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You are here: Home / Naturally Frugal Mom / 7 Ways To Teach Music Appreciation In Your Homeschool Classroom

7 Ways To Teach Music Appreciation In Your Homeschool Classroom

October 14, 2015 by Alea Milham Leave a Comment

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7 Ways to Teach Music Appreciation in Your Homeschool Classroom- Create fun and interactive lessons with these tips for teaching music appreciation at home.

These 7 Ways to Teach Music Appreciation in Your Homeschool Classroom are perfect for the family that doesn’t necessarily have natural music ability. When you aren’t a musician, it can be tough to share musical things with your child naturally and easily. These tips will help you to create great lessons in your home, while giving your kids something fun to enjoy while learning.

7 Ways To Teach Music Appreciation In Your Homeschool Classroom

Make your own instruments. This age old method is always popular with the little kids, but everyone can get excited about making noise with bells attached to string, or something as simple as a plastic bottle with beans inside. Making your own instruments can be a great way to teach music appreciation in your homeschool classroom.

Get familiar with popular movie composers. If you have kids that don’t like traditional classroom work, they’ll love having a chance to listen to movie sound tracks. Talk to them about how every movie has a composer who gathers music for the sound track. Some composers write music, while others simply choose and arrange. Popular composers to look for are Hans Zimmer, John Williams, Danny Elfman and James Horner.

Play popular classical pieces to see if your kids recognize them from movies and television. Many classical pieces are popular to use in movies, television, and even within songs that children are familiar with from plays, musicals, and of course church. Play snippets of songs that are traditional classical pieces and have your children name where they recognize them from. Then share their origins and how music written hundreds of years ago is still relevant today.

Make wind chimes. Wind chimes are an entirely different musical instrument of their own. Use reeds, bamboo, or even seashells to create a musical chime that is varied and allows the wind to create the music. Talk to your kids about how not all music lands perfectly on the charts for notes and melodies, but can still be beautiful.

Travel the map of music. Grab the world map or globe and pick out multiple countries to study. Each week focus on one country and their popular music styles, as well as researching their country, province, or state song. You could have your students also do research on who is most well-known in the music world in that country.

Go to a concert. There is nothing better than hearing live music to really help our kids appreciate different genres. Each semester choose a different genre of music and go to a concert featuring that genre.

Hire a music teacher. As a last resort, you may simply want to hire out music appreciation so you children are taught about how to read music, vocalize, and perhaps play an instrument. This can be something you do as part of a local homeschool group or simply someone you hire as a tutor.

These ways to teach music appreciation in your homeschool curriculum are great for anyone no matter their music experience or talent.

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About Alea Milham

Alea Milham is the owner of Premeditated Leftovers and the author of Prep-Ahead Meals from Scatch. She shares her tips for saving money and time while reducing waste in her home. Her favorite hobby, gardening, is a frugal source of organic produce for her recipes. She believes it is possible to live fully and eat well while spending less.

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Welcome. I'm Alea!

On Premeditated Leftovers I share simple recipes made with whole foods, practical shopping tips, time saving techniques, and meal planning strategies. I also share tips for minimizing food waste, so more of the food that is purchased ends up on the table.

While volunteering as a budget counselor, I realized that food is the element of most people’s budgets where they have the greatest control. I set out to develop low-cost recipes from scratch to prove it’s possible to create delicious meals on a limited budget. Eating well while spending less is about more than just creating recipes using inexpensive ingredients; it’s about creatively combining ingredients so you don’t feel deprived and are inspired to stick to your budget.

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