Learn how to teach a play-along video with #techtiptuesday!
Love play-along videos? But not sure how to teach them. Find out more!
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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!
Love play-along videos? But not sure how to teach them. Find out more!
Read MoreAs the third Monday of January approaches in the States, schools will close to observe the birthday of Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Dr. King was born on January 15, 1929. In music classes, many music educators will use numerous resources to study how Dr. King used nonviolent resistance to achieve equal rights. Here are some that I have used together in my classroom along with a Sing-Along/Play-Along.
Read MoreWant to make learning fun and self-directed? With Google Slides, you can design visually engaging, clickable choice boards in just a few steps! Use screenshots, links, and creative layouts to guide students to videos, games, or lyric sheets. Engage their curiosity and boost independence with this simple, interactive solution.
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#1 Tech Tip for 2025: Play-Along Videos for Day One!
Welcome back to music class! Start 2025 strong with Auld Lang Syne play-along videos tailored to all levels: steady beat for preschool/kindergarten, rhythm for elementary, Boomwhacker play-along for older students, and a notation-based Boomwhacker video for readers. Manipulatives to reinforce learning are available on my Buy Me a Coffee channel. Use YouTube or Soundslice to adjust tempo and key for your class’s needs. Practice rhythms first, then dive into these fun, engaging activities that reconnect students to music. Perfect for any first day back—make it musical, meaningful, and memorable! 🎶
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Attention music educators! Imagine having the power to instantly change the key, tempo, or section of any YouTube or Vimeo video to match your students' needs. Struggling with the wrong pitch or speed in play-along videos? Not anymore! With Transpose ▲▼ Pitch ▹ Speed ▹ Loop, you can tweak it all with just a few clicks—perfect for making learning fun and frustration-free. Whether you're prepping for a concert or helping students master a tricky phrase, this tool is your new secret weapon. Click to learn how to revolutionize your music class!
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Hi! I'm Amy M. Burns, the creative mind behind amymburns.com and the author of "Using Technology with Elementary Music Approaches." By day, I bring music to life as an elementary educator at Far Hills Country Day School. During the evenings, I take on the role of Community Coordinator at Midnight Music and also work as an Elementary Music Consultant at MusicFirst.
Prepare for weekly tech insights every Tuesday to enrich your music lessons with MusicFirst Elementary! Immerse yourself in this interactive K-5 program (soon to include Preschool through grade 6) offering engaging printable lessons, diverse global melodies, instrumental music for bands, orchestras, and classroom instruments, as well as tools for creating impressive movie soundtracks! Click the links below to sign up for a 30-day free trial and discover a top-notch curriculum with cutting-edge resources. Let's create beautiful music together!
Last week's #techtiptuesday highlighted the Supplementary's Tab Musical Elements and Theory Animations, focusing on Animated Musical Elements. This week's focus is on Music Theory Basics, where you will find concise animated videos explaining key music theory concepts:
The Staff
Time Signatures
Time Signatures, Bars, and Barlines
Quarter Notes
Quarter Note Rests
Half Notes
Half Note Rests
Whole Notes
As we count down to 2025, let’s dive into a tool that’s a total timesaver for elementary music educators: 123apps.com. Whether you’re editing documents, tweaking videos, or creating engaging materials, this web-based powerhouse is here to simplify your life. The best part? It’s free!
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The new year is just around the corner, and we’re celebrating with a countdown of ten tech-savvy tips for the elementary music classroom! Here’s our fifth pick to make your teaching shine as we roll into 2025: the Wheel of Names.
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Ever wished you had enough instruments for every student? Or needed that expensive bass xylophone but couldn't fit it in your budget? Transform your classroom devices into a treasure trove of musical instruments! From a charming musical cat that plays bongos to virtual xylophones that display note names, these free online tools are game-changers. Perfect for traveling teachers, students who cannot play instruments traditionally, or when you need those extra chromatic notes. Ready to revolutionize your music class? Let's dive into three amazing virtual instrument sites that will have your students making music in minutes!
