Next week, I will be microteaching an introduction to the guitar.
Lesson plan adapted from LLED 360 Lesson Plan Template:
| 
   Subject: Introduction to the
  Guitar  | 
  
   Grade:   | 
  
   Date: Oct 14/20  | 
  
   Duration:  10 mins  | 
 
| 
   Lesson Overview (What this lesson is about)  | 
  
   This lesson will provide students
  an introduction to the guitar.   | 
 ||
| 
   Content
  Objectives (What
  the students will know)  | 
  
   By
  the end of the lesson, students should be able to:  ·       
  Identify different parts of the
  guitar. ·       
  Define pitch and correctly label note
  associated with each (open) string. ·       
  Read chord charts and tabs.  
 
 
  | 
 
| 
   Language
  Objectives 
 (What
  new language the students will learn)  | 
  
   ·       
  Pitch: how high or low a musical
  sound is. ·       
  Scale: any set of musical notes
  ordered by fundamental frequency or pitch. ·       
  Tab: Short for tablature, which is a
  form of writing down music for the guitar, which mainly uses numbers instead
  of music notation.   ·       
  Chord: Set of harmonic pitches/frequencies
  consisting of multiple notes heard simultaneously. ·       
  Octave: series of 8 notes occupying
  the interval between two notes.   | 
 
| 
   Materials
  and Equipment Needed for this Lesson 
  | 
 
| 
   
 Guitar 
  | 
 
| 
   
  | 
  
   Lesson Stages  | 
  
    Learning
  Activities 
  | 
  
   Time Allotted  | 
 
| 
   1.  | 
  
   Warm-up  
 Get students’ attention,
  connect to previous knowledge and explain why the topic is important to
  learn. 
  | 
  
           ·       
  Ask
  if anyone has picked up and tried to play a guitar before/familiarity with music theory.          ·       
  Play
  a short song (Serene of Water from OoT)    | 
  
   1 minute  | 
 
| 
   2.  | 
  
   Presentation 
 Teach the new content and
  language.  | 
  
           ·       
  Show students the different parts of the guitar         ·       
  Name the pitch associated with each string         ·       
  Introduce the C Major note scale          ·       
  Reading tabs         ·       
  Reading chords 
 
 
 
  | 
  
   5 minutes  | 
 
| 
   3.  | 
  
   Practice and Production 
 Practice, reinforcement, and
  extension of the new content and language. 
 
 
 
  | 
  
           ·       
  Practice
  reading tabs         ·       
  Practice
  reading chords 
 
 
  | 
  
   2 minutes  | 
 
| 
   4.  | 
  
   Closure     
 
  | 
  
           ·       
  Open
  the floor to questions         ·       
  Play
  a closing song? (Lost Woods) 
 
  | 
  
   2 minutes  | 
 
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1KaEka-xEBx7ovP7ZsFU5e6-_D3TG_-QD/view?usp=sharing

Good! Looks very interesting. On the timings: are parts 2 and 3 planned to take 7 minutes altogether? Any further breakdown of that timing?
ReplyDeleteOops, I missed that from transferring this information over; just made that change now.
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Although we had a problem of screen sharing, you did a great job of sending the link right away and started from there. Overall the lesson is well organized, the amount of info was just about right. Good work!
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Positive attributes:
- students were engaged and asked questions
- you adapted to difficulties on the fly
- allowed for Q&A
Possible improvements:
- choose a bit less content to ensure that teaching is paced a bit slower (lots to learn for non-musicians)
- make sure camera angles show what you are doing with both right and left hands at the appropriate times
- write down key terms somewhere so that we can learn vocabulary more confidently (ie. frets, neck, etc.)
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ReplyDeleteTopic: Intro to guitar
ReplyDeletea) 3, b) 3, c) 3, d) 3, e) 2, f) 3
Comments: A great overview of the basics of guitar. Some more engagement from students would be great (difficult without everyone having guitars I know), but otherwise, very well presented!
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Perhaps due to time restraints, didn't spend a lot of time reviewing parts of a guitar and other jargon. Overall Matt was very knowledgeable and spoke clearly. Not sure how I would resolve this but learner involvement was low (hard to fix without giving us all access to guitars).
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I was unable to share screen to show the ppt I wanted, but was able to link everyone to a virtual ppt I had uploaded. 10 minutes is a short amount of time and I felt that I had rushed through my presentation and spoke fast making it potentially difficult to hear what I am saying. It was also hard to show how I was holding the guitar and stuff with a laptop webcam.