Friday, April 15, 2011

New Printables Page

I have created a new Prinables Page to make it easier to download and print my various resources.
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I am always looking for ways to improve my blog and make it easy for viewers to access my materials.  If you ever have any trouble printing or downloading my materials please feel free to leave a comment or send me an email (my3redhead@gmail.com) and I will be happy to send you a copy.


Sometimes the problem might be with the computer you are using.  Here are some tips from Scrib to make sure that you computer has the right settings to few embedded documents:


If you're trying to read a Scribd document embedded on another website, or if you're viewing documents using our Flash-based reader, you may need to install or upgrade the Flash plug-in for your browser. You can download and install the Flash player for free at http://get.adobe.com/flashplayer/.
If you're sure the Adobe Flash Player is already installed on your computer, it may not be configured to allow our document reader to store any local data. The reader needs to be able to store a small amount of data on your computer—less than 100 kilobytes—in order to display documents. You can change this setting using Adobe's Settings Manager:
  1. Open Adobe's Settings Manager, athttp://www.macromedia.com/support/documentation/en/flashplayer/help/settings_manager.html.
  2. Click the "globe & folder" icon to open the Global Storage Settings tab.
  3. Be sure Allow third-party Flash content to store data on your computer is checked.
  4. Click the folder icon to open the Website Storage Settings tab.
  5. Locate the entries for both s3.amazonaws.com and scribd.com (or d.scribd.com). For each of these:
    1. Click on the entry to highlight it.
    2. Move the slider until is says 100K.
flashplayer-global-storage-settings.pngflashplayer-website-storage-settings.png

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Easter Songs

Jelly Beans in My Tummy Sung to "Skip to My Lou"
Red jelly beans yum, yum, yum
Red jelly beans yum, yum, yum
Red jelly beans yum, yum, yum
Jelly beans in my tum, tum, tum
Teaching Ideas:
1. Change the color of the jelly bean having your studnets idenify the color.  Use real jelly beans or ones cut out of construction or foam.  I have included the visual aids I use below
2. Use the flavor to sing about the jelly bean.  Strawberry jelly beans yum, yum, yum



Jelly Bean Countdown
5 little jelly beans I wish I had more
I'll eat the (color) one and now there are four
4 little jelly beans tasty as can be
I'll eat the (color) one and now there are three
3 little jelly beans only a few
I'll eat the (color) one and now there are two
2 little jelly beans, eating them is fun
I'll eat the (color) one and no there is one
1 little jelly bean, the last one for me
I'll eat the (color) one I'm as happy as can be
See the Easter Bunny Sung to "Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush"
See how the bunny hops along, hops along, hops along
See how the bunny hops along On a Easter morning
This is the way he wiggles his nose
This is the way he flops his ears
This is the way he jiggles his tail
This is the way he eats his carrot
Hippity Hoppity “Sung to Shortening Bread”
Here comes a bunny, hip-hop-hop
See how his long ears, flip-flop-flop
See how his nose goes, Twink-twink-twink
See how his eyes go wink-wink-wink
Hippity Hoppity Easter Bunny Hippity Hoppity Flip Flop Flop
Hippity Hoppity Easter Bunny Hippity Hoppity Flip Flop Flop
Funny little bunny goes, hop, hop, hop
Funny little bunny, please stop, stop, stop
Wiggle your ears and crinkle your nose
Then wiggle, wiggle, wiggle right down to your toes.
Hippity Hoppity Easter Bunny Hippity Hoppity Flip Flop Flop
Hippity Hoppity Easter Bunny Hippity Hoppity Flip Flop Flop
Hop, little rabbit, hop, hop, hop
Hop little rabbit, flip, flop, flop
Hop, little rabbit one, two, three
Hop little rabbit, hop to me
Hippity Hoppity Easter Bunny Hippity Hoppity Flip Flop Flop
Hippity Hoppity Easter Bunny Hippity Hoppity Flip Flop Flop
Teaching Ideas:
1. Act this out and have fun with it.  Do a conga line and hop around the room.
Can you find the Easter Egg? Sung to "Mary had a little lamb"
Can you find the Easter Egg
Easter egg, Easter egg
Can you find the Easter Egg
The bunny hid today
Look up and down and all around
All around, all around
Look up and down and all around
For the Easter Egg
Teaching Idea
1. Have a student(s) look for the Easter eggs you have hidden around the room.
2. Have the student identify the color of the egg or a concept that you have placed in the egg.  You could put letters, numbers, addition problems, etc. . . in the egg for the students to find.
Recommended Reading




