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Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts

Sunday, August 17, 2025

Bulletin Board Ideas by Month

 



I keep a document where I keep track which years/months I post my different hallway bulletin boards, and I thought it might be helpful to see them sorted by month.  My beginning-of-the-year bulletin board tends to stay up until winter break if it's a year when I don't put up the bow hold bulletin board; then second semester I'll change it each month or so.  Some I use every year (Birthday/Music for Life/Music In Our Schools Month/End-of-Year Recruiting), some I alternate every-other year (the two January bulletin boards), some I try to rotate between several before repeating one (beginning-of-the-year bulletin boards), and some I've maybe only used once or twice.


What other bulletin board ideas might I add to the mix?


SEPTEMBER/BEGINNING OF THE YEAR/SEMESTER 1


OCTOBER


NOVEMBER


DECEMBER/WINTER CONCERT


JANUARY


FEBRUARY


MARCH


APRIL


MAY/JUNE/END OF YEAR


ANY TIME (or could be timed to special events--Career Day?)


YEAR-ROUND (in classroom)



























Monday, August 19, 2019

Concert Repertoire for Beginning Orchestra


winter concert program beginning orchestra


For winter and spring concerts at my schools, we have a combined orchestra, band, and choir concert that ideally lasts about an hour.  The orchestra portion tends to run about 25 minutes total, so a few pieces performed by the first-year orchestra, a few pieces by the second-year orchestra, and then one or two combined pieces rounds out the orchestra portion.  I meet with my students once a week for 30 minutes during recess for full orchestra and 30 minutes once a week during the school day for small group learning, so these pieces are representative of what students can comfortably have concert-ready.

Here is what my students performed last year at these concerts:


Winter Concert
Beginners:
  • Bile 'em Cabbage Down (students plucked an open string harmony part while I played the melody on the violin)
  • Slavonic Folk Song (pizz. open string harmony, then pizz. melody, then arco melody/harmony together)
  • Serenata by Dale Brubaker (all open strings, arco)

2nd Year Students:
  • Skaters' Waltz by Émile Waldteufel, arr. Richard Meyer (in preparation for the next month's district-wide String Fest)
  • Sword Dance by Thoinot Arbeau, arr. Bob Phillips

Combined Orchestras:
  • Blueberry Jam by Bonnie Greene (in preparation for the next month's district-wide String Fest)
  • Jingle Bells by James Pierpont (my arrangement)


Spring Concert
Beginners:
  • Ode to Joy (my arrangement)
  • It's the Blues Man! (from their Orchestra Expressions book, complete with student soloists improvising the rhythms during their 4-measure solo)
  • Student compositions (one four-measure composition per instrument)
  • Royal Promenade by Don Brubaker (their first "real" full orchestra piece with independent parts)

2nd Year Students:
  • Spring by Antonio Vivaldi, arr. Richard Meyer
  • Student compositions (two eight-measure compositions--one for upper strings and one for lower strings)
  • Fiddles on Fire by Mark Williams

Combined Orchestras:
  • The Lion Sleeps Tonight (arr. Bob Cerulli)


This general format has been working well--in December, I like to start with something that's pizzicato open strings to show where the beginners started at the beginning of the year (and because students would be really comfortable performing that) and work up to something that's arco with D string notes.  And the 2nd year students tend to play fewer pieces (about two big pieces alone) because theirs are longer in length.  If we do only one combined piece at the end, 2nd year students may play three pieces alone; if we do two combined pieces, 2nd year students generally play two pieces alone.

Here are some of the pieces my students have performed for past winter and spring concerts listed in no particular order (student compositions are on every concert too):

Winter Concert
Beginners:
Pizzicato open strings (one piece)
Pizzicato open strings/pizzicato D string notes/arco open string harmony plus D string melody (one piece played three times)...Or play one of these pieces pizzicato only (open string harmony/D string notes melody/choose melody or harmony third time) and play a second piece with the melody arco only
Arco open strings (one piece)

Second Year Students:
A round or something pretty simple (one or two pieces--some years I don't do one of these on the concerts and choose two full orchestra pieces instead)
Full orchestra piece (one or two pieces--often one will be performed for String Fest the following month and the other one will not)
 
Combined Pieces:
We always end with Jingle Bells!  If we do a second combined piece on this concert, it would be a String Fest piece
  • Star of the County Down (melody for 2nd year students; harmony for beginners)
  • Variations on a Sea Shanty (my arrangement)
  • Linus and Lucy by Vince Guaraldi (my arrangement that I got permission from the copyright holder to write--sorry, can't share)
  • Jingle Bells (my arrangement)
 
Spring Concert
Beginners:
Very simple full orchestra piece or a piece from the book

Piece from book with student soloists improvising their own rhythms (they play a 4-measure solo, deciding which quarter notes to change to pairs of eighth notes).  We play a total of four times--first and last times with everyone playing the melody, the second and third times with soloists to include 6 soloists total.

