Ensemble Rehearsal Plan
Ensemble Rehearsal Plan
Ensemble Rehearsal Plan
Learning goals
What Learners will
Be able to do (behavioral):
Understand (cognitive):
and meanings behind the text of Ave Maria and understand the
relationship between the text and the music.
Encounter (experimental):
Technical skills
Latin diction
Breath support through phrases
Ensemble sound and clarity
Appropriate color for certain sections of the piece
Unified vowels through song (the text lines up almost perfectly in
Musical concepts
texture)
Empowering Musicianship
Process
Partner: (Honor their world by beginning with an
experience students bring to the classroom. Include time for
students to collaborate and respond through sharing and
discussion)
may take measure 9-11 in the alto line for example and make a warm
up that has this exact phrase in it. Ascending on by half steps, the
warm-up with a piano accompaniment that outlines the chord structure
for the students will help them hear the line underlying harmonic
progression and where the notes fit into it. This will not only help the
altos sing the phrase more accurately, the other sections will hear
what is happening in the alto section at that point in the piece and
relate it to their own parts as well. The teacher could also create a
warm-up using the specific vowels and colors for parts in the song that
the choir is struggling with. The teacher may use solfege to help the
choir tune more accurately in parts that arent tuning to the specific
overtone series it needs to tune to. After the musical kinks are worked
out of the piece and the choir feels confident in their ability to sing with
ensemble sound and proper diction, rhythms, pitches etc., the students
are then to look up an exact translation of the text and a poetic
translation of the text.
had in their own lives. By doing so, they will have a better understanding of what the text
is conveying through personal experience. They will make their own mental links and
feelings to the prayer, thus making the connection to the music and text more obtainable
because they are using their own life situations and emotions. This will help them to
understand the musical choices the conductor makes and how the text relates to the
music. THESE FOUND EMOTIONS AND UNDERSTANDINGS DO NOT HAVE TO
BE RELIGIOUS. Through using their personal identities to bring about the correct
musical response from the choir, the proper timbre, dynamics, color, etc., will by
achieved faster and more effectively. This will also help them realize the text-music
connection. When they fully understand the meanings behind the text, they can listen to
the song and start to recognize that the composers reason for certain musical choices.
The ensemble will start to understand these ideas and produce the proper musical
responses as to what the composer had in mind and what the conductor has in mind. Once
they make the music to text relationship, the musical nuances like intention, and
expression will fall into place.
connections the students have made with the text. Only when all of these tings are
coupled together can music be made. Who cares if the students sing the notes on the
page, or if they sing the emotion in the world but its the wrong intention, the students
need to understand that music is a large body of elements put together to inspire
emotional reaction in the listener. They need to take away that everything being
connected, text, notes, rhythm, intention, emotion, dynamics, color, phrasing, timbre, etc.,
will create music. This is harder as an ensemble because all of the members must have
the same ideas and if one of the members is inconsistent it can ruin it for the whole
group. That is why in the rehearsal process the students need to make all of these
connections as an ensemble to bring out music in the performance together.
Assessment
Formative:
ensemble sound and diction clarity throughout the unit. The teacher
will also take notes on the overall text to music relationship and how
the students grasp the concept. The teacher will evaluate students on
these elements daily by taking notes and what they hear and the
students say day to day. The teacher will also have a 10-minute talk
with the students at the end of every week. The students may reflect
on what they thought about the rehearsals. They may talk about how
productive rehearsals were and why, their opinions on things they liked
and didnt like, and finally on how they feel about their understanding
of the nuances the conductor is trying to incorporate into the
performance. The teacher will document these ideas and take them
into account when forming the next weeks lesson plans.
Summative:
unit that includes this song. How well they do in the concert
determines the summative assessment.
Intergrative:
all of the notes they have taken and make a decision based on what
the students took away from the process/what they did well and what
they did not do well. The teacher will evaluate him or herself based on
the students performance and what the students said during the
reflection times at the end of the week. They will make new concepts
for teaching this piece and others through eliminating faulty
techniques and activities while at the same time saving ideas that
worked. The teacher can use this information to help them improve the
learning process the next time around. The teachers goal from selfassessment will be to develop things like rehearsal technique,
performance success, ensemble focus and how they can help their
students come to the right conclusions and take away more than just
how to sing the notes on a page.