Saturday, April 9, 2011

Jelly Bean Bingo:Level One

Who doesn't love jellybeans?  They are usually gone within seconds of me putting them out.  The rhythms in level one use the quarter note, half note, dotted half note and whole note.  Using jelly beans to cover your bingo board creates a fun way to play this game and of course after it is over you can eat your jelly beans.



Google Docs: Jelly Bean Bingo: Level One
Jelly Bean Bingo Level One


Google Docs: Jelly Bean Bingo Cards: Level One



Jelly Bean Bingo Cards Level One

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Hopping Intervals: Level Five and Six

Hopping Intervals Level Five has the intervals 2nd through an Octave.  You can play the same as before, (See Hopping Intervals Level One for how to play) just with more challenging intervals.

Level Six is only minor and major 3rds.  I am constantly reviewing this concept with the major and minor chords.  This level and level three (whole steps and half steps) gets very repetitive unless you separate the cards into up and down piles.  I find that if we go up and then down, we aren't moving to the same two or three notes.  With this in mind, you can use just the "hop up" cards to race up the piano or the "hop down" cards to race down.

Usually when racing I start at the far end of the piano and race to middle C.  I put a little sticky flag on the note and whoever gets to the flag first wins.  Now "Hop" to it!

Google Docs: Hopping Intervals Level Five: 2nd-8th
Hopping Intervals Level Five

Google Docs: Hopping Intervals Level Six: Minor and Major 3rds

Hopping Intervals Level SIX

Awesome Giveaway

Check out the great giveaway over at Pianoantics.  Anne is giving away her great resource: Barnyard Friends.  Enter and win the following:
  1. The Barnyard Friend Workbook
  2. The Lamintaed Barnyard Board
  3. A set of Barnyard Friends Flashcards
Her blog and website also have some great ideas.  Check it out!

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Hopping Intervals Level Three and Four

Hopping Intervals have been a big hit in my studio this week.  Here are two more levels that expand the game to whole steps/half steps and 6ths.

To play you need some type of token to represent each player.  I love using erasers and collect all kinds for this very purpose. 

You can start your player on Middle C.

Then I get seven Easter eggs, one for each note on the piano.  I then put an alphabet letter in each egg. I just write the letter on a note card or post it (no printing required).  You can open the egg to see the surprise letter at the beginning of the game, but I have found it is fun to be surprised at the end of the game.


Now for flat and sharp you can add more eggs or an easier way is to pick a card out of a hat that has a sharp or flat on it.  
Now you are going to need a place to record what notes you land on.  I use my ever handy white board, but you can use a simple piece of paper. You want to record how many times you land on a certain note.

Start by drawing an interval card and follow the instructions.  Record the letter you land on.  Keep playing through the cards as many times as you like.

Then at the end open your Easter egg and see what the secret note was. Whoever has landed on that note the most wins!  You can reward the student with jellybeans or a sticker.


Google Docs: Hopping Intervals Level Three: Whole Step/Half Step





Google Docs: Hopping Intervals Level Four: 2nd-6th
Hopping Intervals Level Four

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Hopping Intervals: Updated with Staff Notation

I recently have been teaching intervals in Faber and Faber Level 1 Piano Adventures and wanted to review the 2nd, 3rd and 4th concept with my student.  I have used cards to move across the keyboard before, but this time I inspired by our Easter season with "Hopping Intervals."

