In preparation for reteaching my lesson on Verse and Chorus song form, I made several changes:
- I wrote explicit instructions at the top of each handout, to aid the groups in understanding their tasks.
- I restructured the lyric sheets to be graphic organizers.
- I gave the piano group a place to write down their ideas as they worked.
- I added presentation slides about Verse, Chorus, and Harmony respectively to help the students better connect with the essential understanding of the lesson.
- I kept a timer posted on the SMART board to help students manage their time effectively.
- I stopped the groups halfway through their allotted time to check in and have them deliver one important piece of information to the other groups.
I would say that all of these things improved my lesson to some degree, although some could have been better implemented during the activity. I will reflect on each change and its effect on the lesson:
- The instructions at the top of each page could not have hurt. I think this is a positive improvement in many ways, evidenced primarily by the fact that groups seemed to immediately understand what they were doing. (Granted, it was this group's second time doing the lesson, but there were still clarifying questions asked- simply fewer than last time) Further, this helps differentiate the lesson for students who need more explicit instructions or who benefit from having them available to refer to at any time. This also cut down on the need for me to spend valuable time clarifying the assignment, which allowed me to focus on keeping the groups moving with their own momentum, rather than pushing them to start.
- This change could only help. All groups used it effectively and it also helped me to stay organized at the end when I sang their lyrics. Making things more visual and clear is always for the better!
- I'm not sure that the piano group needed this per se, but I think that it did two positive things. It gave the piano group a way to organize their thoughts and resist the temptation to constantly change what they had written, and it allowed multiple student musicians to play the piece at the end without getting confused about what chords wen with each section. (An unintended consequence, I admit- but a good one!) Beyond this, both the harmony sheet and the better-organized lyrics sheets provided me with concrete student work at the end of the lesson- something that I did not have last time. This is work that I would be able to evaluate to assess each groups understanding, although it would be difficult to separate each students contribution individually. (I'll address this further at the end of the post.)
- These slides were absolutely a positive change. I felt as though I communicated much more about my topic in this lesson as opposed to last time. Due to the time constraints of the lesson, this portion went by very quickly, and I think that in the future I would like to keep those three slides (or a summary of them, at least) posted on the board during the lesson for students to refer to. I think the information contained on them was too valuable to disappear so quickly. If students could refer to that information while writing their lyrics and harmony, I think it would help to keep them more cognizant of the essential understandings which underpin the activity.
- I feel that the timer was positive for both the students and I. I think this is evidenced by the fact that all groups finished in the allotted time despite the fact that they were working on a significantly more difficult song than with the last lesson. It allowed me to keep them on task and stop them at clear points to ask them about what they were doing. I feel as though I could have directed the students attention to the timer better, as I don't think that all students knew that it was there.
- I think that this went very well. The Chorus group shared the song title, and the verse group responded by making sure their lyrics led nicely to that theme. After the Verse and Chorus groups described what they were doing, I conferenced with the piano group to help them use that information to better create their part. In hindsight, I would have liked to do this part in front of the class, so all students could see how the parts were connected. It would only have taken a small amount of time and I think it would have been worthwhile.
A few final notes:
The students picked the easier of the two songs in the first lesson, so I was excited to see how the lesson worked with a more difficult song. (By difficult I really mean that it was more verbose, and had a more complicated structure and rhyme scheme) The students did a great job with it and had little trouble adapting to the new material, but I think that it strongly affected my ability to craft the final result. In future implementations of this lesson I would probably make all of the student options for songs of equal "difficulty" as to better guarantee an effective song at the end of the lesson. It is very important to me that the end of the lesson be powerful, so the lesson should be set up from the beginning to succeed in this goal.
On the same note, there was some miscommunication between D'Andre and I during the final performance of the student song. This is really my fault, because the structure of the lyrics was more complicated than the structure I asked the piano group to create. I think it may be better to perform the final song myself, so that I can adapt spontaneously to the form of the lyrics. This will help create a seamless final product.
Finally, it was mentioned to me that the next step in refining this lesson is developing reliable assessment. I think that this iteration did a better job than the last because of the handouts from each group- but individual assessment using these would be impossible. It would be helpful to develop a rubric or list of expectations that could allow me to grade each students performance as I evaluate them informally in their groups. With slightly more time, I could possibly distribute an exit slip or post-assessment on the essential understandings. (What is a chorus, what section leads to the chorus, what are some strategies to write effective verses/choruses) In this case I would probably leave the slide information (from change 4 above) on the board for students to refer to. This would solidify their reception of the lesson's objective and create a basis for future instruction and assessment on the topic.











