recorder - Teaching With Orff https://teachingwithorff.com An Online Oasis for Movement & Music Educators Fri, 11 Nov 2022 16:00:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://teachingwithorff.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/cropped-Teaching-With-Orff-logo-BWR-4-32x32.png recorder - Teaching With Orff https://teachingwithorff.com 32 32 Steps to Prep the Recorder https://teachingwithorff.com/steps-to-prep-the-recorder/ https://teachingwithorff.com/steps-to-prep-the-recorder/#comments Mon, 19 Sep 2022 11:00:50 +0000 https://teachingwithorff.com/?p=2912 A student's journey on the recorder must begin before they even touch an instrument. Kate Bright shares her strategy to ensure that all elements are in place. With proper preparation, your students will be making music on the first day they play!

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Steps to Prep the Recorder:
Get your students making music the first day they play! 

By Kate Bright, recorder enthusiast 

The very first time I picked up a recorder, I fell deeply in love with this sweet instrument.  I grew up as a clarinetist, but developed jaw problems and had to quit woodwinds forever – or so I thought.  Then, I began my Orff Schulwerk journey and found the recorder, and the rest is history.  I found that the recorder was a tool of great pedagogical power, a tool that could teach my students how to improvise, read, and compose a melody. 

When I began teaching recorder, I saw my students every other day.  While the first few classes were not the best-sounding classes, soon my students were able to play independently and well.  Due to budget cuts, my schedule changed to a six-day rotation, and I found my students and myself struggling with the recorder.  I went back to the drawing board and, after four years of tweaking, I developed the following strategy to help my students have the best beginning  

Where to Begin? 

There are many different methods of beginning a student’s journey on the recorder.  One can begin on A and high C, B-A-G, or even E-D-C.  In truth, a students’ journey must begin far before they even touch a recorder.  Before they pick up their instrument for the first time, their mind, hands, fingers, tongue, and air support need to be in place.    

Preparing the Heart 

My students first experience the recorder on the very first day of kindergarten music.  As they walk in, awed by my shelves bursting with instruments, they follow me while I play my recorder.  I match the tempo of their feet, and then suddenly I stop playing and freeze.  This generally causes my students to also stop.  I resume playing, and stop again.  As the kindergarteners realize that we are now playing a “game,” they begin to giggle.  Once my students can stop with me, I change my sound.  By creating jumping sounds or playing “in slow motion,” I not only expose my students to the entire range of recorder sounds, but also teach students how to respond physically and expressively to musical cues.  From the very first day, the recorder is a source of positive musical experiences.   

My kindergarteners inevitably ask me if they can play my recorder, and that’s when I have the chance to explain to them about germs.  Since I have my students begin playing recorder in January of their third grade year, I can already tell my current kindergarteners that they will get their very own recorder in January of 2022.  When they ask why, I reply “That is when your hands will be big enough to hold it, and your brain will be responsible enough not to lose it.”  

One of the biggest hurdles when learning any new skill is the motivation of the student.  If a student wants to learn, then they will persevere through any difficulties they may have.  If the recorder already has a positive place in their heart, then they will put forth the effort to persevere through the beginning squeaks and finger leaks. 

Preparing the Hands 

The recorder, along with many instruments in the general music classroom, students need to have the ability to use both their dominant and non-dominant hands.  In other areas of school life, this is not the case.  A student’s non-dominant hand is often ignored throughout the rest school day, with the exception of physical education and typing classes.   

Luckily, music is a subject where this lack can be remedied.  Making sure students learn hand clapping games and play instruments that use both hands equally (rhythm sticks, tubanos, maracas, barred instruments, just to name a few) will help them build capacity in their non-dominant hand. 

With the recorder, having the left hand be the hand that goes on top is counter-intuitive to many students that are right-handed.  Third grade begins with many folk dances and body-percussion activities that lead with the left hand.  In the fall of third grade, I challenge my third graders to try allowing their left hand to brush their teeth, hold their forks, and we also learn the “Left Hand Dance.” 

