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2021/2022

Teaching Music II

Code: 106079 ECTS Credits: 3
Degree Type Year Semester
2500797 Early Childhood Education OT 4 0
2500798 Primary Education OT 4 0
The proposed teaching and assessment methodology that appear in the guide may be subject to changes as a result of the restrictions to face-to-face class attendance imposed by the health authorities.

Contact

Name:
Ruth Ortin Lozano
Email:
Ruth.Ortin@uab.cat

Use of Languages

Principal working language:
catalan (cat)
Some groups entirely in English:
No
Some groups entirely in Catalan:
Yes
Some groups entirely in Spanish:
No

Prerequisites


(Traducció pendent de revisió lingüística)
Students who want to enroll in this subject, must demonstrate to have an Elementary Degree on Music in order to sign up. If he/she didn’t study in a music school (formal education), he/she must pass a test.
Students who have previously taken it are exempt from this test. We recommend to have studied Music Teaching I, previously.

 

 

Objectives and Contextualisation

(Traducció pendent de revisió lingüística)

- Design and apply didactic activities starting from diverse sound sources in the different stages and
cycles.
- Deepen in the sequencing of a musical activity.
- Be able to make class designs according to different educational realities.
- To reflect and learn through different modalities of practice, the “know-how” of a teacher.
- Be aware of the importance of music as a means of inclusion.

Competences

    Early Childhood Education
  • Be familiar with the music, plastics and body language curriculum at this stage as well as theories on the acquisition and development of the corresponding learning.
  • Consider classroom practical work to innovate and improve teaching.
  • Properly express oneself orally and in writing and master the use of different expression techniques.
  • Take account of social, economic and environmental impacts when operating within one's own area of knowledge.
    Primary Education
  • Acquiring resources to encourage lifelong participation in musical and plastic arts activities inside and outside of the school.
  • Design, plan and evaluate education and learning processes, both individually and in collaboration with other teachers and professionals at the centre.
  • Incorporate information and communications technology to learn, communicate and share in educational contexts.
  • Know the school’s arts curriculum, in its plastic, audiovisual and musical aspects.
  • Promote cooperative work and individual work and effort.
  • Reflect on classroom experiences in order to innovate and improve teaching work. Acquire skills and habits for autonomous and cooperative learning and promote it among pupils.
  • Take account of social, economic and environmental impacts when operating within one's own area of knowledge.
  • Understand the principles that contribute to cultural, personal and social education in terms of the arts.
  • Work in teams and with teams (in the same field or interdisciplinary).

Learning Outcomes

  1. Apply the practice of writing, composition analysis and recognition through information and communications technology.
  2. Be able to reflect on and adapt didactic interventions in different educational contexts and situations.
  3. Be able to sing and get groups to sing, listening to others and respecting each other.
  4. Be able to work in a team.
  5. Being able to design activities from the different content blocks of the material, in accordance with basic methodological principles.
  6. Identify the social, economic and environmental implications of academic and professional activities within one?s own area of knowledge.
  7. Knowing how to explain the main consequences of the effect of teaching the arts on people’s cultural, personal and social education.
  8. Learn to develop different work strategies that balance the development of group projects and individual projects.
  9. Learn to establish relationships between different artistic languages taking theory and praxis of musical activity as a central focus.
  10. Learn to understand, analyze and compare texts from different domains of thought, culture and the arts with their possible links with the musical event.
  11. Propose viable projects and actions to boost social, economic and environmental benefits.
  12. Recognising the value of musical activities related to singing, song and conducting in educating the individual, and the fundamental role that it plays in school activities.
  13. They have acquired knowledge and skills and abilities in expressive and perceptive dimension of voice, song, choral singing and musical direction.
  14. Understand the learning processes and methodological bases underlying the teaching and learning of music.

Content


(Traducció pendent de revisió lingüística)

1. The music class. Design and dynamics of the sessions. Interrelationship between the contents and the activities in each class. Specific stage and area objectives and contents.

