Alison Hall
- Location
- Adelaide Australia
- Organisation
- Education.au - Education Network Australia
- Sector
- More than one sector
- Interests
- music education, blogging, BeginningTeacher, Music, learning, learning objects, choral music, Choirs, Brass bands, history teachers
- Blog
- Alison Hall
Alison Hall's blog
Music Education Resources on edna
The South Australian branch of the Australian Society of Music Education is holding their Term 4 conference this weekend. The conference's theme is Closing the Gap: Engaging students and delivering educational outcomes through pop culture and technology. Right up my alley I think!
Here is the handout that I will be sharing with them
and hopefully you will also find some interesting and useful
resources as well!
General
Music and Music Education Resources
Find a wide range of online resources on the composition,
improvisation, performance, appreciation and critical examination of
music and musical instruments.
General
Music and Music Education Theme Page
In this theme page teachers will find links to resources
within the edna repository to songs, editing software, lesson
plans and interactive sites:
- Interactive music sites
- Lyrics
- Music
- Music lesson plans
- Music theory
- Musical notes
- Songs
- Sound editing
- Writing Music
- Music events
- Virtual Instruments
- Software
- Music History
Early
Childhood: Music and Movement for Years 0-8
A collection of resources related to teaching music and
movement with young children, including songs, drama and related activities.
Upcoming
Music Education Events
Monitor upcoming national and
international education events in the edna Calendar. The
collection if fully searchable and a range of Music Education
events can be found.
Tags:
resources
music
ideas
music education
Posted at 05:36PM Nov 21, 2008
by Alison Hall |
Comments[1]
Thanks to my Plurk buddy Skip Z, a wonderfully active educator from the US of A, (you'll also find him here on me.edu.au) I have finally stumbled across something I have been waiting a long time to see...
Noteflight
is the first online music composition tool that sits entirely on the
web. Although not as powerful as other software programs such as
Sibelius, the Noteflight score editor allows you to do the basics:
compose online, play back your work and print it. Also after
creating your own scores, you can choose to share them with others,
can publish them to Noteflight's online music library, link to them,
or embed them in your blog. Composing and accessing your work on the
run just got easier!
Still in Beta, Noteflight has limited instrumentation -
piano, bass, drums, violin, guitar, flute, soprano sax, trumpet and
electric bass but the actualy instrument sounds are pretty good -
you don't get the horrible squeaks you get with other score writers
on play back!
Some other great features include:
- Versioning allows you to make keep earlier versions of your work to make changing your mind easier!
- Note input with the keyboard or mouse
- Ability to add a comment to parts of your score or specific notes
- Describe your work and tag it
- Simple key, time and transposition functionality
-
Feedback - tell them what you want to see!
I would suggest reading the terms of
use outlined when first signing up with Noteflight. It appears
that you, as the composer, own all of the content you place on
Noteflight. However your work will be covered under a Creative
Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license, something which
may be quite alien to most musicians... Reading up on it is best to
make sure that you understand how your music can be viewed and used
by others,as well as what lisences you must abide by if you edit
someone elses's work - do this before you decide to place your
entire life's work online...
As I mentioned before Noteflight is only in beta but there are some great possibilities on the horizon, including the ability to import your scores from other programs uaing MusicXML. Finale can export this format directly, and Sibelius allows MusicXML via Recordare's Dolet plugin.
So what's missing?
- You can't add dynamics or ritards or accelerandos
- No lyrics functionality
- No cut and paste between scores
- Can't add grace notes, tremolo or other ornaments
- You can't isolate parts of a score.
Judging by their feedback forum these
are all things that they are hard at work on. For the first free
service of its kind I think that the team at Noteflight should be
very proud at what they have achieved and, most importantly, what
they have started. It can only get better from here.
-
Viva la Musicia!
Tags:
composing
online tools
music
music education
score writing
Posted at 09:57AM Nov 12, 2008
by Alison Hall |
Comments[0]

