Contents
Introduction
The Found Sound
Orchestra
Integrated Subjects
Unit Overview
Sample Lesson Plans
Visual Arts: What I Think You Think the Artist
Meant
Music Composition: (Part 1) Favorite Pop Song Outline
Music Composition: (Part 2) Pop Song Guessing Game
Geography Triangles
Resources
Web Sites
Hard Copy Samples of Downloadable Visual Art
Visual Arts Data Organizer
Song Outline Elements
Introduction
This unit takes place approximately four times during
the school year and acts as a refreshing change of pace. These additional
activities will integrate and round out the district-mandated curriculum
without requiring teaching content too far eschew from it. With this unit
easily integrating nearly all content within the standard curriculum, it
is useful as an exercise for reviewing, applying, and assessing students’
newly acquired knowledge.
The culminating project for this unit is the "
Found
Sound Orchestra" performance. It resembles a choral or symphonic production
in form. The participants, however, need not endure the rigors of classical
music training. I adapted this production idea from a similar event that
I participated in during a 1984 workshop with Vermont's internationally
recognized
Bread and Puppet Theatre that culminated in a winter
festival attended by approxinately 1500 residents of central Vermont.
The Found Sound Orchestra of Seasons
A found sound orchestra production is a live presentation
that comes off as a cross between an ode to, and a parody of a familiar
aspect of life. Its primary strength as a teaching tool is in its ability
to connect students in a multi-sensory and emotional level with the regular
curriculum as it relates to the theme which, in our case, is the seasons.
Because the first season to prepare for is autumn,
it is dealt with somewhat differently than the others. This is because the
teacher is introducing the elements that will comprise the unit's culminating
project at the same time individual subjects’ content is being taught.
As each subsequent season approaches, students can be cued to start thinking
about how their current studies might be expressed through the next seasonal
Found Sound Orchestra performance. Furthermore, since all of the component
parts of the composition grow from the students’ own schoolwork a successful
autumn performance sets the example for future recognition. Motivation comes
more easily when students clearly understand how they will benefit from
working hard.
What does such a production look like? Picture a group
of students, perhaps accompanied by parents or friends, positioned like
a choir on risers and facing a conductor. In addition, there are various
noise-making implements, both natural and fabricated, that have been chosen
for their association to the theme (seasons) which are used more or less
as they would be but toward aesthetic instead of utilitarian ends. The atonal
nature of the performance allows the teacher to focus on teaching compositional
elements such as motifs and variations, movements, themes and dynamics.
Integrated Subjects
Language Arts curriculum contributes initially, through
assignments on descriptive writing as well as biographical, fiction, and
poetry reading.
Social Studies curriculum contributes through assignments
using an atlas to compare a season as we know it to peoples’ experiences
in other US regions, parts of the world, or perhaps, times past.
Science curriculum on the weather, planetary position and the Earth’s
tilt, or animal habitat and behavior to name just a few topics dovetail easily
with a seasonal theme.
Math curriculum contributes directly through an exercise
in scaling and standardizing poster sizes to accommodate a single wall
where they all must fit and be distanced from each other proportionate
to the real world geographies they represent.
Teaching Music Composition and Visual Arts Appreciation/Analysis
alongside the above subjects acts to legitimize and properly value the
arts as integral in our lives and in education. Guided through rubrics
of analysis for each art form, students learn to deconstruct and appreciate
pieces in their own right as they evaluate their messages for inclusion
in the performances.