2. Processes, strategies, techniques and resources for teaching and learning music parting from diverse sound sources.

3. Reflections on diverse music blocks:
3.1- Playful listening versus reflective listening: repertoire, strategies, resources and teaching materials.
3.2- Dance and movement as facilitators of learning and non-verbal communication.
3.3- The song as an approach to the musical language.

4. Music as a means of inclusion and intercultural connection.
5. Attention to diversity in music classroom.

 

Methodology

(Traducció pendent de revisió lingüística)
Our teaching approach and assessment procedures may be altered if public health authorities impose new restrictions on public gatherings for COVID-19
In directed activities, the principles underpinning the methodology are:
- Classes will be carried out on an eminently practical level. From practice and reflective process, we will extract the theory of music education.

- The basic procedures on which the activities in classroom will be developed will be: listening, expression, interpretation, comprehension and musical creation. Group work and individual work will alternate.
- Teachers will show how to apply the contents of the program. All examples will be contextualized to the school reality.

- Carry out group and small group music analysis activities
- Small individual didactic proposals.

The classes are face-to-face and require the active participation of the students in debates, in the elaboration of reflections around various topics, and in the realization of practical activities and simulations of teaching situations.
-learning music.

The teacher interventions will consist, to a large extent, in leading the students' reflections of the analysis of practical questions to create criteria and fundamental pedagogical bases in musical education.

Some group work will be started or developed during class sessions, under the supervision of the teacher.

The autonomous work will start from the work done in class and support materials to analyze, and will mainly consist of:
- Design of activities for learning music of specific elements
- Search for materials and resources to develop didactic proposals.

Supervised activities are individual tutoring and tutored group activities.

 

Annotation: Within the schedule set by the centre or degree programme, 15 minutes of one class will be reserved for students to evaluate their lecturers and their courses or modules through questionnaires.

Activities

Title Hours ECTS Learning Outcomes
Type: Directed      
Face-to-face with the whole group 23 0.92
Type: Supervised      
Tutored activities 15 0.6
Type: Autonomous      
Self-employment activities 37 1.48

Assessment

Class attendance is mandatory: the student must attend a minimum of 80% of classes, otherwise it will be considered not presented.

Other aspects related to responsibility and involvement (punctuality, degree of formality, participation) will also be taken into account. In order to pass the subject, each of the sections must have been passed.

Delivery dates and re-evaluation of the main tasks and exams:

1. Design and presentation of a learning sequence. Delivery: between the 3rd and 4th week of the course. Re-evaluation: The week after the practicum V intensive.

2. Elaboration and presentation of a temporary didactic frame in group. Delivery: the third week of march. Re-evaluation: 2 weeks after submission.

3. Presentation of a good practice. Delivery: the week after the internship intensive. Re-evaluation: 2 weeks after submission.

4.Global evaluation test of the mention. Date: A week after the end of classes. Re-assessment: 2 weeks after the exam.

Only those tasks that the students fail can be re-evaluated and can only aspire to be passed with a 5. The degree of participation and the level of reflection of the contributions will be valued in the debates.
Attitude and active participation during the teaching and learning process are fundamental.

To pass this course, the student must show, in the activities proposed, a good general communicative competence, both orally and writing, and a good command of the language or languages that appear in the teaching guide.
For general aspects, the evaluation will be governed in accordance with the documents contained in: https://www.uab.cat/web/estudiar/guia-del-pdi-1345732500524.html
According to UAB regulations, plagiarism or a copy of a work will be penalized with a 0 as a grade for this work, losing the possibility of recovering it, whether itis an individual or group work (in thiscase, all members of the group will have a 0).

If the performance of an individual work inclass, makes the teacher consider that a student is trying to copy or has some document or device not authorized by the teacher, that activity will be scored with a 0, without recovery option.

