We live in an age of speed.
High speed internet, faster speed limits, and shorter attention
spans. Orchestra teachers need variety
and quick paced lessons to help students stay interested, involved and focused
on progressing. Every minute is important to me in my classes
and I don’t like to waste a moment. By
establishing effectives routines class time is used effectively and time flies. I love it when students are amazed when the
class is over and when they wish they didn’t have to leave. Here are 8 ways you can maximize rehearsal time in your orchestra classroom:
1. Learn to tune quickly.
In my beginning classes with 30-45 students per class I tune every student one by one. Students hurry and line up next to me for tuning and then frequently have a bell-work assignment to occupy their attention while I tune other students. I make sure this takes 5 minutes or less and very little class time is used since I start tuning as soon as students enter the classroom before the bell rings.I use a couple different tuning procedures for my Intermediate and Advanced classes. Often we use the tuning sequence from this website: http://www.orchestrateacher.net/topics/automation-of-daily-routines/ I like this routine, but usually only let each pitch play for about 40 seconds instead of a minute. Other days we tune to my violin. I play 4 open A’s while students listen and they echo back with 4 A’s and tune/adjust as needed. We repeat this procedure several times for each string and it goes very fast.
2. Put music in order.
This simple procedure helps
create smooth transitions in the rehearsal.
I write an agenda on the board listing the things we are working on that
day. Students are required to open their
method books to the appropriate page and have their music in order. I don’t like to wait for students to open
books, find pages, etc.
3. Talk less.
I remember my orchestra teacher in 7th
grade used to talk a lot. I wanted to be
playing and would become frustrated when rehearsals came to a halt because of unnecessary chatter. Sometimes students
need a story or an analogy to help them play the music better, but they also
need practice and they need to work hard in class to get better. When drilling passages, keep a quick pace and
talk very little. My favorite words to
start the class are ‘ready, play.’ They
can get the tempo and start from just those 2 words. When I want to repeat a section, I can
quickly say, “Measure 35! Ready, play!” I like students to keep their instruments up
so we can get a lot of playing done in a short amount of time.
4. Know the music.
It’s very helpful to have music
memorized so that you don’t have to be staring at a score. If you know the music well, you are free to
walk around the room and help students throughout the rehearsal. You can be more attentive to the needs of
your students. I often walk through the
room during a rehearsal and if I need to check a part or play along on my
violin I just look at their music. When
you know the music you can always be thinking ahead of what to work on
next. Right now I can tell you all of
the measure numbers that need work in our concert music. It’s all memorized in my head because those
places need drilling every day and we do it a lot. Tricky passages need to be
reviewed and carefully practiced every day. Always have a specific objective for each rehearsal to be sure students are constantly progressing.
5. Follow a rehearsal
schedule.
Set an appropriate amount of
time for each part of your rehearsal. If
I was a student, I would get very frustrated if 20 minutes of class was spent
on scales and only 10 minutes on concert music.
Use time to your advantage and cover all the material with
careful planning. In general, I spend
2-4 minutes on a warm-up. We do scales,
but also cover new technique. For
example, last week I taught my beginners about 4th finger (4th
position for cello and 3rd position for bass). We did left hand pizzicato and finger taps to
strength that finger, then played D, E, F#, G, A A A--. Students worked to match intonation (A on the
D string to open A). It didn’t take very
long and next week students will be reading 4th fingers in their
method books. With pre-exposure in the warm-up students are set up for success.
Here's a video of a warm-up I did with my beginning students. They had been playing about 2 months and my objective for the warm-up was to help them be comfortable with string crossings, match pitch and correct intonation on D scale note, and play the D scale.
We spend 5-8 minutes in our method book to reinforce note-reading and technique. Sometimes I use GarageBand to play a drum beat during method book work. This helps things move along and we don’t waste time. The last 25 minutes are spent on concert music.
Here's a video of a warm-up I did with my beginning students. They had been playing about 2 months and my objective for the warm-up was to help them be comfortable with string crossings, match pitch and correct intonation on D scale note, and play the D scale.
We spend 5-8 minutes in our method book to reinforce note-reading and technique. Sometimes I use GarageBand to play a drum beat during method book work. This helps things move along and we don’t waste time. The last 25 minutes are spent on concert music.
This is a sample from my beginning class. This was the first time looking at that line in our method books and the video shows how we rehearsed it that day.
6. Don’t offer free time.
The weather is changing and those
cheap violins just won’t stay in tune.
Instead of halting an entire rehearsal to re-tune that eBay special,
give students a specific assignment. You
can have them play a certain measure 10 times, or play a line of music for
their stand partner while the stand partner checks for proper position or
perfect finger placement. They can hunt for ½ steps or mark dynamics. They don’t need free time – put them to work!
7. Use a looper.
I enjoy using SmartMusic as a rehearsal
tool. It has that great looping feature
that plays specific measures over and over again. This is a great tool to help drill tricky
passages while keeping you free to walk around the room to help students. Just set the measures and let it play. You don’t have to talk…you don’t have to
start and stop the group. This helps get
a lot done is a short time.
8. Read facial cues.
Always be aware of the attitude
and feeling in your classroom. Are
students working, are they frustrated, are they bored? Adjust pacing based on what the students
need. If you spend 5 minutes on one
measure students might begin to ‘check-out.’ Switch things up and let students try
something else. Allow them to feel
success in every rehearsal. It’s okay to
leave a piece of music and come back to it another day. Baby steps.
J
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