To play you need some type of token to represent each player.  I love using erasers and collect all kinds for this very purpose.

You can start your player on Middle C.

Then I get seven Easter eggs, one for each note on the piano.  I then put an alphabet letter in each egg. I just write the letter on a note card or post it (no printing required).  You can open the egg to see the surprise letter at the beginning of the game, but I have found it is fun to be surprised at the end of the game.

Now you are going to need a place to record what notes you land on.  I use my ever handy white board, but you can use a simple piece of paper.  You want to record how many times you land on a certain note.

Start by drawing an interval card and follow the instructions.  Record the letter you land on.  Keep playing through the cards as many times as you like.

Then at the end open your Easter egg and see what the secret note was.  Whoever has landed on that note the most wins!  You can reward the student with jellybeans or a sticker.

Google Docs: Hopping Intervals Level One Steps and Skips
Hopping Intervals Level One

Google Docs: Hopping Intervals Level Two 2nd-5th
Hopping Intervals Level Two

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Swag Bucks

I have loved using the swagbucks search engine to earn free prizes.  I just recently earned enough points to get a $50.00 gift certificate to Amazon.  All I do is use swagbucks to search. You can also answer daily polls, play games, watch videos and complete tasks to earn swagbucks.  It is an easy way to earn free money.  I do still use my google search engine for things I really need to find, but mainly I use swagbucks to search and get a few swagbucks here and there.  One things I do is instead of using my bookmark to visit a page like facebook, I search swagbucks for it and click on the link.  It is an extra step, but only takes 5 seconds and I sometimes will get 5 or 10 swagbucks for the search.  Click and try it out!

Search & Win

Friday, April 1, 2011

Animal Songs

Habitat Song Sung to “Skip to My Lou”
Who are the animals that live in the rainforest?
Who are the animals that live in the rainforest?
Who are the animals that live in the rainforest?
Name an animals that lives in the rainforest
Monkeys live in the rainforest
Monkeys live in the rainforest
Monkeys live in the rainforest
Monkeys live in the rainforest

Other verses: Who is the animal that lives in a nest? hive? cave?
Teaching Idea:
1. Have the students list different animals that live in the jungle and sing about them.  Act out any motions the animal makes for fun.
2. Use a different habitat "Who are the animals that live on a farm?"

Habitat Song Sung to “London Bridges”
Zebras and Giraffes live in the Grasslands
In the grasslands, in the grass lands
Zebras and Giraffes live in the Grasslands
In the Grasslands

Other Verses: Elephants and Lions live in the Grasslands
Frogs and Crocodiles live in the Rainforest

Teaching Idea:
1. Have students list the animals that live in different habitats and sing about them.

Mama and Baby: Sung to "Muffin Man"
Mama Cow calls baby cow
Moo, moo, moo, moo, moo, moo, moo
Mama Cow calls baby cow, 
Moo, moo, moo, moo, moo, moo

Other animals: Horse/foal, Dog/puppy, Cat/kitten, Hen/chick, Goat/kid, Pig/piglet, Sheep/lamb, 

Mommy and Babies
Mama tiger, mama tiger
What do you see?
I see a baby cub looking at me.

Sing with other animals

The Animals Go  . .  Sung to "The Wheels on the Bus"
The lions at the zoo go roar, roar, roar
Roar, roar, roar
Roar, roar, roar
The lions at the zoo go roar, roar, roar
All day long

Other verses: monkey go ooh, ahh, ooh, hyenas go ha, ha, parrot in the rainforest, the pig on the farm, snakes in the desert go hiss, 

If I were Sung to "The Mulberry Bush"
Oh, if I were a tiny snake
Tiny snake, tiny snake
If I were a tiny snake I'd slither around the desert

Oh if I were an elephant,
Elephant, elephant
If I were an elephant
I'd march around the grasslands

Oh if I were a kangaroo
Kangaroo, Kangaroo
If I were a kangaroo
I'd hop around the zoo

Teaching Ideas:

1. Come up with other animals and movements for the song.


Check out these resources!


Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Easter Egg Rhythm Worksheet


This is a Easter Egg Worksheet is just like my Pot of Gold Game.  I got a request to make different themed worksheet that would go with my Rhythm Addition Cards.  I made some different colors so that you could play this in a group game as well or just choose you favorite color.

To play you fill up the easter egg with tokens: bingo chips, pennies, M&M's or Jellybeans.

You use the Rhythm Addition Cards and add up the correct amount of tokens to place in the Easter Egg.  I have different levels of cards to fit most students.  The first one to fill up their egg wins!

I also used this in a regular classroom setting for math concepts.  For Kindergartners I just had them simply recognize the number in different forms: 3, three,  * * *.  For older students you could do math addition or subtraction flashcards.

Google Docs: Easter Egg Rhythm Game Green, Pink, Yellow, Blue

Easter Egg Rhythm Game Green

Easter Egg Rhythm Game Yellow

Easter Egg Rhythm Game Blue


Easter Egg Rhythm Game Pink

Monday, March 28, 2011

New Chord Cards


I created some Chord Cards to go with just about any game that use note names.  Students identify can identify the chord's root and say the quality of the chord: Major or Minor.  The cards include all major and minor chords on the white keys.  There are some blank cards if you would like to make your own version.

Google Docs: Chord Cards

Chord Cards

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Spring Songs

It is that time of year again.  You can hear the birds sing and the see the flowers blooming.  It is a great time of new beginnings.  Enjoy the nicer weather and these fun songs.
Spring is All Around Me (The Wheels on the Bus)
Above my head I see the sun, see the sun, see the sun.
Above my head I see the sun. Spring is all around me. 
Below my feet I see the grass...
Above my head I see a bird...
Below my feet I see a bug....
Above my head I see a cloud...
Below my feet I see a worm....
Teaching Ideas:
1. Brainstorm with the kids about what things you see in spring that would be above your head and below your feet.  
2. Ask the children to use their hands to point to where you see these signs of spring.  A bird (the children would point up) The grass (The children would point down)
Spring Time Sung to: "Did you Ever see a Lassie?"
My- eyes can see it's spring-time, it's spring-time, it's spring-time.
my- eyes can see it's spring-time, the grass is so green!
The green grass, the flowers, the sunshine and showers
My- eyes can see it's spring-time and I am so glad.
My-ears can hear it's spring time, it's spring time, it's spring time.
My- ears can hear it's spring-time, the birds sweetly sing.
The birds sing, the lambs bleat, the frogs croak, the bees buzz.
My- ears can hear it's spring time, and I am so glad.
My-body can feel's it's spring time, it's spring time, it's spring time.
My-body can feel its spring time, the air is so warm.
The warm air, the breez-es, no frost and no freez-es.
My- body can feel it's spring time, and I am so glad! 
My nose can smell it's spring time, it's spring time, it's spring time.
My nose can smell it's spring time, the flowers smell sweet
The green grass, the flowers, the barnyard, the showers
My nose can smell it's spring time, the flowers smell so sweet.
Teaching Ideas:
1. Discuss the five senses 
2. Name things you can see, hear, touch, taste and smell in springtime.
Marching into Spring
March into spring one step at a time
March into spring with words that rhyme
Clap your hands together up high in the air
Look our for raindrops that land in your hair
Jump over puddles, Skip over ground
Walk back in your house and quietly sit down
Teaching Ideas:
1. Act out the poem.
2. Come up with words that rhyme with signs of spring: flower, bee, green

Daffodils fingerplay 

One little daffodil had nothing much to do,
Out popped another one, then there were two.
Two little daffodils were smiling at a bee,
Out popped another one, then there were three.
Three little daffodils were growing by the door,
Out popped another one, then there were four.
Four little daffodils were glad to be alive,
Out popped another one, then there were five.
Five little daffodils were wearing golden crowns,
They danced in the breeze in green satin gowns.
Teaching Idea:
1. Have the children pretend to be the flowers, popping up
2. Talk about what flowers need to grow.