Left-Hand Dance 

Music:  “Rakes of Mallow,” from Rhythmically Moving 2. 

Opening position:  Closed circle.  Students have a scarf in their left hand, right hand is behind their back. 

A Section: 

  • Students circle to the left for 16 beats while bouncing their scarf with their left hand. 
  • Students circle to the right for 16 beats while continuing to bounce their scarf with their left hand. 

B Section: 

  • With their left hand, students throw the scarf in the air and catch it three times.  On the fourth measure, have students turn alone.  This section is performed twice. 

Extension: 

Once students have mastered the basic dance, the next step is to allow students to create their own B section where they explore what other artful actions they can do with only their left hand moving.   

Preparing the Fingers 

As much as nondominant hands are ignored in daily life, fingers and finger dexterity are even further ignored.  As my teaching career has progressed, I have seen first-hand the effects of students raised with video games and tablets:  students are falling behind in gross motor skills, fine motor skills, and general muscle tone. 

About six years ago, I began to notice a significant decline in my students’ ability to actually place their finger over the hole on the recorder.  I soon realized the issue was not focus or inattention, but a simple lack of muscle development.  My students had never been asked to independently move their ring finger in their whole life.  I spoke with my school’s occupational therapist about what exercises I could do with my students to help develop those finger muscles.  She suggested playing with PlayDough or digging in sand/dirt as probably the most practical solutions.  Unfortunately, my carpeted music room was not the best space for those activities, so I created my own finger dexterity exercises based on the following hand-shapes.   

 

After the shapes were named by my students, we used them in steady-beat listening exercises.  I would call out two animals, and students would alternate between making those two shapes with both hands.  As students progressed, we would try patterns of three animals, or have student leaders. 

Another finger-related intervention I have tried is the “headless” recorder.  My school purchases recorders for my third graders, that they use until they leave us until fifth grade.  My fifth graders choose to donate it back to the school or take it with them.  I have a class set of recorders where I have removed the head joint.  This way, students can look down inside the recorder and see if their fingers are fully covering the holes.  Students have the opportunity to become familiar with the layout of the recorder and also do not have a way of producing sound. 

Preparing the Tongue and the Air 

To help my students be prepared for articulating notes on the recorder, I began using beat-function syllables.  A beat-function system using t’s or d’s to articulate notes transfers extremely well to articulating notes.  Starting about two weeks before they get their recorders, I have students read rhythms with their hand in front of their mouths.  This way, they can feel the way that the air is separated when d’s and t’s are articulated.  Because articulation is not visible to students, it can be a difficult concept for them to understand. 

Airflow is critical to producing the sweet sound of the recorder, and producing gentle air is another difficult concept to master.  I pair practicing articulation with practicing gentle air.  I used to use tissues for this activity, but last year I experimented with using craft feathers (purchasable at any craft store for less than two cents per student)with great success.  This lesson occurs about one to two weeks before they receive their recorders. 

I directed students to hold the feather about an inch from their lips.  After opening their lips a tiny bit, students practiced reading rhythms and watched their feather move with their articulations. Then I had students use only a tiny amount of air, to see if they could read rhythms and have the feather only move a tiny amount.  At the end of class, students took the feathers home as homework for music class. 

My Students are Prepared! 

After students have been prepared, it is finally time to begin to actually play the recorder!  Again, there are many choices for the music teacher.  I strongly recommend trying any recorder before buying a classroom set.  I prefer to use recorders that are white or ivory colored.  With those recorders, a teacher can spot an improperly covered hole from across the room. 

There are also a few choices about what pitches students should learn first. 

