One Song, Three Teaching Processes: Sea Shell

There are times we come across a song or rhyme we know students would enjoy, but we might not be sure where it fits in the curriculum.

How can we step back and imagine musical possibilities? What if we were to treat songs like musical prompts?

In this post we talked about some ways to explore one rhyme with several different pedagogical lenses. 

Today we’ll do the same for a song, Sea Shell. Here’s an example of how one song might be used for three different pedagogical outcomes and three different age groups.

This also shows how we might approach the song in different areas of learning: The first activities are for students who don’t know the song. The next two, it’s expected that students would know the song already. The 2nd grade activities are in preparation, before students are aware of the notation and label for half note. The 3rd grade activities are in practice, after students consciously know low sol. 

Each grade objective includes student choice in the activities.

Let’s jump in!

 
 

The Song

This song is sourced from the collection at Holy Names University.

 

 

Echo Singing & Vocal Exploration

Kindergarten / 1st Grade

This activity is designed for young musical learners in the early grades.

Before the Activity: Previous Knowledge and Experience

This activity doesn’t require any previous knowledge or experience! Consider using this as an introduction to vocal exploration and add it to your collection of echo songs.

Learning Experiences

Experience #1: Introduce

In this first learning experience, the teacher introduces the song through movement and active listening.

  • Seated, the teacher sings the song and leads students in swaying side to side as they listen. 

  • In between rounds of the song, the teacher asks questions: “What is our song about?” “What do you think the sea shell is singing about?” “Wait, can sea shells actually sing?”

  • Sing while moving hands like the waves of the ocean, showing the melodic contour of the song. Students echo each four-beat phrase with ocean movements.

    • Sea shell, sea shell (sea shell sea shell), Sing a song for me (sing a song for me)

Experience #2: Ocean Movements

In this second experience, students extend their ocean movements and continue echoing the song. This learning experience is primarily a review and reinforcement of the previous class, giving students more opportunities to listen and move to the song.

  • Review the previous class: Sing while moving hands like the waves of the ocean, showing the melodic contour of the song.

  • Students echo each four-beat phrase with ocean movements.

    • Sea shell, sea shell (sea shell sea shell), Sing a song for me (sing a song for me) 

  • “What if you could make your ocean movements while standing on your spot?” 

  • Repeat the activity with students echo singing and showing the melodic contour with stationary movement

Experience #3: Whole-Class Pitch Exploration

There are many possibilities for the pitch exploration here! Feel free to write your own on the board.

  • Echo sing and move to the song as review 

  • “What do you think the sea shell’s song sounded like?” Show several options of melodic contour on the board, and lead students in performing with vocals and movements

Experience #4: Partner Pitch Exploration

Students have sung the song and explored many examples of pitch exploration. Now it’s time for them to create their own sea shell songs. Asking for four different options encourages students to invent variations, instead of stopping after one idea.

  • Echo sing and move to the song as review 

  • Review pitch exploration ideas on the board 

  • With their shoulder partner, students use a piece of yarn to create their own vocal explorations 

    • Ask students to come up with four different options 

  • Students take turns sharing their ideas with the class

 

 

Half Note & Form

2nd Grade

Many music curricula explore one sound over two beats in the 2nd grade year. The ocean theme of this song can make it convenient for exploring elongated sounds, like ocean waves. We can also experiment with the form of the song.

Before the Activity: Previous Knowledge and Experience

  • Previous Knowledge: Before this activity, students should have conscious knowledge of steady beat, quarter notes, and eighth notes. Even though the activity focuses on one sound over two beats, students don’t need to have conscious knowledge of half notes. In future classes, students will be introduced to the half note vocabulary and symbol we’ll use in this class.

  • Previous Experience: Students should have plenty of independent and collaborative experiences singing, playing instruments, speaking, moving, reading, writing, improvising, arranging, and aurally identifying the rhythmic set listed in the knowledge section above. For these activities, students should have heard the song before, though it does not need to be memorized for the first learning experiences.

Learning Experiences

Experience #1: Rhythm Movement

In this first learning experience, students use movement to show the duration of the rhythm. This happens as a whole class at first, then with pairs of students. There is an opportunity for formative assessment as students tiptoe, step, and slide with a partner at the end of this experience.