Daffodils fingerplay Alternative Addition Version                  

One little daffodil smiling at a bee
Out popped two more and then there were three.
Three little daffodils were glad to be alive
Out popped another two more and  then there were five.
Five little daffodils looking up toward heaven
Out popped another two more and then there were seven
Seven little daffodils growing in a line                                                                    
Out popped another two more and then there were nine.
Nine little daffodils blowing in the wind
Pick them up and take them home and they can be your friends.
Version 2
Two little daffodil were growing by the door
Out popped two more and then there were four.
Four little daffodils were playing lots of tricks
Out popped another two more and  then there were six.
Six little daffodils standing up straight
Out popped another two more and then there were eight
Eight little daffodils blowing in the wind
Out popped another two more and then there were ten.
Ten little daffodils blowing in the wind
Pick them up and take them home and they can be your friends.
Recommended Reading
1. It's Spring by Linda Glasser
2. Splish Splash Spring by Dorothy Donohue
3. Mouse's First Spring by Lauren Thompson

Friday, March 25, 2011

Help the Bee Find His Key: Note Names


Here is another version of Help the Bee Find His Key.  Once worksheet focuses on Middle C Position.  I also created one using Treble Clef Notes and Bass Clef Notes.  And last, but not least a Key Signature one.

Google Docs: Middle C Position
Help The Bee Find His Key Middle C Position

Google Docs: Treble Clef

Help The Bee Find His Key Treble Clef

Google Docs: Bass Clef
Help The Bee Find His Key Bass Clef

Google Docs: Key Signatures


Help The Bee Find His Key Signature

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Help the Bee Find His Key: Accidentals

Here is another worksheet to help student recognize accidentals.  I love using the bee finger puppet to play these notes.  I also stick these in a page protector and use a dry erase marker to mark the answer.  A great paper and printer saver!

Google Doc: Help the Bee Find the Key: Sharps
Help The Bee Find His Key Sharp Version

Google Doc: Help the Bee Find the Key: Flats

Help The Bee Find His Key Flat Version

Google Doc: Help the Bee Find His Key: Accidentals

Help The Bee Find His Key Accidental Version

Monday, March 21, 2011

Help the Bee Find His Key

Here is a fun worksheet to help beginner students with key recognition on the keyboard.  A fun idea is to have them make the buzzing sound as the draw the line.  I have a fun little bee finger puppet that the students use to find and play the keys and the keyboard.

Google Doc: Help the Bee Find His Key

Help The Bee Find His Key

Friday, March 18, 2011

New Fun Pointers!

I found these pointers at our school's book fair put on by Scholastic Books.     I got a great dog and bird pointer.  The bird is especially fun because when you squeeze the head, the eyes pop out.       I use pointers to point along in the music mostly, but you could use them in games, rhythm cards and even tapping the rhythm.  The kids love them!

Here are some links to some pencil toppers sold on Amazon
Pop Eye Pens
Other Pencil Toppers

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Group Lesson St. Patrick's Day Theme

Last week I held my group lessons with a St. Patrick's Day Theme.  My students had a blast and learned a lot too!  We played several games and had a sharing time where students played their favorite pieces. Here are some pictures of our games:


Playing Tic Tac Toe with the gold coins from the Pot of gold!

And we have a winner!

Two winners!

The students loved playing Lucky Penny

I adapted the Pot of Gold Game to work with different levels with different colored rhythm cards


Students playing the Lucky Leprechaun Game