Beginning with A-C’ 

Benefits: 

  • Students are able to play so-mi songs immediately 
  • Left-hand pointer finger is the only finger that moves 
  • La can be added by having students lift the left-hand thumb 

Challenges: 

  • The left hand is the only hand used 
  • The recorder is unstable (especially if going to a high D) due to the lack of fingers covering holes 
  • It is difficult to correctly place the right hand since it does not cover holes 
  • Students can overblow and still produce the correct pitches 

Beginning with B-A-G 

Benefits: 

  • Students are able to play mi-re-do songs immediately 
  • A majority of recorder methods begin using this tone set 
  • The notes are organized logically; fingers move in order 

Challenges: 

  • The left hand is the only hand used 
  • It is difficult to correctly place the right hand since it does not cover holes 
  • Students can overblow and still produce the correct pitches 

Beginning with E-G 

Benefits: 

  • Students are able to play sol-mi songs immediately 
  • Students must use gentle air 
  • The right hand is immediately used and in the correct placement 
  • The left hand covers the holes, but the fingers do not move once they are placed 
  • Once E-G is mastered, it is simple to add the notes B and A. 

Challenges: 

  • The student must use the correct amount of air and have six holes correctly covered; otherwise the E will not speak correctly 
  • It can be difficult to judge whether a student is overblowing or if a student has an improperly covered hole. 

The Very First Day 

The class before the students get the recorders is when I allow them to discover with the headless recorders and teach them about “feather breaths.”  When we actually get recorders, our only focus is to produce a low E. 

Materials:  Labeled recorders for each student, tenor recorder for teacher, bead necklaces. 

  • Before students get their recorders, class recorder rules are reviewed:
  • Feather Air
  • Left hand on top 
  • Cover the holes 
  • Don’t Bite!  (This is the only brand-new concept – I remind my students to not bite their new best friend!) 
  • Recorders are distributed.  Students are asked to count the number of holes on their recorder to ensure that all recorders were correctly produced.  (This keeps students occupied as they are being distributed.) 
  • Using my tenor recorder, I demonstrate left hand on top with “chicken fingers.”  (The thumb hole and first hole are covered.)  All students hold their recorder high in the air with the “chicken fingers” displayed until the entire class has their left hand on top. 
  • Nonverbally, I have the class use simultaneous imitation – they do exactly what I do, when I do it.  I demonstrate feather air and then together we play the first note – a B. 
  • If the class is successful, I add one more finger for “bunny fingers” and we play an A.  I model moving from A to B, and they simultaneously imitate me.   
  • Before moving to “unicorn fingers,” I have my students take their recorder out of their mouths, turn it horizontally (with bunny fingers still in place) and watch their ring finger cover the hole.  We do this ten times before we return to our nonverbal simultaneous imitation. 
  • I model moving from “bunny” to “unicorn” – A to G.  Once the G is in unison and student fingers are in the correct place, I have students stop and pretend to “spray glue” their left hands so that they cannot move. 
  • Next, I demonstrate adding the next two fingers on the right hand, so that students are playing an E.  We play E-G patterns as we listen. 
  • Once the class has their fingers in low-E position, I have students stand in a circle.  I walk around and listen to each student individually, as all students practice.  If students can play the E successfully, I put a bead “necklace of knowledge” on them and challenge them to add one more finger to play a low D.  If everybody earns a “necklace of knowledge,” we stop and have a class celebration. 
  • At the end of class, students return their necklaces, put their recorders back in their bags and then return them to the class bin.   

Troubleshooting 

Even with all of the above preparation, students still squeak, and that is okay!  If my students are squeaking, or playing the upper octaves, I check 3 things – finger placement, thumb placement, and have them blow slower.  If they are still have problems, I take their recorder, turn their mouthpiece backwards and have them blow while I cover the holes.  If the sound is good, then it is a finger issue.  If not, it is easier for them to fix their air support when they don’t have to worry about finger placement. 

If you have a student that has limb differences, I strongly encourage you to check out the website Another Way to Play, or check out the article “Adaptive Solutions:  Recorder Instruction for Students With Physical Differences” by Valerie Thomforde in The Orff Echo (Vol. 51, No. 1). I’ve had students with different abilities use alternative fingerings or adaptive recorders if needed.  The important part is to be open with your student and their family, and make adaptations before recorders are handed out.   

Final Notes 

Once students know their first two notes, they will soon be on their way to improvising, creating, and composing on their own!  If you are looking for more information on how to integrate recorder with your classes, try visiting your local Orff chapter, taking Orff levels, and stay tuned to Teaching with Orff for more high-quality lesson plans! 