  • The teacher sings the song with movement directions for tiptoe, step, and slide. Students echo sing and move (locomotor or non-locomotor)

    • Step step step step (students echo)

    • Tiptoe tiptoe sliiiiiiide (students echo)

    • Tiptoe tiptoe step step (students echo)

    • Tiptoe tiptoe sliiiiiiide (students echo)

  • The teacher sings the song on text. Students echo sing and move, translating to tiptoe, step, and sliding movements

    • Sea shell sea shell (student sing text and step step step step)

    • Sing a song for me (students sing text and tiptoe tiptoe sliiiiiiide)

    • Sing about the ocean (students sing text and tiptoe tiptoe step step)

    • Sing about the sea (students sing text and tiptoe tiptoe sliiiiiiide)

  • Divide the class in half. One half sings and moves first, then pauses for the other partner to sing and echo

Experience #2: Aurally Identify

The movement work from the previous class is extended here, as the teacher takes away the movement directions and replaces them with an instrument or neutral syllable. Students use their aural awareness to identify one sound that lasts for two beats.

  • Review previous class. Students echo sing the song on text

  • “Let’s take out the echo and sing it straight through.” Students sing the song straight through, without echoing.

  • Students sing the whole song and clap the words, remaining seated 

  • Seated with their feet in front of them, students sing and put the rhythm of the words in their feet

  • Students stand, and sing the whole song while tiptoeing and stepping in open space

  • As a B section, the teacher plays four or eight-beat rhythms on a recorder (or sings on a neutral syllable), using a combination of two sounds on a beat, one sound on a beat, or one sound elongated over two beats. Students echo move.

    • Example: ta ta ta-a (students step step sliiiiiiide), ta-di ta-di ta-di ta (tiptoe tiptoe tiptoe step) ta-a ta-di ta (sliiiiiiide tiptoe step) ta-di ta-di ta-a (tiptoe tiptoe sliiiiiide)

  • Students sing the song as they tiptoe, step, and slide back to their spots.

  • “How many times do we slide in this song?” Students inner hear and pat a steady beat (we slide two times)

  • “How many sounds do you hear in the word, ‘me’?” (one sound) “How many beats does it last?” Students sing and pat a steady beat (it lasts two beats)

Experience #3: Visual & Form

Students have identified one sound that lasts for two beats. Now they use their aural awareness and translate it to a visual representation of the rhythm. Iconic notation is used here to show the elongated sound. In later lessons, the label and symbol for a half note may be used. At the end of the learning experience, students mix up the form to create a new order of the song.

  • Review previous experiences as necessary

  • “Which phrases of the song have matching rhythms?” Students sing and pat a steady beat (phrases 2 and 4 have matching rhythms)

  • Help the teacher put the phrases of the song in the correct order.

  • “How do you know this is the correct answer? Talk to your shoulder partner.”

  • Students explain their thinking, then share their answers as time allows

 
 
  • “I’m tired of giving the correct answer all the time. Let’s mix up the form so it’s the incorrect answer.”

  • Mix up the form to create new version of tiptoeing and sliding. Students speak the new combination while moving their feet in front of them (staying seated) or turning their fingers into people and moving on the floor in front of them.

  • Repeat the activity, with students arranging the form for the class

  • Students repeat the activity with a partner and move around the room to their arrangement.

  • Share combinations as time allows 

 

 

Low Sol & Partwork

3rd Grade

By the 3rd grade year, many students are ready to work on the extended pentatone, including low sol. As melodic vocabulary grows, students can apply their knowledge to their developing partwork skills.

Before the Activity: Previous Knowledge and Experience

  • Previous Knowledge: Before this activity, students should have conscious knowledge of solfege pitches, do, re, mi, sol, la, low la, low sol. These learning experiences would fall in to the “practice” phase of learning.

  • Previous Experience: This activity is for students who are ready to sing a bass line to a known song. Consider previous experiences students have had with bass lines and partner melodies to prepare them for these experiences. You can find more information about scaffolding vocal partwork skills here. Students should also already know the song for these experiences.

Learning Experiences

These are adapted from the low sol concept plan in the 2021 - 2022 Planning Binder.

Experience #1: Partner Melody & Movement

In this learning experience, students listen to the new partner melody with the song. After hearing the melody, students learn it by rote through a combination of movement and aural skills. Aurally decoding the melody is one of the reasons this experience should fall in the practice phase of the learning process. When students have learned the melody, they sing it as the teacher sings the main song.

