Amy M. Burns

Elementary Music Technology and Integration

Amy M. Burns has taught PreK-grade 4 general music for over 25 years at Far Hills Country Day School (FH) (https://www.fhcds.org/). She also teaches grade 5 instrument class, directs the FH Philharmonic, is the Performing Arts Department Manager, and teaches privately in the after-school conservatory after being the director for over 20 years. She has authored four books and numerous articles on how to integrate tech into the elementary music classroom. She has presented many sessions on the topic, including four keynote addresses in TX, IN, St. Maarten, and AU. She is the recipient of the 2005 Technology in Music Education (TI:ME) Teacher of the Year, the 2016 New Jersey Music Educators Association (NJMEA) Master Music Teacher, the 2016 Governor’s Leader in Arts Education, and the 2017 NJ Nonpublic School Teacher of the Year Awards. Her most recent publication, Using Technology with Elementary Music Approaches (2020), published by Oxford University Press (OUP) is available from OUP and Amazon. Burns is also the Community Coordinator for Midnight Music (MMC) at https://midnightmusic.com/, the General Music Chair for NJMEA Board of Directors, and the Elementary Music Consultant for MusicFirst (https://www.musicfirst.com/), a company built by music educators for music educators, dedicated to helping music teachers and their students make the most of technology in the classroom.

Looking for my YouTube Channel, or the manipulatives for my Play-Along Videos, click on the social feed buttons below!

⚠️ Warning: This Play-Along May Be Broken 👀

An April Fools Robot Glitch Play-Along for Elementary Music Using The Syncopated Clock

Looking for a memorable April Fools’ Day activity that still reinforces core musical skills? This "April Rhythm and Movement Play-Along” is designed to keep students engaged, thinking, and laughing—while strengthening steady beat, listening, and response skills.

In this lesson, students begin by following a steady beat to The Syncopated Clock by Leroy Anderson, then experience a series of unexpected “glitches” that challenge their focus and musical understanding. Just when they think they’ve figured it out… the system breaks completely and shifts into a totally different, golden musical style!

And...some of the conductor's beats are purposely off!

🎯 Learning Goals

  • Maintain a steady beat through changes in tempo and structure

  • Respond quickly to auditory and visual cues

  • Identify contrasts in tempo, style, and musical character

  • Strengthen focus and active listening skills

🧠 How It Works

Students are introduced to a simple, repetitive pattern (body percussion or instruments such as rhythm sticks, hand drums, or Boomwhackers - the piece is pitched in D Major). Once the beat is established, the “system” begins to glitch.

🕰️ Section 1: Normal Operation

  • Students perform a steady beat (pat, clap, tap, or play along on instruments)

  • Connect to the ticking of the clock in the music

  • Establish confidence and predictability

⚠️ Section 2: Glitch Mode Activated

The music starts behaving… strangely.

Introduce visual or verbal glitch cues such as:

  • No slide that tells you the rhythms and body percussion found in the video

  • No warning of pattern changes

  • 4x, 3x, etc start to change

  • Breaks into another song and then comes back

  • Optional: pause and ask, “What just happened to our music?”

Students must continue following the video while adapting to each unexpected change.

⏩ Section 3: Tempo Takeover

Now the glitches begin to affect the tempo itself:

  • A section suddenly speeds up

  • Another section dramatically slows down

  • Students must adjust their movements or playing in real time

This is where the listening skills really shine—students quickly realize they must rely on what they hear, not just what they expect.

🛠️ Materials & Setup

💡 Teaching Tips

  • Model each glitch before starting the full play-along

  • Keep the tone playful—this is meant to feel unexpected and fun

  • Pause after the activity to reflect:

    • What changes did you notice?

    • Which part was the trickiest?

    • How did you stay on the beat?

🎵 Why This Works

Using a familiar, steady piece like The Syncopated Clock gives students a strong foundation. The added glitches:

  • Encourage adaptability

  • Strengthen listening and response skills

  • Reinforce tempo awareness in an authentic, engaging way

And of course—the unexpected musical “break” creates a moment they won’t forget.

🎁 Extension Idea

Have students create their own movements

  • Assign small groups different parts of the video

  • Let them perform for the class

✨ Final Thought

Sometimes the best musical learning happens when things don’t go as planned… or at least appear that way.

So go ahead—press play.

Just don’t be surprised when your classroom system suddenly… glitches.

The music starts behaving… strangely.

Introduce visual or verbal glitch cues such as:

  • No slide that tells you the rhythms and body percussion found in the video

  • No warning of pattern changes

  • 4x, 3x, etc start to change

  • Breaks into another song and then comes back

  • Optional: pause and ask, “What just happened to our music?”

Students must continue following the video while adapting to each unexpected change.

⏩ Section 3: Tempo Takeover

Now the glitches begin to affect the tempo itself:

  • A section suddenly speeds up

  • Another section dramatically slows down

  • Students must adjust their movements or playing in real time

This is where the listening skills really shine—students quickly realize they must rely on what they hear, not just what they expect.

🛠️ Materials & Setup

💡 Teaching Tips

  • Model each glitch before starting the full play-along

  • Keep the tone playful—this is meant to feel unexpected and fun

  • Pause after the activity to reflect:

    • What changes did you notice?

    • Which part was the trickiest?

    • How did you stay on the beat?

🎵 Why This Works

Using a familiar, steady piece like The Syncopated Clock gives students a strong foundation. The added glitches:

  • Encourage adaptability

  • Strengthen listening and response skills

  • Reinforce tempo awareness in an authentic, engaging way

And of course—the unexpected musical “break” creates a moment they won’t forget.

🎁 Extension Idea

Have students create their own movements

  • Assign small groups different parts of the video

  • Let them perform for the class

✨ Final Thought

Sometimes the best musical learning happens when things don’t go as planned… or at least appear that way.

So go ahead—press play.

Just don’t be surprised when your classroom system suddenly… glitches.

©2026 amymburns.com

Any info, student examples, pictures, graphics, etc, may be used with permission. Please contact me personally before using any info, student examples, pictures, graphics, etc.