Monday Mailbag – Teaching Eighth Notes
(Click Above for Link) by Natalie
How do you teach eighth note rhythm patterns to students? Any tricks?
I’ve used all sorts of approaches for this over the years. In fact, I distinctly remember a phase I went through where I would use different food names for rhythm patterns. One of my students was struggling with rhythm, so we spent a good deal of the lesson learning and saying things like “ap-ple pie pie ap-ple” and so on. Her mom – an accomplished pianist – was observing that week. As we concluded the lesson, I congratulated myself on this clever approach that I had picked up from some workshop. When the student returned the following week she had the rhythmic counts written in throughout her who song and explained matter-of-factly that her mother said the other approach was silly and she should count it. So much for that cleverness!
I quickly reached that same conclusion for myself and have reverted to being a firm believer in just learning to count with numbers right off the bat. Usually to first introduce eighth notes, we set the metronome and tap along with the beat. Then I have the student imitate me in tapping two times per beat. Lastly, we attempt to tap the beat in one hand and two times per beat in the other. I make a point to explain that eighth notes do NOT mean that you play faster. The tempo is what dictates the speed, not the notes themselves. When you see eighth notes, you just easily play two notes in the space where you would normally play one quarter note. The goal is to avoid two things:
The short-long rhythm that many students play, rather than an even distribution of the beat between the two notes.
Tension in the student when they see eighth notes and think that they have to play faster.
Ultimately, they have to both understand the division of the beat intellectually and be able to feel the beat intrinsically. Much easier said than done, right?! But this is why we start with tapping and often incorporate other body movements as well. The more they can feel the beat, the better!
There is another method I heard about a while back from my friend and colleague, Amy, called Takadimi that sounds and looks interesting, but I haven’t investigated it in enough detail to know if it’s something I would switch over to or not. Do any of you use Takadimi or some other approach to counting? Any tricks you’ve learned to help students learn eighth note rhythms effectively?
Matt,
ReplyDeleteComing from an elementary general music teacher, I remember the days of trying to find a method to teach my younger students about rhythm that was easy to understand, but easily transferable. I'm sure that everyone reading has heard of the "ta" and "ti-ti" method and I'm pretty sure that most people have tried using it before. During my first year, I was trying to follow the curriculum verbatim. But the whole "ta" idea was really starting to get to me. Students would only recognize the quarter note and eighth notes, but couldn't correlate those ideas to the concept of counting rhythms. So I switched to a method that I had used during my undergrad years.
Have you ever heard of a method created by Froseth/Gordon known as CMLS (comprehensive music learning sequence)? It replaces "ta" with "du" and "ti-ti" with "du-de" (doo-day). After getting used to the concept, the kids really seem to understand the whole idea of rhythm. It's also easily transferred through the different levels of music education, but it is easily adaptable to every level from PreK through 12th grade (or higher). Here is a basic overview written by Dr. John Kuehn (from Indiana University of Pennsylvania) -
http://www.swsd.k12.pa.us/~ray_evelan/CMLSpage.htm
If you like the basic idea and you get a chance, I would look up the complete method. It would be worth your time..even if to see a different viewpoint.
SBrown