Sharing one of the most popular items I have posted
(compiled by Rick Bjella-- contributing: Randal Swiggum, Nick Page, Larry Doebler, Lucy Thayer, Tim Bruneau, Patty O’Toole)

Whose opinions are valued most?
Around whom do your structure your strategies for the daily rehearsal?
- foster a safe environment ("well, that was creative", “basses I love you dearly...”, “I love the way you truly listen to each other and honor what was said”)
- share affirmations with the ensemble
- provide a more accurate, personalized, positive reflection on student efforts in rehearsal. (i.e. "Glenn you are particularly good at dramatic reading of texts, that is a real gift that you have, that is a contribution that you make in a way that is particularly stunning")
- give the students only the title of the piece ask them “how do you think it will sound?”
- give short writing moments (in journals, portfolios, 3 x 5 cards, board work, post-it notes
- have student led warm ups prescribed by the teacher
- have an improvisation on one note-(the drone has been a powerful musical force throughout the ages-explore different vowels)
- ask YOU questions (addressed directly to students relevant to personal experiences meant to evoke personal opinions “Have you ever ______? How did it feel? Did you ____?)
- develop listening squads: students sit out and listen to rehearsal, offering critical comments
- giving students many opportunities to evaluate both rehearsals and performances (written comments, group discussions, etc.)
- allow the individual person to react with free movement that reflects the phrasing-start simply and then work towards more subtlety
- switching parts so that the student is understanding all of the choral parts
- sing the instrumental accompaniment for understanding of the entire phrase
- move to the pulse of the music- developing body memory
- learn parts through solfege (movable or fixed do depending on the piece) Assists pitch memory and independence
- have singers in positions to be compassionate. (Sing at a nursing home, a soup kitchen, hospital, or funeral, etc.)
- have student compositions based on one phrase or one word
- listening with intent (give them a puzzle, a problem, or a chance to share their opinion of something technically challenging - i.e. This Little Babe).
- fellowship game - sit or stand in a community interview circle (this can also be done in smaller groups as well): a. interview a person in the middle - ask three questions student has a right to ‘pass’ on any question. b. model the activity by being in the center as well.
- have students develop their own text interpretations
- use story telling (composers, personal experiences relating to the text, communing with nature, growing-up, losing loved ones, stories by other artist, authors, poets, visual artist)
- believe in your story
- have the students read a letter (that you or they create) from the composer about her intentions for the piece.
- have the students teach a spiritual, or folk song by rote to the class before passing out the arrangement
- invite student opinions on an artistic decision (e.g. where exactly the crescendo should begin, which vowel color suits the mood of a particular word best, etc.)
- have student-led sectionals
- memorization squads: if the group is having trouble with individuals not memorizing their parts, have a team sit out and check the memorization of individuals in the group
- have students come up with their own warm ups
- have them listen to tapes from their own recording sessions and evaluate the relative quality
- have an anger moment where they allow it to all come out in their singing
- try student grading of each other and themselves (set up a careful list of criteria - they see much more than you do)
- have a choir council or officers to meet and discuss issues from the students’ perspective, to act as spokes people, and to plan social events and group-bonding activities
- use dalcroze activities led by students based upon the music that is being rehearsed
- moving to the pulse of the note values- freeing the eyes from the score
- sing silently - owning the score without singing it/ showing it completely through the eyes-check the memory at a predetermined spot.
- find ways to actively involve them in the drama of the music.
- have student invested towards nuts and bolt needs (library maintenance, attendance)
- have touring planned by students- discussing at the ground level objectives and
- discuss the etymology of words, showing links between one language and another.
- have a student committee set clear goals regarding students able to sing their part alone with musicianship and understanding
- have students write reflections concerning a concert
- consider having student program notes
- have an open forum -- pose a question on curriculum (i.e. “What makes this a good piece of music?”, “What makes an exciting choir rehearsal?, If you had one wish for this choir it would be..) ask a follow-up question/ journal entries
- develop abstract expressions - break the choir into six groups, provide them with markers, crayons, finger paints -- ask the them to illustrate a concept you have been working on such as dotted rhythms open vowels, binary form, the heart of the music.
- run rehearsals of difficult passages in circles (basses, tenors, altos, sopranos) while running the passage have the leader in the middle make suggestions for improvements -- set strict time lines -- change leadership in the middle constantly. (use movement within the circle to solidify different learning styles)
- have a no limits day -- suggest that they can sing in any manner they think is appropriate and the only thing off limits is the ‘can’t’ word.
- student independence:
- shoot for depicting the text in a synergetic manner not as a result of what the conductor might impose
- show the score through physical movement reflecting dynamic, dramatic, linear and harmonic elements with complete physical understanding
- sing one part and reflect physically another part.
- interact with others through discussion with people not in the choir
- have students understand the integration of all study with the music that is being performed
- model the behavior you wish to emphasize.
- model them before the rehearsal
- model them during the rehearsal
- model them after the rehearsal
- never stop modeling them
- time
- structure of the ensemble, rehearsal room / form of the rehearsal
- how things are learned and percieved
- pedagogy: who teaches whom? why?