![]() Or teachers can introduce students to choral exploration in Blob Opera, a “ machine learning model trained on the voices of four opera singers,” developed by Google and AI artist David Li. ![]() Beatboxing musicians who create complete musical works manipulating their breathing, mouths and throats inspired this tool’s development. As school budgets are always stretched, it’s important for programs to be very inexpensive or preferably free.Īt the elementary level, students can enjoy and learn from apps such as Incredibox, where students can explore beatboxing, combining rhythms and sound effects to create unique pieces. This often leaves online tools as the default. Instrument-free musicĭuring the pandemic, most school-based music teachers have faced the challenge that elementary students don’t have access to instruments at home. Going online has forced music educators to adapt existing ideas, or adopt existing technology, to discover, invent and share ways to reach students to keep music education alive. However, as many teachers and students have discovered in the last two years of on-and-off virtual school, music lessons during the pandemic have unearthed some pleasant surprises. As a music educator, I’d hazard that few school music teachers would opt to teach their students remotely. Whether teaching how to play a musical instrument, or how to sing, teachers rely on learners’ physical cues to help them progress - cues that are often obscured either by watching someone on a screen or listening through a microphone. Learning to make music is a full mind-and-body activity. BY ROBBIE MACKAY, QUEENS UNIVERSITY, ONTARIO, THE CONVERSATION ![]()
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