If one of the main reasons we play music is to enjoy it with other musicians or with an audience, why do we ask students (particularly young children) to practice alone all the time? Music is fundamentally social and students will be more motivated to practice if the music teacher helps students to be part of musical social experiences.
For example, there is always the jam session. Getting students together to play with and for each other on a regular basis helps students to interact with other musicians the way adult musicians do. The more informal the session, the more it will feel like being social rather than being a formal performance. For example, the music teacher might have students play duets, trios, or rounds with each other. A jam session might also be an opportunity to teach folk music by ear.
Another way to help students have a social experience with music is to have a friend with whom to take lessons. If you give a thirty-minute lesson to each of two students, you could actually take that hour, and give each one a twenty-minute lesson and then spend twenty minutes on music the two can play with each other.
Often you can pair students who go to the same school. You may find students getting together after school to play music with each other, which reinforces important musical skills of being able to play with other people and which is enormously motivating.
If a parent or other family member plays music, then incorporate that music into the lesson. A parent who plays guitar by ear can accompany folk music tunes that are so great for establishing good tone and intonation. It is helpful if the parent plays something different from the student so that the sessions together are more social than formal, parent-led practice.
Create a small group of students and find venues for playing. If you have a group of students, who play folk tunes, many nursing home and retirement centers will welcome their performances.
Pair up an older student with a younger student as a practice buddy, again thinking of pairing students who live near each other. There is nothing like teaching a skill to help a person learn it. The older student will be reinforcing his or her own skills. Younger children respond well to having an older buddy.
All of these ideas take time and organization, but if they become part of your practice as a music teacher, parents will quickly see the benefits and will likely be willing to pay a small amount extra for their children to be involved. Your students will become stronger musicians who are motivated to play their instruments as a result of your taking advantage of the social nature of music.
Music Is The Doctor
So you want Katy Perry's new album or perhaps you're looking for a sweet romantic song for playing over Valentine's Day. For many people it is as simple as opening BitTorrent or eMule, selecting the tracks, downloading, and then transferring to your iPod or burning to a CD.
The idea of sharing music seems benign enough. If I have some music you want and you have some music I want, why shouldn't we share? For one thing, sharing music on your computer with unknown users on the Internet goes against many of the basic principles of securing your computer. You must have a firewall, either built into your router or using personal firewall software.
However, in order to share music on your computer and access music on other computers within a P2P network such as BitTorrent, you must open a specific TCP port through the firewall for the P2P software to communicate. In effect, once you open the port you are no longer protected from your firewall.
Another security concern is that when you download music from other peers on the BitTorrent, eMule, or other P2P network you don't know for sure that the file is what it says it is. You might think you are downloading Katy Perry's "I Kissed a Girl", but when you double-click the file how can you be sure that you haven't also installed a Trojan or backdoor in your computer allowing an attacker to access it at will?
The more important thing you have to know about sharing music is sharing unauthorized music files on the Internet is illegal.
The U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act deems copying of copyrighted music (with the exception of making a copy for your own use) as illegal. The U.S. Code protects copyright owners from the unauthorized reproduction, adaptation or distribution of sound recordings, as well as certain digital performances to the public. In more general terms, it is considered legal for you to purchase a music CD and record (rip) it to MP3 files for your own use. Uploading these files via peer-to-peer networks would constitute a breach of the law.
So, with all of that in mind, sharing music is dangerous. You need a safe and legitimate method to search and download the music you want.
Easy MP3 Downloader is not a Peer-to-Peer program. You're not sharing music with others and what you download are 100% safe MP3 files. It's 100% Legal. There are large numbers of Free Legal Music Sources on the Internet. Easy MP3 Downloader can help you find them more easily by searching the public video and audio websites, such as YouTube, Yahoo!, etc.
Both Earl Marsden & Jessie Sweet are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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