The Development, Vol. I, No. 2 November 30, 2006
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The current issue of The Development, your very own PCMS eNewsletter, is now available. If you did not receive a notification in your email, please contact us to be added to the mailing list. For now, be sure to zip on over to www.pianocentralmusic.com to read and learn.
Yummy in my Tummy . . . November 29, 2006
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Repeated Kindermusik Enrollment Makes the Difference November 28, 2006
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Have you re-enrolled for Spring classes? If not, why not? If you’re considering trying something new, consider the following study regarding the benefits of a long-term Kindermusik education. Your children are worth it: read on!

Excerpts from the following article are courtesy of Lori Burkhardt. The entire article can be read here.
*****
Repeated, not sporadic enrollment makes all the difference.
Beth Frook ~ Little Hands Kindermusik, Clifton, VA www.littlehands.com
Earlier this year (2005), Beth Frook shared a granddaddy of a Foundations of Learning (FOLs) in her Kindermusik class. A local university had recently conducted a study on 3-and-5-year old children in her program titled “The Effects of Kindermusik on Behavioral Self-Regulation in Early Childhood.” *See editor’s note at the bottom of this column.
It proved what Beth—and many other Kindermusik Educators—already knew:
The longer you stay in Kindermusik, the better.
Specifically, the study showed:
“Children currently enrolled in Kindermusik showed higher levels of self-control than those never enrolled and those previously enrolled. This suggests that in order for children to reap the benefit of increased self-control as a result of Kindermusik participation, it is important to have repeated and recent Kindermusik experiences and remain enrolled in the program.”
“Four-year-old children who had been exposed to Kindermusik for longer periods of time are better off in terms of self-control—namely a child’s ability to plan, guide, and control their own behavior—than similar children with less Kindermusik history.”
“These experiences, stop-go, high-low, fast-slow, short-long, and loud-soft, whereby children’s motor behavior is guided by the music, appear to be good exercise for young children’s emerging self-regulatory skills.”
Below, Beth shares her reaction to the study and the role that research plays in her Kindermusik classes.
Editor’s note:
Study results were made available to Kindermusik in May, 2005. The study was conducted by Adam Winsler Ph.D and graduate student Lesley Ducenne in the Department of Psychology at George Mason University.
The 15-month study included 91 children between the ages of 3 and 5 who were split into three groups: 23 students currently enrolled in Kindermusik, 19 students previously enrolled in Kindermusik, and 49 students of similar family backgrounds from local preschools who had never had Kindermusik.
The children were observed doing a variety of tasks that required self-control such as slowing down their motor behavior, delaying their gratification, refraining from touching attractive but forbidden toys, quietly whispering, and compliance with instructions to initiate or stop certain behaviors. Parents also completed surveys.
The study, supervised by Adam Winsler, Ph.D, Applied Developmental Psychology in the Department of Psychology at George Mason University, will likely be presented at national conferences and published later this year.
Thanks, Lori!
Kindermusik Educator Gift Picks November 27, 2006
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Drool-worthy November 27, 2006
Posted by molliegreene in From Us to You, Instrumental Instruction, Kindermusik, Uncategorized.1 comment so far
Cute children’s clothing is everywhere. But not all of it speaks of the terrific-ness of the great composers.

At this site you can get Beethoven’s mug, as well as other famous composers, authors, artists, and philosophers, on a mug, and on everything from cozyness for your dog to underwear to t-shirts.
A David Small World November 26, 2006
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Greenville’s Museum of Art will continue to display David Small’s artwork through January 8th. David Small was chosen as the museum’s annual children’s picture book illustrator because, according to the museum’s website, he “creates appealing, personable, and sometimes eccentric characters using delicate line and vibrant color.”
Before you experience the exhibition, you may want to consider reading David Small’s books and using the handy study guide offered by the museum to teachers (and parents, of course!).

The exhibition will also be featured during the museum’s annual Holiday Party for Children on December 9th from 2-4 p.m. This event is free and open to the public. Children must be accompanied by an adult.
Children, children, I hear you Jingling November 26, 2006
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If you’re of the crafty persuasion, you’ve probably already started creating special ornaments and holiday decorations in anticipation of the month of December. If not, here’s a project that you and your children can do together to get the jingling started.