  • Students walk in a circle, singing the song without teacher assistance

  • “I’ll try to mess you up this time. Listen to each other.” The teacher walks inside the circle in the opposite direction, singing the partner melody:

  • Students sit in place. The teacher teaches the partner melody by rote. Students echo sing eight beats at a time, showing the high and low movements of the melodic contour

  • The teacher sings eight beats at a time. Students echo on solfege with Curwen hand signs or with the movements they just created

    • “Hey there, let me hear your song” (do do do do sol sol sol)

    • “Hey there, then we’ll sing along” (do do sol sol do do do)

  • Students walk around in a circle, singing the partner melody without teacher assistance. The teacher walks around the inside of the circle singing the main melody of Sea Shell.

Experience #2: Partwork

This lesson experience reviews the melody from the previous class, and expands partwork skills. Instead of the teacher singing one part and the whole class singing the other, students work toward partwork interdependence by dividing the partner melody and main melody between half the class.

  • With a partner, students decide if they’ll sing the partner melody on solfege with hand signs, or on text with movement that matches the melodic contour.

  • Seated with their partner, students perform their choice, then switch jobs

  • Students walk around in a circle, singing the partner melody without teacher assistance. The teacher walks around the inside of the circle singing the main melody of Sea Shell.

  • The teacher “tags” a few volunteers to be on the inside circle team and sing the main melody. The rest of the class continues to sing the partner melody.

  • Continue tagging singers until the inside and outside groups are approximately even

Experience #3: Transfer to Barred Instruments

Students have already aurally identified low sol in the partner melody. When it’s time to transfer their understanding to a barred instrument, students use their knowledge of steps and skips to identify low sol and figure out the partner melody by ear.

  • With a partner, students decide if they’ll sing the partner melody on solfege with hand signs, or on text with movement that matches the melodic contour.

  • Seated with their partner, students perform their choice, then switch jobs

  • Using a barred instrument visual on the board, students work with their partner to figure out where do and low sol live if do is F.

  • Students help the teacher notate the melody of the partner song on the board

  • Students read the notation on the board, pointing to the notation or pointing to a barred instrument visual

  • With a partner, students sit behind a barred instrument and figure out how to play the partner melody by ear.

  • One partner plays and sings the partner melody. The student without mallets sings the main Sea Shell melody. Switch jobs.

 

 

When we step back and look at our classroom materials as musical prompts, we see many pedagogical possibilities.

Today we looked at how one song might be used for vocal exploration, half notes, and low sol. But there are so many more ways this song might be re-imagined in our teaching.

There are many possibilities with one simple musical invitation!

2 4 6 8, Meet Me At the Garden Gate - One Rhyme, Three Teaching Processes

When we sit down to write a lesson or a lesson segment, we need two things: a song (or another musical work) and a learning activity. 

There are times when a song serves a clear purpose in our classrooms. Perhaps we have confidence about how to use the song because we saw it modeled in a training or explained in a textbook. There are other times we enjoy using a song, but the musical purpose is unclear. 

Today we’ll look at one rhyme and how we might use it to accomplish three different musical goals.

The way we found a song in a resource (video, workshop, textbook, article, etc.) may not necessarily be the way that song needs to live in our classrooms. We can use our creativity and pedagogy skills to imagine new possibilities.

 
2, 4, 6, 8_1.jpg
 

The Rhyme

There are many ways we could experience this rhyme! It could be a finger-play, a dance, a jump rope game, or a hand clapping game, among many other possibilities. The text can be found at Holy Names University.

Two, four, six, eight,
Meet me at the garden gate.
If I’m late, don’t wait.
Two, four, six, eight.

Variations of this rhyme also use Golden Gate instead of garden gate.

For our purposes, we’ll play it as a hand clapping game with a partner.

Two students face each other and clap partner hands together, then pat their own knees to a steady beat.


1st Grade

In 1st grade, we’ll use this rhyme for rhythm vs beat, ABA form, and melodic dictation with sol and mi.

Each of these lessons is designed to take up between 10 and 15 minutes of a full lesson.