Assessment Activities

Title Weighting Hours ECTS Learning Outcomes
Global evaluation test of the mention. 30 0 0 1, 9, 3, 2, 13, 6, 5
Involvement and participation in classroom activities. 20 0 0 9, 14, 3, 2, 6, 11, 7
Preparation and practical presentation of class designs 20 0 0 1, 8, 9, 14, 4, 2, 13, 11, 12, 10, 7, 5
Teamwork 30 0 0 1, 9, 14, 4, 2, 13, 11, 12, 10, 7, 5

Bibliography

GENERIC BIBLIOGRAPHY

Bibliografia

GENÈRICA

Alcázar, A. (ed.) (2008). La Competencia artística : creatividad y apreciación crítica. Madrid : Secretaría General Técnica, Subdirección General de Información y Publicaciones.


Aróstegui, J.L. (ed.) (2014). La música en Educación Primaria. Manual de formación del profesorado. Madrid: Dairea.


AA.VV. (2004). La musica en la escuela: la audición. Barcelona. Ed. Graó

Blacking, J. (1994). Fins a quin punt l'home és music?. Vic: Eumo. (Versió original en anglès, 1976).


Bordons, G.; Casals, A. (2012). Poesia, música i escola: un triangle sonor. Temps d'Educació, 42, 11-30.


Calderón, D. (ed.) (2014). Expressió Musical a Primària. Barcelona: Publicacions de la UB.

Carrillo, C.; Vilar, M. (2014). El perfil profesional del profesorado de música: una propuesta de las competencias deseables en Ed. Primaria y Ed. Secundaria. Revista Electrónica de LEEME, 33, 1-26. Disponible a: http://musica.rediris.es/leeme/revista/carrillo&vilar14.pdf

Fubini, E. (2004). Música y lenguaje en la estética contemporánea. Madrid: Alianza.


Giráldez, A. (coord.) (2014). Didáctica de la música en primaria. Madrid: Síntesis.

Gluschankof, C.; Pérez-Moreno, J. (eds.) (2017). La música en la educación infantil: investigación y práctica.Madrid: Dairea.


González-Martín, C. (2014). Metodologia d'ensenyament-aprenentatge de les cançons i repertori. A Calderón, D. (Ed.) Expressió Musical a Primària. Barcelona: Publicacions de la UB.


Hargreaves, D.J.; North, A.C. (Eds) (1997). The social psychology of music. New York: Oxford University Press.


Hemsy de Gainza, V. (1995). Didáctica de la música contemporánea en el aula. Música y Educación, 24, 17-24.


Hemsy de Gainza, V. (1997). La transformacion de la Educacion Musical a las puertas del Siglo XXI. Buenos Aires: Guadalupe.

Hennessy, S. (1995). Music 7-11. Developing primary teaching skills. Londres: Routledge.


Lluveras, N.; Valls, A.; Vilar, M. (1994). La cançó a l'etapa primària. Bellaterra: ICE de la Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona.


McDonald, R.; Hargreaves, D.J. i Miell, D. (2002). Musical Identities. Oxford: Oxford University Press.


Maideu, J. (1997). Música, societat i educació. Berga: Amalgama.


Malagarriga, T.; Valls, A. (2003). La audición musical en la Educación Infantil: propuestas didácticas. Barcelona: CEAC.


Malagarriga, T.; Martínez, M. (2010).Tot ho podem expressar amb música. Barcelona: Dinsic.


Martí, J. (2000). Más allá del arte: la música como generadora de realidades sociales. Sant Cugat del Vallès: Deriva.

Miranda, J., Oriols, J., Valls, A., Feliu, T., Malagarriga, T., Godall, P. (2009).
Música 1-6. Projecte Duna. Barcelona:Teide

Ocaña, A. (2001). Recursos didáctico-musicales para trabajar en Primaria. Granada: Grupo Editorial Universitario.


Martí, J.M. (2016). Aprendizaje musical para niños. Metodologías y sistemas pedagógicos de la didáctica musical. Barcelona: Redbook Ediciones.


McPherson, G.E.; Welch, G.F. (2012). The Oxford Handbook of Music Education (2 vols.). Oxford:Oxford University Press.


Miralpeix, A. (2012). iMúsica: educación musical con el iPad y el iPhone. Eufonía, 56, 27-35.


Pascual, P. (2002). Didáctica de la música. Madrid: Prentice Hall.