Originally published by Teaching With Orff on September 26, 2018

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Making It Work: Instrument Storage and Organization 2 https://teachingwithorff.com/making-it-work-instrument-storage-2/ https://teachingwithorff.com/making-it-work-instrument-storage-2/#comments Wed, 24 May 2017 15:31:29 +0000 https://teachingwithorff.com/?p=2028 The Active Music and Movement Classroom: So Much Fun “in Store!” Drue M. Bullington Part 2 of a glimpse into one teacher’s answer to the challenges of having students manage the use and storage of a variety of instruments in an active elemental music and movement classroom. (Read Part 1 here) Un-tuned Percussion Storage: All…

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The Active Music and Movement Classroom: So Much Fun “in Store!”

Drue M. Bullington

Part 2 of a glimpse into one teacher’s answer to the challenges of having students manage the use and storage of a variety of instruments in an active elemental music and movement classroom. (Read Part 1 here)

instrument storage

Un-tuned Percussion

Storage:

All of the “kleines schlagwerk,” or little percussion instruments in my classroom, are stored in labeled plastic bins. These are mostly stored in the top shelf along the back wall of my classroom. They are about 3.5 feet off of the ground– tall enough that the little hands aren’t tempted, but short enough that most first graders through 6th graders can easily access the bins to find and put away instruments as needed. The instruments are sorted by “Ring,” “Scrape,” “Click,” “Shake,” “Special” and “Skin.” Our hand drum collection is rather large, so I store them in cabinets on the sides of the room.

instrument storage

Procedures:

In younger grades, I get the whole basket down and either pass out the instruments or have students choose one at a time. In older grades, they are more accustomed to a gentle, orderly approach and are trusted to choose instruments on their own. The rule is that once an instrument is chosen, there are “No tradesies!” This prevents the constant visiting of the instrument “store” for returns and exchanges. Putting them away is an independent task for older students entirely but for younger students they return them to the bins, and I put it away on the shelf.

Recorders

The student recorders are stored in a cabinet along the sidewall of my classroom, which I also built. There are cubbies for each class in the school grades 3-6. Each cubby holds a plastic bin with the class’s recorders.

instrument storage

The recorders in the bins are owned by the individual student, or are on loan from the school. (Everyone has their own recorder assigned to them to use and I keep a bucket of spare recorders available if students forget theirs for whatever reason. I gave up on trying to enforce the responsibility past 3rd grade.) Generally, the students would rather play their own recorder than use the loaners, so it works out pretty well. I have a 6th grade helper who takes the used recorders to the cafeteria for cleaning and sanitizing regularly. I figure if it’s getting the trays and flatware clean enough to eat from, it’s good enough for getting our recorders clean.

Procedure:

In each class there is a “Recorder Manager.” The students earn this meaningless title by having their “home spot” nearest the recorder shelves. (I usually try to plan ahead and assign the more responsible types to those seats.) These students listen for me to say something about needing recorders and then they swing into action by taking the recorder bin from the shelf and placing it in the middle of the floor. They take three recorders from the top and pass them out to the students in the class. While they are passing these out, the students in the home spots next to the manager’s spot go to the bin, and pass out three, and then the next person three, etc. I used to just have the kids use “common sense” and anyone in the room could get a recorder and hand it to its owner. There were two pitfalls here: 1. Common sense was fleeting because they would all go at one time.  Twenty kids would crowd around the same bin on the floor and four or five of them would bonk their heads together and then walk around dazed with their hands rubbing big goose eggs. 2. They would all look for their own instead of just taking a random one and giving it to its owner. As a result, we now pass them out three at a time going around the circle.

