

Whether you teach music privately, for a music school, for a public/private/charter school, for a college or university, or some combination of the above, you have most likely used EdTech tools at some point along the way. Think about it: maybe you recommended an ear training or music theory website or app to your students, used an online metronome app during a lesson, or sent a link to an audio or video recording to your class. Now, think back to why you used these tools at that particular moment for that specific situation. Chances are, it was to fit some kind of practical need, such as increasing student engagement, approaching musical concepts from a different perspective, to more effectively reach student(s) who may be having difficulties understanding a given topic, or maybe something else entirely.

My point here is that regardless of the specific reason for using EdTech tools, it was likely done for a clear reason that would benefit the overall experience of yourself and your students, rather than just because it seemed cool or trendy or like it might be the “next big thing.” Sure, that may have played a role, but it was not the central reason, and this is so important to remember anytime you are considering adding EdTech tools to music teaching. If you don’t have a clear reason for why you are using the given EdTech tool as a part of your teaching, don’t use it.

Quality teaching can use several very simple or numerous very advanced technologies, so long as the “why” for each tool is clear in the mind of the teacher. In short, the “why” provides the answer for the “when.” When you have a good reason for using an EdTech tool, use it for that reason. If it seems there may be other contexts to use this tool, backed up by good reasons, then explore using that tool in those contexts.

How to use EdTech tools, however, is more variable. Each piece of technology has its own language and means of accomplishing goals. That being said, I’ve found over the years that repeating several loose-knit processes speeds up the time it takes from first hearing about a new tool to implementing it in your teaching. Here is a general process that I have found to be helpful for unpacking the “how” of EdTech tools:

(1) Learn about the tool. Ask and find answers for a variety of inquiries about it, such as: What is it built for? What can be done with it? What kinds of involvement does it demand from the student? How can this tool be used in my learning spaces?
(2) Try it yourself, with an emphasis on play and exploration and experimentation. This is probably not the time to try anything complicated (unless you are under a tight deadline, in which case do what you need to do to get the project done, with or without the tool). Have fun with it. Yes, you will make mistakes and exciting discoveries and there will likely be some frustration with the tool along the way. Your students will also have these experiences when you implement it, and experiencing the learning process yourself results in increased ability to problem solve and empathize with your students. It is also the best way I know of learning how to use the tool.
(3) Make sure that you have concrete reason(s) for using this tool that, if successful, results in a clearly better overall experience for both you and your students. If the only reason you are using the tool is because you like using it, it becomes much harder to get buy-in from students, which leads me to my next point…
(4) Make sure that this tool can likely be learned by your students within the given time constraints. If the tool has a steep learning curve, it can still be a highly effective tool, provided it is presented to students who have the skills (not just tech skills) to work through the early stages of learning how to use it. If students are skeptical of tech in general, introduce it slowly, with easy to use tools that and enjoyable and enhance the learning experience.
(5) After considering the points above, implement the tool, be attentive to student feedback, and continually adjust your approach accordingly.

Filed Under: College and University, How To, Insights, K - 12, Private and Group Lessons Tagged With: EdTech, Learning, Music, Music Education, Teaching

Introduction

September 2, 2021 by EdTech for Music Leave a Comment

Hello and welcome to EdTech for Music! This blog focuses on sharing insights, advice, reviews, recommendations, and ideas about using EdTech tools for teaching and learning music. Along the way, we’ll discuss different approaches, concepts, numerous specific EdTech tools, and more importantly, their practical applications for learning and teaching music. I have over a decade of experience working with educational technology in music education as a teacher, student, and website designer. I created this blog to share my passions for music and educational technology to help fellow musicians, music educators, and music students understand the why, how, and practical uses of EdTech tools in our field. Although I teach primarily private and group lessons, workshops, conference presentations, and college courses, it is my hope that the content on this blog will be applicable for teachers and students exploring music in a broad variety of formats and contexts.

Filed Under: Insights Tagged With: EdTech, Learning, Music, Music Education, Teaching

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  • A Framework for EdTech Music Teaching
  • Metronome Online Review
  • EdTech Music Education Resources
  • EdTech and Music Education: When, Why, and How
  • Introduction

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