Pujol, M.A.; Serra, J. (1998). La dansa catalana en l'ensenyament primari. Barcelona: Generalitat de Catalunya. Dept. de Cultura.


Sanmartí, N. (2010). Avaluar per aprendre. L'avaluació per millorar els aprenentatges de l'alumnat en el marc del curriculum per competències. Generalitat de Catalunya. Departament d'Educació.

http://phobos.xtec.cat/edubib/intranet/file.php?file=docs/primaria/orientacions/avaluar_per_aprendre.

Sharma, E. (2006). Musicas del mundo.  Madrid: Akal / Entorno Musical.

Tafuri, J. (2006). ¿Se nace musical? Como promover las aptitudes musicales de los niños. Barcelona: Graó.

Torns, X.; Malagarriga, T.; Gómez, I. (2009). Dos enfoques en enseñanza del lenguaje musical. Música y Educación, 77, 50-63.

Valls. A.; Calmell, C. (2010). La música contemporània catalana a l'escola. Barcelona: DINSIC.

Valls, A.; Vilar,M. (2004). La evaluación del area de musica. A: Educación Primaria. Orientaciones y recursos (6-12años). Barcelona: Ed. Praxis

Vilar, M. (2004). Acerca de la educación musical. Revista Electrónica de LEEME, 13. Disponible a: http://musica.rediris.es/leeme/revista/vilarm.pdf


METHODOLOGY

Bachmann, M. L. (1984). La rythmique Jaques-Dalcroze. Neuchâtel: La Baconnière. (Ed. en castellà: La Rítmica Jaques-Dalcroze una educación por la música y para la música. Madrid: Pirámide, 1998).


Barniol, E. (1998). Pensamiento pedagógico y acción educativa de Zoltán Kodály. Música y Educación, 35 (11,3), pp.85-102.


Casals, J. (1993). El método Ireneu Segarra. Música y Educación, 16, 51-74.

Chapuis, J.; Westphal, B. (1980). Sur les pas d'Edgar Willems. Fribourg: Pro Musica.


Díaz, M.; Giráldez, A. (2007). Aportaciones teóricas y metodológicas a la educación musical. Una selección de autores relevantes. Barcelona: Graó.


Hegyi, E. (1999). Método Kodály de Solfeo I y II. Madrid: Pirámide.
Orff, C.; Keetman, G. (1950-1954). Musik für Kinder.5vols.

Mainz: Schott.
Paynter, J. (1999). Sonido y estructura. Madrid: Akal.


Sanuy, M., González Sarmiento, L. (1969). Orff-Schulwerk-Música para niños. Introducción.. Madrid: Unión musical española.


Schafer, R.M. (1994). Hacia una educación sonora. Buenos Aires: Pedagogías Musicales Abiertas.


Steen, A. (1992). Exploring Orff. A teacher's guide. Mainz: Schott.
Suzuki, S.(2007). Vivre c'est aimer. Marsella: Corroy.


Szönyi, E. (1976). La educación musical en Hungría a través del método Kodály. Budapest: Corvina. (Ed. en anglès, actualitzada: Kodály's principles in practice: an approach to music education through the Kodály method. (5a ed. rev.) Budapest: Corvina. 1990).


Tomatis, A. (1987). L'oreille et la voix. Paris: Robert Laffont.


Vanderspar, E. (1990). Manual Jaques-Dalcroze. Principis i recomanacions per a l'ensenyament de la rítmica. Barcelona: P. Llongueres.


Ward, J. (1953). Musique(diversos volums). Tournai: Desclée et Cie.


Willems, E. (1975). La valeur humaine de l'éducation musicale. Bienne: Pro Musica. (Trad. al castellà: El valor humano de la educación musical. Barcelona: Paidós, 1981).

Willems, E. (2001). El oído musical. Madrid: Paidós.

SONGBOOKS

Alcázar, AJ (1999). 88 temas para voz e instrumental Orff. Madrid: Mundimúsica.

Amoaku, W. K. (1971). African Songs and Rhythms for Children: a selection from Ghana. Mainz: Schott.