"Real" full orchestra piece

Second Year Orchestra:
Two or three full orchestra pieces, possibly one brought back from January's String Fest

Or something a little different

Combined Orchestras:

Concert info to share with families (Google Docs):

Please see this post for a Google Sheet of repertoire options organized by unit/concert.

For a more in-depth look at my winter concerts including logistics and sample speaking parts, please see this post :)

Which pieces do you like to program for a beginning orchestra concert?  Which pieces should I consider for future concerts?

spring concert program beginning orchestra

Friday, December 28, 2018

Have a Punny New Year! Bulletin Board


Have a punny new year musical bulletin board for elementary orchestra


Happy New Year!  For this year's January bulletin board, I'm departing from my usual informational sort of theme and trying out the humorous route.  The internet is a wealth of musical puns, and I also included a couple of jokes where you can lift the flap to see the answer.

"Have a punny new year!" heading, images, jokes, and sources




Have a punny new year musical bulletin board for elementary orchestra


Have a punny new year musical bulletin board for elementary orchestra


Have a punny new year musical bulletin board for elementary orchestra


Have a punny new year musical bulletin board for elementary orchestra


Have a punny new year musical bulletin board for elementary orchestra


Have a punny new year musical bulletin board for elementary orchestra


Have a punny new year musical bulletin board for elementary orchestra


Have a punny new year musical bulletin board for elementary orchestra



Monday, November 26, 2018

Updated Winter Packets (plus audio files)



winter packet sheet music and audio files for beginning orchestra


I often have one or two students who enter fifth grade already having studied a string instrument privately for a couple of years.  I have the flexibility to add them to sixth grade orchestra as fifth graders, which better meets their needs.  However, this means that those students take sixth grade orchestra twice.  Concert repertoire changes every year, more or less, but the packets of additional repertoire hasn't always.  This year I figured it was time to switch up the winter packet for the students in the second-year orchestra.  I've also been on a kick with creating audio files in Finale so students can play along with accompaniment at home, so I did that to these too.  Each piece has audio files in at least three different tempos.  The packet for first-year string players is the same as before; I've just added audio files.


Winter packet (for first-year string players):

Contents:
  1. Jolly Old Saint Nicholas
  2. Good King Wenceslas
  3. Up on the Housetop
  4. Overture to The Nutcracker
  5. Carol of the Bells
  6. Here We Come A-Caroling


Winter packet--revised version (for second-year string players):

Tenor clef version of winter packet--revised version (for second-year string players):

Contents: 
  1. Jolly Old Saint Nicholas (duet)
  2. God Rest You Merry, Gentlemen (duet)
  3. Sivivon Sov Sov Sov (A two-part round)
  4. Winter Is Coming (A three-part round)
  5. Over the River and Through the Wood
  6. Auld Lang Syne
  7. "March" from The Nutcracker
  8. Troika
  9. Carol of the Bells

Winter packet--original version (for second-year string players)


Enjoy!

winter packet sheet music and audio files for beginning orchestra



winter packet sheet music and audio files for beginning orchestra


Monday, November 5, 2018

Winter Concert Programming



Winter concert elementary orchestra programming


It's that time of year to be thinking of winter concerts!  This post is brought to you courtesy of a reader wondering what to program for beginners' first concert.  (Again, thanks for reading, thanks for your question, and glad I could offer some ideas!)  At my schools, we share our winter concert with band and choir, so the entire orchestra portion (for first- and second-year players) runs about 25 minutes, for an hour-long concert total.  Orchestra students at my schools meet for small groups once a week for 30 minutes and full orchestra during recess once a week for 30 minutes, so here is the kind of music I program for our first concert of the year, given my specific situation and the pacing that allows.

Beginners:
We play about three pieces, one that's all pizzicato open strings that everyone has been playing since the first or second week of school and everyone knows really really well (like the harmony part to "Bile 'em Cabbage Down" from the Supplement Packet and I play melody on the violin), one that has a pizzicato open-string harmony part and pizzicato melody with D string notes (and then we'll play it a third time, perhaps arco, and kids can choose which part to play) with a short piano introduction before each time, and then we have a tradition of playing "Serenata" by Dale Brubaker, from his "Concert Tunes for Beginning Strings" book.  "Serenata" is all open strings, arco, and students love this piece!  By this time of the year, students have composed two pieces so far, so we'll play a pizzicato composition of D string notes for each instrument, as well.  I play piano for everything (and make up a piano part to accompany the students' compositions too).

Second Year Players:
We'll play two or three pieces, grade 1, one of which we'll be performing the following month for our district-wide String Fest, and one that is just for the winter concert.  I conduct these pieces (and have a hand ready to jump in at the piano to help support if needed).  There are always a couple of students that remark that they're playing fewer pieces than the beginners, but I tell them that theirs are much longer than the beginners' pieces, so it balances out time-wise.  The other String Fest pieces they're working on are also in various states of preparedness, and those two or three concert pieces are really what they're ready to perform for an audience at this point.