Rhythm: Rhythm vs Beat

2 4 6 8_1.jpg
  • Play the game with a partner while speaking the rhyme 

  • Point to icons for steady beat 

  • Students choose if they’ll clap the rhythm of the words or point to icons for the rhythm of the words 

  • “When we play the game, does our game use the rhythm or the beat?” (beat) 

  • “Let’s try playing our game with the rhythm of the words instead of the steady beat. We’ll use the same motions, but make them match the rhythm of the words instead of one sound for every beat.” Lead the class in playing the rhythm

  • “Take some time to practice with your partner. You might also find a new way to play the rhythm of the words” With their partner, students clap and pat one or two sounds on a beat to show the rhythm of the words in the game 

  • Extensions: 

    1. Pairs of students choose if they’ll clap the rhythm of the words or play the beat game. 

    2. One partner does one, the other does the opposite

    3. Switch partners!

Form: ABA

2 4 6 8_3.jpg
  • Students play the beat game with a partner (Two students face each other and clap partner hands together, then pat their own knees to a steady beat.)

  • With their partner, students arrange rhythmic building blocks in any order they want to create a B section

  • Perform the rhyme in A B A

    • A - speak the rhyme

    • B - All student groups play their B section four times

    • A - speak the rhyme

 
2 4 6 8_2.jpg
 

Melody: Melodic Dictation

  • Students play the game with a partner

  • “When we play this game, do our hands start high or low?” (high)

  • “What if we sing our game so the words match the motions?!” Transfer the rhyme to a sol and mi melody

  • The teacher improvises a four-beat sol and mi melody on a neutral syllable. In partners, students pat and clap the teacher’s melody while singing it on sol and mi

  • Student groups create their own melodic pattern using sol and mi by singing and clapping or patting a combination of sol and mi.


These 1st grade lesson segments have explored rhythm vs beat, ABA form, and dictation with sol and mi.

Let’s re-imagine the same rhyme with more musical concepts, this time more appropriate for 3rd grade musicians.


3rd Grade

We can add other ideas and musical processes to the same rhyme to make it pedagogically and artistically appropriate for 3rd grade.

These lesson segments explore rhythmic partwork with ta-dimi, performing in a round, and playing low sol on barred instruments. They’re designed to take up between 10 and 20 minutes of a full lesson.

Rhythm: Partwork

  • Students walk in open space with a steady beat, clapping the rhythm of the words

  • Add a rhythmic prompt: Speak “Oh no, I’m running late - I couldn’t find the garden gate!” two times.

2 4 6 8_1.jpg
  • What would you do if your friend were late to the garden? Would you keep waiting even though they said not to? Or would you start planting seeds without them?

  • Students choose their response and speak it four times in a row.

late_1.png
  • In groups of 2 - 4, students choose which response they’ll give and create motions to go along with the text

  • One side of the room is “no problem,” the other half of the room is “Looks like they’re late. I’ll start without them”

  • Students scatter in open space. Walk with a steady beat, clapping the rhythm of the words of 2 4 6 8 while moving to the side they chose. When they get there, speak “oh no I’m running late” two times, then their chosen response four times. Clap 2 4 6 8 in place.

  • In spots, speak the rhythm of each ostinato on rhythm syllables instead of text

Form: Round

  • Students clap the rhythm of the text while walking in open space

  • Students choose if they’d like to come in first or second in the round by holding up one or two fingers.

  • Students form two circles. One starters walking first clapping the rhythm of the words. The other circle comes in four beats later.

  • Students choose if they’d like to stay in their circle or if they’re ready to move in open space while clapping their part in the round. Tell students they’ll have two tries either way.

  • Practice moving in open space while clapping the words in a round two times.

Melody: Barred instruments and dictation

  • Perform the rhythm on body percussion (teach by rote with visual)

2 4 6 8_6.jpg
  • Transfer body percussion to a melody on solfege:

2 4 6 8_5.jpg
  • Review absolute pitch names on barred instruments if do is F.

  • In partners, students collaborate to figure out the melody on barred instruments

  • Students choose if they’ll sing on solfege or letter names as they play the new melody

  • With their partner, students notate the melody in standard notation


There are other processes we could walk through, depending on our musical goals and classroom climate.

  • Concepts: Today we looked at ways to explore rhythm, form, and melody. However, we could also use the same rhyme to explore texture or expression.

  • Skills: These activities used a variety of skills, but we could repeat the process with more emphasis on skills like composition, improvisation, or listening.

There are many possibilities with one simple musical prompt!