Apel·les Mestres (2004). Les 29 cançons infantil d'Apel·les Mestres (veu i piano). Barcelona: Boileau.

Bonal, M. D. (2004-2008). Arietta. Volums 1-5. Barcelona: DINSIC.
Bonal, E;

Casas, M.; Casas, N. (2005). Diversita't. Cançons, danses,...activitats i recursos per a la convivència en la diversitat. Barcelona: Fundació Jaume Bofill / Generalitat de Catalunya. Disponible a: http://www.entrecultures.org/04_calidos/diversitat.htm

http://www.entrecultures.org/04_calidos/diversitat.htm

Bonal, M.D.; Martorell, M. (1967-1999, amb múltiples reedicions). ESQUITX (de l'1 al 5). Barcelona: mf.


Busqué, M; Badia, M. (2002). Tunc Que Tan Teta. Tarragona: Arola Edicions.

Casellas, M., Manent, R., Roma, R. i Vilar, R. (2001). Cançoner de butxaca. sempre hi ha una cançó. Tarragona: El Mèdol / Centre de la Cultura Popular i Tradicional Catalana.

Costa, J. (2002). 111 cànons de tot arreu. Barcelona: Clivis.
Costal, A. (coord). Cançons que cal saber. Barcelona: Raval Edicions, Pòrtic.

Crivillé, J. (1981) Música Tradicional Catalana (I) - Infants. Barcelona: Clivis.

Departament d'Ensenyament (2001). Cançons populars i tradicionals a l'escola. Disponible a: http://www20.gencat.cat/docs/Educacio/Documents/ARXIUS/doc_20517154_1.pdf

Hunt, Peter (ed.) (2017). Junior Voiceworks at Christmas: 40 Seasonal Songs. Oxford: Oxford University Press.


Maideu, J. (1991). Assaig. Cançons i exercicis (2a ed.). Vic: EUMO.


Maideu, J. (1992). Llibre de cançons - Crestomatia de cançons tradicionals catalanes. Vic: EUMO.


Orts, M. (ed). PRODIEMUS (Propostes, Reflexions, Orientacions i Didàctica Interdisciplinària per a Educar a través de la Música). http://www.prodiemus.com/canconer/


Puig ,A., Padilla, R. (2013). El cançoner de tothom. Barcelona: Bonalletra Alcompàs.


Rosell, A. (2007). Cançoner 1 / 2. Llanars: Amadeu i Cia.


SCIC (1973-2017). Cançoners del Secretariat de Corals Infantil de Catalunya. Volums 1-9. Barcelona: SCIC.


Stannard. K. (2003). Junior Voiceworks 1: 33 songs for children. Oxford University Press.


Stannard. K. (2007). Junior Voiceworks 1: 33 more songs for children. Oxford University Press.


Taltabull, C. [2006(1958)]. Dotze cançons populars de Nadal. Berga: Amalgama Edicions.

SPECIALIZED MAGAZINES

Eufonia. Barcelona: Ed. Grao.

Musica y educación. Madrid: Musicalis.

LEEME. Revista de la Lista Electronica Europea de Musica en la Educacion. Univ. de La Rioja. http://www.unirioja.es/dptos/dea/leeme/sumariogen.html

ON-LINE RESOURCES

Xtec. http://www.xtec.cat/web/curriculum/primaria

Xtec. Escola Oberta. Musica http://www.xtec.es/recursos/musica/index.htm

Biblioteca Virtual de Educacion Musical (Bivem) http://80.34.38.142:8080/bivem/ Mestres i musica.

La web dels mestres de musica http://www.mestresimusica.net/ Associacio d'Ensenyants de Musica de Catalunya (Aemcat) http://www.aemcat.org/

https://sites.google.com/a/blanquerna.url.edu/calaix-de-music/

http://www.lapaginamusical.com/

http://www.prodiemus.com/

 

 

 

 

 

Software

No specific software is required. However, it will be useful to have a score editor (eg: Sibelius, Finale, ...) and an audio editor (eg: audacity, garage band, wave pad, logic pro, cubase ...).