Rhoda Bernard, Ed.D.

June 14, 2009

Taking More Advantage of Technology in my Teaching

Filed under: Music Education, Technology, Uncategorized — Tags: — admin @ 6:23 pm

One of the faculty members who works for me is going to use a significant amount of technology for her courses this summer. Appropriately, she teaches the Music Technology courses in our program.

She is going to use weebly (www.weebly.com) to build a custom website for her classes. This site will include an interactive syllabus, links to online articles, videos, lesson plans, and other curriculum materials. The site will also include a blog for her and a discussion group site for the students.

We are not set up across the institution for these sorts of tools. Weebly appears to be perfect for us because it offers all of this for free.

I will be very curious to see how things go with these tools in our program this summer. I would love to adapt them for the courses that I teach in the Music Education Program. Rather than do so much of our communcations via email, the students and I might be able to create more of a community online. We might be able to continue our discussions in various formats and forums outside of class. We might be able to share resources differently.

I know that friends of mine who teach in other institutions regularly use tools like these in their work. Perhaps I may end up joining them….

What I am interested to know more about is what is lost and what is gained by using these tools in one’s teaching. What, if anything, ends up working less well or being less effective? What, if anything do we end up missing out on? What are the benefits of using these tools? What do they offer that other environments and technologies do not? How does using these tools change the way that I teach, and the way that my students learn?

The Boston Conservatory Program for Students on the Autism Spectrum: More than Just Saturday Morning Music Lessons

Filed under: Music Education — admin @ 3:52 pm

Rachel Jayson, Boston Conservatory MMED ‘09, said it best when she remarked that the Boston Conservatory Program for Students on the Autism Spectrum is “more than just Saturday morning music lessons.” For the 15 young students with ASD diagnosis involved in the program in the 08-09 school year, participation in this groundbreaking music program has provided them with the opportunity to develop their musical skills on their instruments (piano, voice, or violin), to be sure, but it has also given them the chance to develop interpersonal relationships with other young musicians and with their instructors, enabled them to spend time devoted to something that they are good at, and helped them to develop their communication skills (both through music, as well as through other means).

The program is “more than just Saturday morning music lessons” for the Master’s students in Music Education who are instructors in the program (there were 6 in 08-09), as well. Through the intensive training and ongoing support that they receive from a team of expert consultants that includes autism specialists, musicians with autism, and music therapists, the Music Education students have learned a great deal about working with students of all kinds, not just students on the autism spectrum. One of the most powerful lessons that they have learned is the importance of establishing strong relationships with one’s students — and those relationships might be through music, or they might be through something else. Getting to know your students, and know them well, makes for much more effective teaching, where you can individualize your approach so that you can meet your students where they are. In their brown bag lunches (which take place every two weeks), the Music Education students discuss the strategies that they have developed for working with their young students, and they share creative ways to approach various learning situations. Guided by their expert consultants, they collaborate on finding their way with their students.

I am very, very proud of this new program, which recently ended its first year. The program is the result of a partnership that the Music Education Department at Boston Conservatory entered into with the Autism Higher Education Foundation. As the Program Director, I am the day-to-day leader of the program. Everything on the Conservatory end of things is my responsibility — from selecting the Music Education students who work as instructors in the program, to arranging the logistics regarding space and resources, to collaborating with the upper administration to secure their support and assistance.

Yes, adding this program to my already overloaded plate has been a great deal of extra work for me. But it has also been an incredibly rewarding experience — to make something really unique and extraordinary happen at Boston Conservatory and to make a difference in the lives of so many young people and their families.

In 09-10, we hope to expand the program to 24 students, and we plan to include additional instruments/types of lessons (guitar, viola, cello, composition, and music theory) in our offerings.

AHEF handles the student intake portion of the program. If you know someone who may be interested in the program, or if you are interested, please see www.autismhighereducationfoundation.org for an application. You also can find more information about the program at www.bostonconservatory.edu – go to Music Education and scroll down for the link.

Powered by WordPress