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Music Teachers Resources: Making Students Love Music
Sep 13th
Music Teachers Resources: Making Students Love Music
When your private studio has innovative and interactive music teachers resources, you can certainly focus on developing your students’ interests in music. Through these, you can also motivate them to craft music as both their profession and passion. Teaching music can be a difficult task. It requires much time and effort; thus, makes music education more challenging, dynamic and versatile.
Ideally, a music teacher must have these objectives in mind:
• to offer a custom-made and challenging program for his musically-inclined pupils to maximize their music potential;
• to provide a holistic music education through listening, performing (solo and group) and composing skills; and,
• To realize that everyone has such potentials to understand, express and create music.
Effective music teachers have such resources that can really encourage students to attend classes regularly, motivate them to participate and cooperate, and most of all, inspire them to love music. Many music teachers resources are readily available via the Internet. In just a matter of a few clicks, you can learn how to enhance your teaching strategies pertaining to music education.
There are various music teachers resources that can definitely be used as your motivating factors in teaching music to a vast number of students with different personalities, demands, needs and desires. Here is my comprehensive list:
• Cooperative learning. It is an instructional paradigm in which teams of students work on structured tasks such as homework assignments, laboratory experiments, or design projects. It is being administered under conditions that meet five criteria: positive interdependence, individual accountability, face-to-face interaction, appropriate use of collaborative skills, and regular self-assessment of team functioning.
Many studies have shown that when correctly implemented, cooperative learning improves many aspects like information acquisition and retention, higher-level thinking skills, interpersonal and communication skills, and self-confidence. In here, it seeks to foster some benefits from the freedom of individual and collaborative learning.
• Opportunities. It can be an advantage if an enhanced curriculum is made to unleash students’ musical skills and talents. They must be given such chance to perform and compete – be it solo or as a group, representing their school in music-related activities as well as various competitions.
• Exposure. Also, just like opportunities, exposure can be of great help to become more interested. Familiarity and awareness to several music scenes can actually make them look forward to the next musical sessions. They can attend concerts, recitals or band rehearsals. Visiting some professional or conventional recording studios can be fun and exciting ways of learning music while exposing them to the real world.
With all these innovative and effective music teachers resources and strategies, I am so certain that you could meet your academic goals and visions. Good luck and happy teaching!
More relevant and effective music teachers resources, visit this music teaching site.
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Landscape Photography: Making the Most of the Sky
Sep 4th
Landscape Photography: Making the Most of the Sky
Good landscape photography requires not only all your skills as a photographer; it also takes a little cooperation from mother nature. You can do everything right and still end up with a dull photo if the conditions are wrong.
All landscape photographers have to deal with the weather in their work. That’s fine if you live close to your location and can come back as often as you like. But when you are just passing through, you have to take your chances along with the rest of the tourists. That’s why no matter how skilled (or unskilled) a photographer may be, truly unique images usually require a certain element of luck.
When you visit a great location, the last thing you usually want to see is a grey, overcast sky. But believe it or not, a cloudless blue sky can be just as bad. A plain sunny sky, while beautiful to look at, offers very little to a composition, and will often produce photos destined for deletion. Sometimes the best you can do is angle the camera down to eliminate most of the sky, and rely on the foreground to provide the interest.
On the other hand, an interesting sky offers so much more potential for a great photo. Even better is the fact that no two cloud formations are ever quite the same, so you have the chance of capturing a truly unique image – no matter how often that location has been photographed before you.
So, when you encounter a great sky, how do you make the most of it in your photograph? Here are a few pointers.
Tip #1. Firstly, it never hurts to keep a polarising filter handy. The polariser is like a pair of sunglasses; it reduces glare and reflection. It can also increase the contrast between the sky and the clouds, adding even more impact to a good cloud formation.
Most polarising filters rotate on the front of the lens, allowing you to control the level of polarisation. Try to use good judgement when using a polariser; it is easy to go too far and produce skies that are way too dark and unnatural. With experience, you will be able to use your polariser to add extra ‘punch’ to your skies while maintaining a natural look.
Tip #2. Experiment with your horizon. If you have a truly impressive sky, it can be effective to let the sky fill the frame as much as possible. You may choose to completely ignore the rule of thirds and position your horizon close to the bottom of the frame. When your foreground subject is dwarfed by a great sky, the impact of the sky is even more impressive.
Tip #3. Use the shapes in the clouds. Clouds are not just fluffy lumps in the sky; they contain shapes, lines and patterns which you can use to create the visual flow of your composition.
Try to recognise the way the lines or shapes in the clouds lead the eye. You may start to notice a definite pattern leading strongly to the left, to the right, or even up and down. This pattern should help you to shape a more effective composition. For example, if you have a good subject in the foreground (let’s say it’s a tree) and all the shapes in the sky are pointing to the left, you might consider positioning your tree to the left of the frame. That way the leading effect of the sky will draw the eye to the subject; the sky will be doing all the hard work of the composition for you!
Tip #4. Be patient. The clouds are always moving, sometimes fast and sometimes very slowly. There will be times when the formation is not right for your composition, but if you are patient the right moment will come when everything falls into place. Along with talent and technique, a good landscape photographer also needs plenty of patience.
Tip #5. Choose the most attractive light. It is a well known rule that the best light for landscape photography is usually early in the morning or late in the afternoon. This is not just beneficial for objects on the ground. The softer, more colourful light creates much more attractive conditions in the sky. If taking your photos in the afternoon, take the extra trouble to wait around for sunset, when your sky may literally turn to gold.
Visit http://www.naturesimage.com.au and check out Andrew Goodall’s landscape and outback collections for some images of spectacular skies. If you found these tips helpful, you should check out Andrew’s top selling ebook “Photography in Plain English” and also sign up to the free online newsletter.
Music Video 2000, “Hear My Cry” (c) 2000 Serious Records Ltd.
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