What you Need:
- egg carton
- paint
- glitter
- glue
- yarn
How to Do It:
- Cut the cone shaped pieces that separate the eggs out of an egg carton (one carton will produce five bells).
- Paint each divider using acrylic or poster paint. Let dry. Apply glue wherever you want the glitter to stick (around the edges, all over, in polka dots, etc.). Sprinkle with glitter.
- Thread an embroidery needle with yarn and poke through the top. Pull yarn through part-way. Attach jingle bell to bottom of yarn. Tie several top-ends of jingles to the door-knob.
Around the World in 15 weeks November 26, 2006
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This fall you’ve been discovering music from countries and cultures from around the world. Each one is a lovingly chosen, time-tested story, song, and rhyme passed on from parent to child from centuries near and far.
Kindermusik is dedicated to bringing you and your child this variety of high quality musical recordings for essential, developmental reasons:
Greater language proficiency—Just as you read a variety of books to expand your child’s vocabulary, exposure to a wide variety of music and sounds expands your child’s “ear vocabulary.” High quality musical recordings and real instruments help your child “fine tune” her ear to recognize and imitate the sounds that make up words and language.
Spatial awareness—When a child listens to music, her mind perceives the sound in multi-dimensional ways. The sound is loud or soft, fast or slow, it moves up and down, or left to right. Eventually, she’ll use that “awareness of space” to work with her body when she walks through the living room and tries not to hit the coffee table. Much later, this same awareness is necessary skill for learning how to get around things, jump, run, and move in zig-zag ways.
Temporal reasoning—You hear this skill in action when a preschooler tells a story. He starts with his own experience and then moves to some imagined place with a princess or a superhero then goes back to something real again. Music does the same thing. It goes back and forth between established places (the chorus) and to new places that take you somewhere else (the verse). The ability to go back and forth from something established to something imagined comes from temporal reasoning, a skill used in music writing, storytelling, and problem solving.
Emotional intelligence—With exposure to a greater variety of musical styles—like jazz, folk, or classical, this increased exposure to music increases a child’s awareness, and understanding of different moods and emotions.
Here is just a sample of the variety of music you’ll hear this semseter in a Kindermusik class.
Village
Zum Gali Gali (Israel)
Les raftsmen (Canada)
The Keel Row (Northumberland)
May There Always Be Sunshine (Russia)
Our Time
Duermete, mi nino (Latin America)
Fais do-do (France)
Shake Hands (African-American)
The Muffin Man (England)
Imagine That!
Uskudar (Turkey)
Funiculi Funicula (Italy)
Siyahamba (Zulu)
Rain or Shine (Texas, United States)
Young Child
The Nutcracker Suite (Russia)
Ho Ho Wantany, (Native American)
Good News (African American)
Rig a jig jig (England)
Family Time
Sma Grodorna (Sweden)
Whisky Frisky (African-American)
San Sereni (Puerto Rico)
Sulla Lulla (Norway)
“Perfect Practice Makes Perfect” November 22, 2006
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Dr. Carol Baskins, Kindermusik educator and piano instructor at PCMS compiled a list of ideas to help instrumentalists have more fruitful practice sessions. Take note as you work hard on your Winter recital pieces!
1. Establish a routine time, free from noisy distractions, and when you are mentally and physically alert.
2. Look at your assignment and set a few simple goals. Take a few minutes to study the score, looking for details as suggested below. Think before and during as you play.
3. Begin with a few warm-ups, and then attack the hardest section first, while you are fresh.
4. Be persistent. Keep trying. Remember, perfect practice makes perfect.
Practice Pointers
1. Score study (eyes and mind) leads to SUCCESS!
- Name notes
- Name intervals
- Find patterns (broken chords, scales)
- Name key signature (write in sharps or flats as needed)
- Discover key
2. Play (fingers and mind)
- Block and name intervals
- Block and name broken chords
- Play all similar patterns
- Practice jumps back and forth (eyes and memory). Can you move and get one hand ready while the other is playing?
- Play skeleton (starting positions/notes of each phrase or section)
3. Rhythm
- Name time signature
- Write in counting
- Count OUT LOUD while tapping
- Play rhythm on a single note for each hand (interval of 3rd or 6th)
- Count OUT LOUD while playing SLOWLY and ACCURATELY
(hands separately {HS}, then hands together {HT}
4. Practice IN SECTIONS, with repetitions to achieve accuracy and
musicality
- Play hands separately (HS) with overlap to next section
- SLOWLY and ACCURATELY, play hands together (HT) with overlap to next section
Fall Family Festival November 7, 2006
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The Fall Family Festival will be held at Buncombe Street Child Development Center Saturday, November 18th from 3-5 p.m. This event is fun, free, full of games and surprises. Merchandise will also be for sale that day in the event that you’re still shopping for holiday gifts.