Combined Orchestras:
If the beginners are in pretty good shape with a String Fest piece by this time, we'll do one combined piece, a sort of sneak preview to String Fest, and then we always end with "Jingle Bells" before turning it over to the band.


Melody/harmony pieces for beginners:

Some winter concert pieces I've programmed for second-year players:

Combined pieces:


About a month before the concert, I send a half sheet of concert info home (and post it on our class page online).  This is the same day I invite students to decorate flyers to advertise our concert.  Please see this post for flyer and concert program templates.

At the concert, a principal or I will welcome families, and then I have students introduce each of the pieces.  This is for a couple of reasons: first, students take more ownership when it's the performers telling their families about what they're about to hear (and students get really excited to have a speaking part and talk into a microphone), and second, it gives me a chance to deal with instruments that go out of tune or bridges that fly off of instruments or bows that explode between pieces without having to make everyone wait.  If there were more time, I would have students write the speaking parts, but as it is now, I write them and students read them.

Here's a sample script of speaking parts.  In full orchestra, a couple weeks before the concert, our question of the week is to drop their name in the bucket if they would like a speaking part.  The next week, I draw names, and those kids come up and write their name on the board next to the piece they'd like to introduce.  I have the script cut into strips and give each student their part to practice.  I do print off three additional copies--one for the alternate to practice from in case anyone is absent on concert day, one to leave on the stand for kids to read off of, and one for myself so I remember who's doing what.

At the concert, I have beginners start off in the front of the orchestra (with second-year students sitting in the back of the orchestra with their stand partner).  Then the two groups switch, and the second-year students stay in the front for "Jingle Bells."  I use masking tape to tape a little name card of both sets of stand partners on each stand, so the kids know where to sit.  I make students sit with their stand partner even when they're just sitting in the back of the orchestra listening to the other orchestra play so that they know their folder of music is accounted for and because I have fewer behavior issues when students are sitting where I want them to sit :)

The last two full orchestras or so are dress rehearsals where we practice sitting in our concert seat with our concert stand partner, staying in rest position while the speaker says their part before each piece, and having our music all in order, and standing and smiling together at the end etc.

I'd be curious to hear what other teachers do for beginning orchestra concerts.  I've heard of more informances where the concert really shows families what a typical day in orchestra is like and might include showing the different warmups and such, but I haven't tried that before.  My hope is that the speaking parts give not just background information about the pieces but also what the students have learned and what to listen or watch for during the performance.  I've also heard of concerts where the students have been teaching a parent or family member how to play their instrument as the students are learning over the weeks and then there's maybe a piece on the concert where all the family members come up and play the piece that they've learned.  I haven't tried that before either, but I would be interested in hearing how that has worked out for others.  Any other ideas or formats or favorite pieces for winter concerts?

Winter concert programming ideas speaking part

Monday, January 2, 2017

Inspirational Quotes for the New Year Bulletin Board


Inspirational quotes, New Year's bulletin board


Happy New Year! For my first bulletin board of 2017, I displayed four inspirational quotes with images of fireworks.  For the two shorter quotes, I used my mom's Cricut to cut out the large letters, and then I just printed out the longer quotes.  A few colorful markers brightened up the fireworks, and then colored borders matched each quote to its author.

Quotes included:

"Whatever you are, be a good one."
—Abraham Lincoln

"Be yourself; everyone else is already taken."
—Oscar Wilde

"The expert in anything was once a beginner."
—Helen Hayes

"Promise me you'll always remember: You're braver than you believe, and stronger than you seem, and smarter than you think."
—A.A. Milne


Happy New Year!

Inspirational quotes, New Year's bulletin board


Inspirational quotes, New Year's bulletin board


Inspirational quotes, New Year's bulletin board


Inspirational quotes, New Year's bulletin board


Inspirational quotes, New Year's bulletin board


Inspirational quotes, New Year's bulletin board


Inspirational quotes, New Year's bulletin board






Monday, December 14, 2015

Winter Concert Reflection



Winter concert reflection



After our first concert of the year, I have students share their thoughts about their experience through a concert reflection sheet (which I based off of what was already being used by our elementary band teacher).  During the first full orchestra after the concert, I have these reflection sheets plus pencils already on everyone's stand, and then after our warm-up, I turn on some background music while everyone is writing.  Depending on how long it takes for students to finish and the class atmosphere at the moment, I may have a couple of students verbally share some thoughts; otherwise musicians just turn these in when they're finished and start practicing the next piece while others are still working.


