Product Description
Designed to provide sample month-by-month and yearly plans for each grade level from one to six, this step-by-step guide features a collection of more than 200 songs—many of which are new to the Third Edition—organized precisely in the sequence of the Kodaly Method. KEY TOPICS: It presents a highly sequential music program in which singing, moving, listening, musical reading and writing, improvising and composing are the means through w… More >>
The Kodaly Method I: Comprehensive Music Education
Tags: Comprehensive, education, kodaly, kodaly method, Method, music, music education, music program, reading and writing
#1 by Rita Cassia T. Alsina on April 20, 2010 - 9:30 am
Here you find a accessible explanation about basic but unknow concepts of learning music. Its worth read each page with atention.
Rating: 5 / 5
#2 by Custard Puff on April 20, 2010 - 11:34 am
a very helpful book especially for inexperience music teacher like me, loads of ideas which stimulate and also help me to create other new ideas.
Rating: 5 / 5
#3 by Kari on April 20, 2010 - 2:25 pm
This book provides a solid foundation for teaching with Kodály method in the United States. As well as curriculum ideas for Kindergarten through grade 6, there are many songs for classroom use.
I think that if you will be teaching Kindergarten you should also own Music in Preschool by K. Forrai. This book gives only passing notice to the Kindergarten year, in my opinion
Rating: 5 / 5
#4 by Anonymous on April 20, 2010 - 4:58 pm
I read the first edition of Choksy’s “Kodaly Method” after my first year of teaching, and thought, “why didn’t they teach me this in college?”. The next year, I bought the second edition when it came out, and used it as a guide for teaching for many years. It had become so tattered and worn, but I still referred back to it. I broke down and bought the third edition last summer, while doing my level 2 Kodaly certification. I wasn’t sure I wanted to pay that much for the book, but it has been worth it.
For anyone starting out in teaching music, you need this book. It gives grade by grade guidance of what to teach, how to teach it, and suggested materials to use. You might not set up your curriculum exactly as stated in the book, but you will definitely find useful teaching examples for the main concepts at each grade level.
The song anthology in the back has been expanded and is more complete than ever before. There is quite a bit of pedagogical information for each song, that is included in this edition.
My only question is “Why don’t American colleges and universities use this method as the basis for preparing its teachers?”. It is definitely the most thorough and sound foundation to build upon at the undergraduate level; then procede into Orff-Schulwerk training at the graduate level. Both of these approaches have been so integrated into American music teaching, they deserve more intensive study in teacher preparation than the casual mention or superficial discussion that they seem to currently receive.
Rating: 5 / 5