Tubanos

The World Music Drumming is a fantastic resource, and we are lucky enough to have acquired a lot of drums over the past few years to bring these possibilities to life. I store these drums on the side of the room under the recorders. I use the same colored floor tape around the bottoms of the drums to help the students see a color-coded difference in the drums, and to help them put them away in the correct area marked by a floor tape square. These colors are also helpful in projected visuals of large drums = blue, medium drums = red, and small drums = yellow.

instrument storage

When drumming, seating is an issue sometimes. I found these great stools for $4.99 each! They stack and take up little space in the room and are perfect for a student to sit upon behind a drum.

Ukuleles

Storage:

I have 30 ukuleles in my classroom. They all hang on rubber-coated garden tool hooks on the same long, open wall in the back of the room above the Orff and un-tuned percussion instrument shelves. These are placed about 4 feet from the ground so taller kids can easily get them and put them away. I never numbered these because it hasn’t ever mattered who gets what instrument because they are all the same.

instrument storageProcedures:

The students simply walk back and get a ukulele, and then we play them for class. When we’re done, they put it on an empty hook.

A quick note on tuning: I don’t do it! I teach a group of sixth grade students, usually members of the orchestra program, and they tune the ukuleles daily in exchange for one Jolly Rancher! I consider it money well spent!

When we need supplies:

Sometimes you need to get kids a lot of supplies quickly for an activity; a pencil, a paper, an eraser, a clipboard; dry erase markers, marker boards, and eraser, etc. When this need arises, I make a line of the supplies, and have the students follow the leader, buffet style, to pick things up. They circle around the room to their home spot with all of their “swag” and then we can get started. We put things away in reverse. It’s the fastest way I’ve found to efficiently manage getting and putting away these kinds of things.

instrument storage

Organizing the instruments and supplies and helping your students independently manage their use in your classroom is an effective way of maximizing the instructional time you have with your students.

This is a window into storage and management of instruments and supplies in our classroom. I know that it won’t be a perfect model somewhere else, but I hope it helped spark some of your creativity! I would invite you to share your ideas and pictures in posted comments below to keep the conversation going about what works in your world.

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Playing With Improvisation https://teachingwithorff.com/playing-with-improvisation/ https://teachingwithorff.com/playing-with-improvisation/#comments Wed, 07 Sep 2016 17:22:11 +0000 https://teachingwithorff.com/?p=1434 Playing With Improvisation 2, 4, 6, 8 – Recorder Version B Section 2, 4, 6, 8 – RECORDER Teaching Process: Sing song and ask students to label form. (abca) Sing the first 4-beat motive, the a motive. Students echo the a motive. Students sing the a motives and you sing the b & c motives.…

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Playing With Improvisation

2, 4, 6, 8 – Recorder Version

2, 4, 6, 8 music

B Section

meet me at 3 o'clock music

2, 4, 6, 8 – RECORDER Teaching Process:

  • Sing song and ask students to label form. (abca)
  • Sing the first 4-beat motive, the a motive. Students echo the a motive.
  • Students sing the a motives and you sing the b & c motives.
  • Students sing the song and pat the steady beat.
  • Change steady beat to ‘pat-clap-hands out–clap’ and students imitate pattern while singing song.
  • Use the steady beat pattern for the a motives and students create new steady beat movements for the b & c motives to emphasize the form.
  • Present PowerPoint Slide 2. Speak B Section text.
  • Students perform ABA Form (A=2, 4, 6, 8 with steady beat movements & B=‘Meet Me at 3 O’clock spoken)
  • Students make a circle. Assign partners in a SINGLE circle with partners facing each other.
  • Partner dance for A Section:
    1. “2, 4, 6, 8” = pat–clap–partner–clap
    2. “Meet me at the garden gate” = double high 5 with partner, keep hands connected andchange places
    3. “If I’m late, don’t wait” = 4 steps to turn to face the person behind you and this personbecomes your new partner
    4. “2, 4, 6, 8” = pat-clap–partner–clap
  • Partner dance for B Section:
    1. “Meet me at 3 o’clock” = shake RIGHT HAND with partner you are facing and pull pastthem
    2. “Meet me at 3 o’clock” = shake LEFT HAND with the next person you are facing and pullpast them
    3. “Meet me at 3 o’clock” = shake RIGHT HAND with the next person you are facing and pullpast them
    4. “And don’t be late!” = shake pointer finger at them and this person becomes your new partner to repeat the entire game
  • Present PowerPoint Slides 3 & 4. Students identify gates as letter names or solfege.
  • Students sing song following gates on 3 line staff. Highlight notes as students sing by clicking your mouse or space bar.
  • Students sing song again using text or solfege. (PowerPoint Slides 5 & 6)
  • Present PowerPoint Slide 7. Students name notes on staff and then show fingerings on recorder. As each note is clicked in, students play the B Section text rhythm on one pitch at a time.
  • Present PowerPoint Slide 8. Students sing letter names and finger notes on recorder. Click in note names as they are sung using mouse or space bar.
  • Students perform A Section melody on recorder. (PowerPoint Slide 9)
  • Perform rhythm of BX & SG parts using body percussion (pats & snaps).
  • Present PowerPoint Slide 10. At barred instruments, students set up in G pentatonic. (Take off C’s & F’s.)
  • Students play a G simple bordun (G & D’) on beats 1 & 3 of each measure (this is the pat from the body percussion pattern).
  • Students play octave G’s on the snaps from the body percussion pattern.
  • Assign parts and perform while singing the song.
  • Present PowerPoint Slide 11. Students use pitch stack of the notes from the song (B-A-G-E) for improvisation. Students choose a note to play for each line of the “Meet me at 3 o’clock” B Section and then play BBAG for “And don’t be late!” (Or you can have your students suggest a pattern of notes for the last line.)
  •  Give students as much choice as possible for their improvisation of the B Section depending on known notes on recorder.
  • 1⁄2 students play the game and 1⁄2 students play recorder. Trade parts.

Improvisation:

  • This lesson keeps the improvisation simple, however, students could also improvise using all 4 pitches on each line.
  • Students could use all 5 pitches of the G pentatonic scale by adding D into the pitch stack.
  • The B Section can be used for assessment by having students play only 1 line at a time as a solo.This moves quickly and you can assess many students in a short amount of time.

PowerPoint Tips:

  • Slides 3-6: Each gate gets a background color when you click the mouse or space bar in Slide Show. The gates that are split represent 2 eighth notes and will get their background color at the same time. This process helps students track the melody.
  • Slide 7: The order of the notes is: G E A B and for each note the order is: note on staff, note name, and then fingering.
  • Slide 8: The letter names of the notes can be clicked in with the mouse or space bar. You can click them in as students name them or you can talk through the notes and then students can play the song with the letters still in place. Slide 9 is the melody in notation with NO letter names above the notes.
  • Slide 10: Click to show the text “Take off C & F.” Click again and the C’s will leave the slide. One more click will remove the F’s.

Making it work for you:

  • The song with the game can be done as an activity alone.
  • Practice the 3rd motive with your students. This motive is the challenging motive of this song and once they get that one it is usually very successful.

Excerpts from Playing With Improvisation: Technology With Integrity in the Orff Classroom by Lisa Sullivan. Copyright © 2014 by MIE Publications. All rights reserved. Used with permission.

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Recorder Lesson: Que Llueva https://teachingwithorff.com/recorder-lesson-que-llueva/ https://teachingwithorff.com/recorder-lesson-que-llueva/#comments Wed, 06 Apr 2016 16:52:50 +0000 https://teachingwithorff.com/?p=1162 In this excerpt from Journey Around the Globe with Recorder!*, Darla Meek shares her lesson for soprano recorder, Que Llueva. This lesson includes a game, an Orff arrangement, and a contrasting section composed by the students. *Copyright © 2016 by Sweet Pipes. Used with permission. Journey Around the Globe With Recorder! is a series of 24 lessons for…

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In this excerpt from Journey Around the Globe with Recorder!*, Darla Meek shares her lesson for soprano recorder, Que Llueva. This lesson includes a game, an Orff arrangement, and a contrasting section composed by the students.