Read MoreMusicFirst Elementary, Powered by Charanga, offers a well-rounded curriculum designed specifically for young learners that can be used with one device in the classroom to a room with 1:1 devices. Let’s take a moment to explore five important aspects that contribute to making MusicFirst Elementary (MFE) a wonderful curriculum for young learners:
Read More🎵 Looking for fresh, tech-savvy ways to level up your rhythm activities in 2025? Discover how tools like 4four.io’s Rhythm Dice and Rhythm Randomizer can transform your music classroom with customizable rhythm games, sight-reading exercises, and self-assessment stations! From rolling interactive dice to creating flashcards in seconds, these tools are easy to share on your LMS or embed in your website, saving you time while keeping students engaged. Ready to bring your rhythm practice to life? Let’s dive in and explore! 🎶
Read MoreWhen you need lyric videos and play-along instrument videos to assist the students with their learning of songs and their performing of concert songs, what efficient tools and ideas are out there? Here are two freemium ideas.
Read MoreI used ChaptGPT to save me a great amount of time. One of the ways I used it recently was to write out our holiday concert script. I prompted it and then guided it to:
Read MoreJoin me daily as we countdown to 2025 with “Ten Tech Tips for Elementary Music Teachers!” I hope that this helps you review tech tips you know or give you new ones to use to begin the new year!
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What is MusicFirst Elementary ( 0:00-1:03)
Welcome to MusicFirst Elementary, Powered by Charanga! MusicFirst Elementary is a robust platform for K-5 music educators, offering a spiraled curriculum that builds skills progressively. It features creative tools like a graphic score creator, beat maker, notation with accompaniment styles, a rhythm decoder, and a web-based DAW for scoring films. Its supplementary tab includes resources for ukuleles, recorders, boomwhackers, and barred instruments, along with quick videos for introducing and reinforcing musical concepts. Teachers can also use these Creative Tools to make their own interactive resources to personalize their teaching.
The platform provides authentic, original, and public-domain music, sheet music for band and orchestral instruments, and more. It empowers teachers with diverse, engaging materials for comprehensive music education, fostering creativity and conceptual growth.
Quickstart Video - How to Begin (1:03-2:42)
This quickstart video will help get you started with MusicFirst Elementary. Since you have already created a login, let’s look at the home page.
A great place to begin is to look at the “Get Started with Three Steps”.
Click a grade tab and scroll to Unit summaries. Here we are showcasing Grade 2.
Each unit has six songs in different styles and a lesson plan. We will showcase Unit 2 Lesson 3, “The Redwood Tree”.
Click Plan for Lesson Plans and sheet music.
Click Teach for interactive classroom resources.
Click resources on the left side of the lesson viewer to load them.
Start with “Understanding Music” which is a warmup on foundational musical skills like echo-clapping, improvising with three notes, and echo-singing.
Use the provided higher-order thinking questions and cross-curricular information as students listen to the song. As the curriculum moves into grades 3-5, these questions and information become more in-depth and involved.
Integrate reading lyrics with or without notation.
Use instruments or sing along via the “Playing Your Instruments with the Song” tab. In grades 3-5, these include various parts for instruments found in band, orchestra, and general music classroom instruments.
Encourage three-note improvisation using pitched or non-pitched instruments with the “Improvise with the Song” tab.
Compose a new melody with guided notes and rhythms using the “Compose with the Song” tab, which includes Music Explorer, one of the seven creative tools.
Conclude with the “Perform the Song” tab.
Try One Creative Tool (2:42-4:13)
Since you utilized Music Explorer in the “Compose with the Song” tab, let’s level up to YuStudio, the web-based digital audio workstation tool that can create music and score videos. Follow these steps to create a drum and bass loop for student improvisation:
Launch YuStudio from the Creative Tools Tab.
Click on YuStudio app and make it full-screen.
Set the Key to C Pentatonic.
Add a full drums loop (Rock) from Audio>Sound>By instrument.
Loop the drum track to end at measure 9.
Add the Motown Soul Bass Loop from Bass>Electric Bass.
Adjust the volume for each track.
Click the Loop button so a green bar appears above the two tracks and drag it to the beginning of measure nine.
Go to File>Save a copy and title it C Pentatonic Improv.
Adjust the tempo if necessary.
Have the students improvise with the rhythm pattern of “ta ta ti-ti ta”, “du du du-de du”, “1 2 3-and 4”, or rhythm patterns found in a chant or song to a pitched instrument set to C pentatonic or using non-pitch instruments. Encourage improvisations in a large group, then smaller groups, and then individually.
Try One Supplementary Activity (4:13-5:06)
To access classroom resources, click on the Supplementary Tab and select “Resources for Classroom Instruments.” Choose a song for instruments like recorder, ukulele, barred instruments, or boomwhackers, and perform from the playlists.
