Sigur Ros, Burnout, & the Joys of Making a Good Playlist

By |2021-11-30T20:15:29-05:00November 29th, 2021|General Music, Inspiration, Middle school, Music Service Learning, New Teachers, Stories, Teaching, Teaching Philosophy|

I have roughly 200 playlists in my Apple Music library. Not the algorithmic ones that our benevolent tech overlords provide for us - my very own creations. 200 of them. Perhaps that’s more than any sane human should have.  Most of them are for me. Some are [...]

Culturally Responsive Teaching: Using Exit Tickets to Foster Joy

By |2021-06-22T10:08:26-05:00June 21st, 2021|Choir, General Music, Inspiration, Middle school, Series, Stories, Teaching, Teaching Philosophy, The Asterisk, Virtual education|

Today’s Topic:  Culturally responsive teaching with exit tickets (fostering joy) Today’s Tip:   Utilize daily exit tickets for qualitative data that informs your practice. Exit tickets work!  Since the pandemic started, I have been using exit tickets to gauge student engagement and understanding. It started as a [...]

Research to Practice: Using Data for More than Just Grades

By |2020-10-20T08:29:11-05:00October 20th, 2020|Band, Choir, General Music, Orchestra, Research to Practice, Teaching|

I used to think that research was complicated and couldn’t help me in my classroom. I used to see the Music Educators Journal arrive in my mailbox, flip through, sigh, think to myself – “If I only had time….,” and then add the issue to a growing pile on my dining room table. [...]

The “New Normal”: Teaching Elementary Music in Prince Edward Island, Canada

By |2020-09-22T05:51:48-05:00September 21st, 2020|General Music, Remote music teaching, Stories, Teaching, Virtual education|

Heading back to the classroom on Prince Edward Island I love my beautiful province. It is tiny, surrounded by water, and a protected haven from the chaos of our present health crisis. Prince Edward Island has managed to stay safe from community transmission of COVID -19. With [...]

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