*Copyright © 2016 by Sweet Pipes. Used with permission. Journey Around the Globe With Recorder! is a series of 24 lessons for teaching soprano recorder.  Power points are included for each lesson to aid in presenting the material.

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Making It Work: Recorder Storage https://teachingwithorff.com/making-it-work-recorder-storage/ https://teachingwithorff.com/making-it-work-recorder-storage/#comments Wed, 06 Apr 2016 16:09:09 +0000 https://teachingwithorff.com/?p=1168 I am the type of teacher who uses recorders with my students throughout the year. Sometimes we use the recorders every lesson for several classes in a row; sometimes we don’t. Because I use my recorders in this way, asking the children to take them home and bring them back each class does not work…

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I am the type of teacher who uses recorders with my students throughout the year. Sometimes we use the recorders every lesson for several classes in a row; sometimes we don’t. Because I use my recorders in this way, asking the children to take them home and bring them back each class does not work well for me. Many teachers keep recorders in the classroom for a variety of reasons, and storing them in a hygienic and easily accessible way is a conundrum.

Each classroom and teaching situation is different, but this is how I make it work…

I had my school custodians save the cardboard paper towel roll centers from the paper towel machines. The tubes are shorter and sturdier than the tubes from grocery store paper towels. I purchased one of the Hefty brand plastic tubs from Target for each class and stuffed the containers with the tubes until they fit snugly. I labeled each bin by writing the class information on a 4×6 card and placing it at the front of the bin between the tubes and the plastic. (This makes it easy to change out for next year.) One recorder goes in each tube, mouthpiece up. The tubes keep the recorders from touching. When I stack the bins three high, they are the perfect height for the children to retrieve and return their recorders easily. The bins for the classes using recorders on that day go on the top of the stack. When class is over I leave the lid off of the bin until the next day so the recorders completely dry before closing the lid. This avoids the need for cleaning rods and cases, which have caused many a problem for me in the past, and saves time. The children just drop the recorder in the bin and return to their seats. In the morning I close the bins, and re-stack for the next set of classes. I keep their cases and cleaning rods in milk crates on top of cabinets in the hallway. At the end of the year, students who have purchased their own recorders may take them home or leave them with me in the bin for next year.

What methods for recorder storage have worked for you? Please share your method and explain why it works best for your teaching situation. We would love to see pictures of your recorders in the storage solutions you have contrived. Your idea may be just the thing that works for someone else!

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Recorder Lesson: Green Sally Up https://teachingwithorff.com/recorder-lesson-green-sally-up/ https://teachingwithorff.com/recorder-lesson-green-sally-up/#comments Wed, 09 Mar 2016 17:45:46 +0000 https://teachingwithorff.com/?p=1120 In this excerpt from Recorder: A Creative Sequence*, Alan Purdum shares his lesson for soprano recorder, Green Sally Up. Students use low D and E for playing and improvising, and experience the jazz elements in a children’s hand clapping game. *Copyright © 2014 by Cedar River Music. Used with permission. The third volume in the Creative Sequence series,…

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In this excerpt from Recorder: A Creative Sequence*, Alan Purdum shares his lesson for soprano recorder, Green Sally UpStudents use low D and E for playing and improvising, and experience the jazz elements in a children’s hand clapping game.

*Copyright © 2014 by Cedar River Music. Used with permission. The third volume in the Creative Sequence series, Recorder is a sequential curriculum of folk songs, games, and creative student activities to incorporate the soprano recorder into the music classroom.

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Lesson: Candy Corn Composition https://teachingwithorff.com/lesson-candy-corn-composition/ https://teachingwithorff.com/lesson-candy-corn-composition/#comments Wed, 30 Sep 2015 01:27:34 +0000 https://teachingwithorff.com/?p=884 Amy Fenton shares a creative process for capturing the rhythms of the season in her Halloween lesson for soprano recorder: Candy Corn Composition.

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October brings crimson leaves, glowing jack-o-lanterns, and children eager for Halloween tricks and treats.

Amy Fenton shares a creative process for capturing the rhythms of the season in her Halloween lesson for soprano recorder: Candy Corn Composition.

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