St. Patrick’s Day

Lucky Leprechaun

Lucky Leprechaun

Game Directions: Have the class form a circle. Choose one child to be a leprechaun. The leprechaun marches around the inside of the circle. At the end of the second phrase the leprechaun stops in front of a child. They join hands and they “jig” – left heel forward, right heel forward, etc. The children in the circle should do a “sailors hornpipe” at the same time (fold arms and jig in place). Now two children march in the inside circle. They choose two more partners and jig again. Continue with four, then eight, until the entire class has had a turn.

 A video of the St. Patrick’s Day Jig that is played the same way is included in the Musicplay Digital Resources and on www.Musicplayonline.com.   Use the search engine to find St. Patrick’s Day Jig.

 John the Leprechaun
John John the leprechaun
Went to school with nothing on.
Teacher said, “That’s not fair!
Give him back his underwear!”

 Suggestions:  Have the children take off one shoe and step the beat while they say the leprechaun poem. The foot with the shoe on will make a louder noise, and will emphasize that that beat is accented.Have the children take off one shoe and step the beat while they say the leprechaun poem. The foot with the shoe on will make a louder noise, and will emphasize that that beat is accented.

Create accompaniment for a poem:

1.  Create accompaniment with an Ostinato:

– Have the students think of an ostinato to say with the poem

For example:  Will you please be fair?  or  Leprechaun had nothing on!

– Choose non-pitched instruments and have a small group play the ostinato on instruments while the rest of the class says the poem.

 

2.  Create an Accompaniment for the Poem with Word Highlights:

1. Teach the poem.

2. Play the poem on non-pitched percussion instruments. (Play the rhythm of the poem as shown above.)

3. Review families of classroom instruments: metals, woods, drums, shakes and scrapes Try playing the poem on each instrument family. Try playing one line 1 on metal, 2 on woods, 3 on drums, etc.

4. Have the class circle or underline words in the poem that they feel are the most important. In your class, students could use different colored markers to underline words.

5. Choose rhythm instruments, found sounds or body percussion for each highlighted word. Play and say the poem using all the rhythm instruments that you’ve chosen.

6. Just play the poem – think the words.

7. Decide on a final form. You could say the poem, say the poem with all instruments, say the poem with highlighting instruments, just play the poem with the highlighting instruments. The creators should decide on the form. As an extension to this activity, create a simple song using the lyrics. When students have tried either rhythm ostinatos with a poem or word highlighting a poem as a class, it will be easier for them to try doing this with a group

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www.musicplayonline.com
Our new online resource is coming along really well.  It’s free to use until Aug. 1, 2016, so try out the games, songs, activities while it’s free!

Musicplayonline Includes:
– 700+ song movies, with both lyrics and notation movies
– hundreds of children’s demo movies of action songs, singing games and performances
– hundreds of name the note activities and solfa note naming activies – included for every reading song
– POP Quizzes to practice terms, symbols, dynamics, tempo, note names
– Games to learn comparibles:  fast/slow, loud/quiet, beat/no beat, beat/rhythm
– solfa practice movies:  echo, poison melody, read handsigns, read note names, listen and sing and assessment
– rhythm practice movies:  11 levels of rhythm to practice using echo, poison rhythm, read, listen and say, assessment

Still to be added
– lesson plans and teacher notes
– printable arrangements for every song:  piano, ukulele (C and D), guitar, Orff and Boomwhacker
– printable worksheets, class big book templates, for many, many songs!
– dance, theory,
– guitar is coming soon!

 

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