Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Re:Not exactly solid linking (Score 1) 384

according to the fundamentals of the Music Learning Theory and the practical application of a technique for the method (Jump Right In), children learn music in much the same way as they learn a language. although not entirely the same, by teaching patterns of sound with context, a child will have much more success in music than the current standards of teaching. for example, would you ever try to teach a 6 month old baby to read the alphabet before reading words before they could imitate sound for themselves? no!!! of course not, that idea is ludicrous. however, that's what's happening with music these days: students learn 3 notes the first week, with no context or reference to familiar music or sounds (unless their music teacher is particularly savvy). a "scale" is no more useful to music than the alphabet is to language.

back on topic of patterns having little to do with language... check out the music learning theory (ed gordon, richard grunow, chris azzara). there are tonal patterns which are separate from rhythm patterns. these patterns are based on the most basic aural knowledge of western music (tonic/dominant - macro/microbeats). children, who learn these patterns before embarking on learning a musical instrument, are much more proficient on the four vocabularies of music.

please check http://www.giml.org, and more specifically http://www.giml.org/methodology.html for a more thorough explanation of the importance of patterns in musical success.

Slashdot Top Deals

"We want to create puppets that pull their own strings." -- Ann Marion "Would this make them Marionettes?" -- Jeff Daiell

Working...