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Music and Drama Program
Music is taught in grades pre-K through 5 incrementally – concepts
and skills taught one year are then utilized and expanded through the
following years. Pre-music reading skills begin in first grade, with students
expected to read simple lines of music by third grade when they have a
unit on playing recorders. Reading music continues, so that by fifth grade
students are able to write their own music.
Songs start with familiar children’s songs and games, and include
folk songs from many countries, performance pieces, and songs used to
teach specific reading concepts. Students sing in all classes, at first
a cappella in order to begin developing pitch and beat awareness, then
with accompaniment. Part-singing is introduced in third grade, and by
fifth grade students are singing in harmony.
Cross-learning is used whenever possible – relating music to history,
social customs, religious practices and history, mathematics, and science,
this happens as often as material allows. In fifth grade students learn
about the lives and times of specific composers – the influence
on them, and how they have influenced society since they were alive.
Music in the middle school becomes choral performance – time is
focused on preparing specific pieces for performance. Specific reading
issues and performance techniques are emphasized as needed by the music
being performed.
Pre-drama learning objectives begin in kindergarten, and are revisited
every year after that as students learn to be comfortable performing in
front of their peers. Fifth grade students are selected to act out the
Christmas program – the first introduction to a strictly theatre-oriented
class.
In middle school drama students learn the basics of stage movement and
presentation, beginning improvisation, basic acting and rehearsal skills,
and backstage skills needed for a performance. They then use what they
have learned to prepare and perform a play or other presentation for the
school and their parents. |