These are so much fun to read though.  While we may talk a little bit after the concert or during small groups or when a student is dropping off his or her instrument in the morning, I learn so much more about what really made an impression on my students and how they view their learning in orchestra and how they see themselves as musicians by reading through their responses.

Then, since we music teachers are also advocates for music and music education and our students, I share these first-hand accounts of music making an impact on our students with as many people as I can think of :)

I type up many of the responses as a bulleted list after selected reflection questions and include that in the weekly email to orchestra families.  I also email the list of responses to the entire school staff and post it on a bulletin board for the whole school to see.

Not only is this a way for students to process their thoughts about what may have been their first experience performing on a stage in front of an audience, but it's also a way to use writing in a performance-based class and a fantastic advocacy too.  Concert reflections are definitely worth the few minutes it takes in class, and it can be nice to go through the questions each year change out a question or two for something that is more meaningful for this particular concert or group of students.

**Update: In recent years, I've started writing a reflection letter of my own as a sample and a way to share my thoughts with the orchestra.  I will have this on the screen as students come in to full orchestra that day, and as I read through the prompts/directions for their reflection, I will refer to my letter as an example of a possible response for the different questions.



Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Winter Concert Bulletin Board



Winter concert bulletin board



The orchestra bulletin board was due for a change, and advertising the winter concert was the direction I ended up taking.  This bulletin board idea actually came from a picture I saw on Pinterest, with the "One Night Only" bit about an upcoming school concert.  The time and date of the concert is posted for everyone to see on their way to and from music class to build excitement (and awareness) for the winter band, orchestra, and choir concert.  There's a list of some of the pieces that will be performed along with some winter art.  I eventually filled up more of the empty space with pictures of the students playing their instruments on pajama day, a few flyers decorated by students, plus a batch of student compositions (not pictured).  This was a pretty quick and simple bulletin board to put together (and timely too)!



Winter concert bulletin board



Winter concert bulletin board



Winter concert bulletin board



Winter concert bulletin board



Monday, November 30, 2015

Winter Packets




My schools each have a winter band/orchestra/choir concert in December.  The closest we get to performing Christmas music is my arrangement of "Jingle Bells." It has become an orchestra tradition at my schools to end their portion of the concert with combined 5th and 6th grade orchestras playing their different parts and student volunteers ringing bells.  Before my students leave for winter break, I pass out these winter packets for them to enjoy over their time off from school.  These packets are great for sight-reading and reinforcing skills from the fall semester.  I've tried to stay away from the more religious Christmas songs and to include some melodies that may be unfamiliar to my students.  The second-year winter packet includes many rounds and duets too.


Winter packet (for first-year string players):
Contents:
  1. Jolly Old Saint Nicholas
  2. Good King Wenceslas
  3. Up on the Housetop
  4. Overture to The Nutcracker
  5. Carol of the Bells
  6. Here We Come A-Caroling


Winter packet (for second-year string players):
Contents:
  1. Jolly Old Saint Nicholas (duet)
  2. Good King Wenceslas (duet)
  3. We Wish You a Merry Christmas
  4. Winter is Coming (A three-part round)
  5. The Bell Doth Toll (A three-part round)
  6. Auld Lang Syne
  7. In the Bleak Midwinter
  8. Carol of the Bells

Enjoy!




Sunday, November 8, 2015

Jingle Bells!

Jingle Bells score elementary orchestra



One tradition at my elementary winter band/orchestra/choir concerts is that the orchestras always end their portion of the concert with "Jingle Bells."  I've written an arrangement that works well for where my students are by this point in the year.  Beginners have an open-string arco harmony part, while the 2nd-year players have a more exciting harmony part, with lots of shuffle bowing patterns.  The beginners' harmony part is in unision; while the 2nd-year harmony part has separate parts for upper strings, cellos, and basses.  2nd-year basses are welcome to add slaps on the rests in their harmony part!  The piano interlude gives them time to set bows down and get ready to pluck.

Combined beginners and 2nd-year players play through this twice at the concert:

1st time:

  • Beginners--open-string harmony part
  • 2nd year players--melody


2nd time:

  • Beginners--melody (or open-string harmony--their choice) 
  • 2nd year players--harmony


In past years, at the school performance for students, one pre-chosen student from each class comes up and rings jingle bells while the orchestra plays.  I have students from the orchestra help with distributing and collecting the bells.  They're just little jingle bells from a craft store threaded through pipe cleaners with the ends tied together to form a bracelet.

For an introduction, I play the last two measures on the piano, and, as an interlude before the repeat, I play the last four measures again, showcasing the jingle bell players and giving the string players a moment to remember which part they're playing next.

I'm sure "Jingle Bells" is one of those pieces that every orchestra teacher has their own arrangement of, but here are the parts for mine; feel free to use!  It's one that students love every year--and I enjoy hearing and playing too!





Audio files (with piano introduction and interlude)


Happy jingling!


Jingle bells