Do you prefer using a methodology in your classroom? Let’s look at the Kodály Supplementary Songs Tab to utilize songs and activities found in that tab. You could sing with the recording or acapella, encourage multiple stave reading, hide the lyrics and encourage decoding, or click the “More Fun” tab to enhance the song with movement activities. Or utilize the many Orff-Inspired Activities and the Orffestrations (coming soon)!
Need to Customize Your Lessons or Assign Them to Students? (5:06-6:18)
Customization of lessons can be done by adding lessons, activities, creative tools, and such, to “My Workspace” and then creating new lessons from the materials found in the curriculum. To see more about this, check out the videos in both the MFE and #Techtip MFE playlists.
To assign lessons to students, you simply:
Go To My Workspace>My Student Groups
Create a group and assign a grade
Add student names. I usually copy and paste from a Google Sheets or Excel file.
Click “Add Students”
MusicFirst Elementary automatically assigns them a login user ID and a password.
Add Assignments using the Assignments Tab and add your customized lessons or units from My Workspace.
They can access your assignments through Yumu, a password-protected online space where students can learn, play, and develop their musicianship. It is the area where students and teachers can access assignments, create music, and share content.
Need assistance? (6:18-end)
Contact MusicFirst Elementary Music Consultant Amy Burns, at amy@musicfirst.com. For some great videos showing MusicFirst Elementary in action visit Amy M. Burns’ YouTube channel found at https://www.youtube.com/c/awillisburns
Ready to bring some holiday fun into your music classroom? Boomwhackers are already a go-to favorite for active and engaging music-making, but this play-along activity takes things to a whole new level of seasonal cheer. Whether you’re looking for a fresh idea to energize your students or a perfect way to wrap up the month, this activity will help you end your classes before winter break on the right boomwhacker note.
Our featured song? None other than the hilariously iconic "You're a Mean One, Mr. Grinch", written by Theodor Geisel with music by Albert Hague. While the original version was famously sung by Thurl Ravenscroft, we’re taking a modern twist with Pentatonix’s electrifying acappella cover from their album The Best of Pentatonix Christmas. Uploaded to YouTube on December 18, 2019, this performance captures all the sass and swagger of the original, perfect for a Boomwhacker-based jam session.
So grab your Boomwhackers, the manipulatives, use the tempo settings in the YouTube play-along or the Soundslice Notation Play-Along, channel your inner Whoville musician, and prepare to turn your classroom into a festive soundscape of Grinchy grooves. Because who can be a Boomwhacker Grinch when your students are laughing, learning, and loving music? Let's dive in!
Read MoreRecently, I came across a discussion in one of the elementary music education groups about whether it's acceptable for students to perform with a vocal accompaniment track instead of an instrumental one. The response ultimately depends on the teacher, as each educational context is distinct, and instructors should choose what best supports their students.
One effective compromise is to lower the volume of the lyrics on the accompaniment track. A couple of decades ago, achieving this would have required expensive equipment and technical expertise. However, nowadays, it's possible to accomplish this easily with a free, web-based tool, and I opted for moises.ai.
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Join in the fun with this exciting play-along for the song, "Puppy for Hanukkah" written by Daveed Diggs, William Hutson, and Jonathan Snipes. Gather your instruments, including C, E, F, and G boomwhackers, tambourines, rhythm sticks, and maracas and shakers, and get ready to play!
Read MoreYou know that moment when you discover something so simple yet life-changing? That was me today, learning that…
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One of my favorite holiday pieces is “Christmas Eve/Sarajevo 12/24” by Savatage / Trans-Siberian Orchestra (1995). It is a combination of “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” played in the beginning of the song by a solo cello, and then in a round with a flute and guitar. The next part picks up the tempo and is the melody of “Carol of the Bells” or “Shchedryk”, the Ukrainian New Year’s song by Mykola Leontovych, written in 1916. I recently arranged this piece for my school’s Philharmonic, which consists of students in grades 4-8 who play strings, brass, woodwinds, and piano. They had a wonderful time learning to play and perform the song, and it inspired me to create this play-along video. For this video, I edited the song and slowed down the tempo so that it could be successfully performed by elementary and middle school students.
Like my resources? Please consider buying me a coffee at https://www.buymeacoffee.com/elmusedtech.
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