Beyond the specific activities we learned and the group work we created in the moment, what I remember most are a few sage words of wisdom from Ms. Frazee. In addition to pieces from the Music for Children volumes and folk material from different cultures, she advised us to plan a curriculum that included time tested rhymes, prose and adages. One that stood out to me as a musical possibility is the rhyme I learned as a child to remember the number of days in each month:
Thirty days has September, April, June and November.
February has twenty-eight alone. All the rest have thirty-one.
Say for leap year;
That's the time February's days are twenty-nine.
I have used this rhyme as the basis of a rhythm and body percussion lesson with my older students (4th and 5th grades). At first, I teach them a simple body percussion piece by rote. After learning the short example, I guide students to talk with a partner about how it might be written down. After a few minutes, we regroup and students answers. And, in an age of social media and portable technology, I am thankful that they can still find so many possibilities. The body percussion could be written with: music notes, words, letter abbreviations, numbers, colors, drawings, shapes, Morse code, etc. Sometimes, I have to set a limit or their answers will eat up too much class time. Finally, I focus them back to the answer of color and present the following visual:
I give them time to learn the body percussion of the rhyme,then we perform it together. After they are pretty comfortable with the rhyme and body percussion, I followup the color coded version with its music notation:
Now, this is all fine and good and could probably stop there. But, having been immersed in a body percussion piece about months for a class period or two, my students are ready to take it to another level. The rhyme will have more meaning to them students if they have a personal connection to it. So, to that end, I extend the lesson one more step by having students work in groups to create body percussion pieces based on the rhythms of their birthdays. Suddenly, January 16th is not just a day on the calendar, it is a rhythm (s=s=s=s e-e) that has many musical possibilities. This past week I witnessed my students' group work and, as always, was blown away by what they created together. And it all came from a rhyme I learned when i was a child.
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