Learn Now Music, Inc.

Thursday, June 28, 2012

The importance of summer learning

We all know the value of good schooling for our children. However, the value of summer learning is often overlooked. Youth who do not participate in educational activities during summer experience learning losses, according to the National Summer Learning Association. For youth that never engage in summer learning activities, the learning loss accumulates each year to create a large achievement gap between these students and their peers. Families can play an important role in their child’s education by including learning activities into their summer schedule. Encourage your child to read a story or newspaper article, then have a discussion about it. Or have her compute the price difference between two items at the store. Activities such as these can help your child maintain skills learned from the school year through the summer. Families can also improve their student’s academic achievement by enrolling them into organized summer programs. Such programs foster positive social interactions as well as provide exposure to opportunities students might not have during the school year. READ MORE

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Summer Camps for Music

Summer is a great time to get started on a musical journey! Check out some great area summer camps for - group piano group guitar and group voice Contact Learn Now Music for more deatils and locations TODAY!

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

The Importance of Summer Learning....

The Importance of preventing learning loss during summer and other away-from-instruction periods. Extensive research has been conducted showing that significant learning loss takes place during summer breaks and other away-from-school time periods. In research conducted by Cooper et al. 1 , the analysis showed that summer learning loss equaled at least one month of instruction. Especially vulnerable are mathematical computation skills and skills related to reading and writing, such as spelling skills. In addition, children who speak a language at home other than English experience a setback in their English language skills without practice during school breaks. 1 In order to prevent and slow this learning loss, students must have access to grade appropriate activities and practice materials during their away-from-school time. Kids Learn was designed to bridge the away-from-school gap in instruction with activities that are based on standards of learning, as well as best practices in education and learning. Kids Learn includes student-directed activities in mathematics, reading, and writing. The average learning loss in mathematical computation skills over the summer months is approximately 2.6 months of grade level equivalency. 2 Approximately 30% of the practice pages in Kids Learn provide basic mathematical skills review and computational practice. The remainder of the pages review reading and writing skills. In addition to the general learning loss experienced during the summer, studies show that this loss contributes to the achievement gap in reading performance, especially between lower and higher income children. 3 Kids Learn addresses this phenomenon by including both reading and writing activities. For example, students may be asked to read a passage or a book and write a directed/constructed response to it or they may be required to follow written directions in order to complete an activity. The reading selections are written at the reading level for the grade the students recently completed, maintaining their reading skills at an appropriate grade level. The importance of the connection between and reading and writing and how this connection improves both skill sets has been supported through research by Whyte (1985). 4 Kids Learn offers many opportunities to make that all-important reading-writing connection. For example, each ten-page section includes an activity that requires the student to read a book and write about it. And finally, studies show that students are most susceptible to losing facts and procedural skills during instructional breaks. 5 That is why Kids Learn places a strong focus on 2 practicing and reinforcing basic skills such as phonics, punctuation, parts of speech, seeing patterns in number sequences, and knowing the value of coins and bills. A synthesis and analysis of studies of learning suggests that there are nine factors that influence learning. The top two factors are: 1. Amount of time students engage in learning 2. Quality of the instructional experience including method and content. 6 Kids Learn addresses both of those factors by extending the learning beyond the traditional school year, and by providing research- and standards-based activities that practice both basic skills, as well as higher level skills needed for success in school and beyond. For additional research on the topic of summer learning loss, TCM recommends the influential article, The Learning Season: Untapped Power of Summer to Advance Student Achievement, written by Beth M. Miller, Ph.D. and commissioned by the Nellie Mae Foundation. This report is a synthesis of the latest research and data on how opportunities and experiences children have outside of school result in gaps in achievement-test scores. The author asserts “In fact, summer programs have the potential to close the test-score gaps in a way that thus far has alluded us” (pg. 3). To illustrate this potential, the author takes a look at why summer makes a difference for middle-class and lower-income families through the learning. Using data gathered from different types of summer programs implemented around the country, the author analyzes the efficacy of these programs and who participates in them. To conclude, the author makes policy recommendations, so all students have equal access to high-quality summer experiences. Through this report, the Nellie Mae Foundation hopes to spark public dialogue, policy changes, and on-going research about summer learning. This article can be accessed at http://www.nmefdn.org/Research/. Click on the link titled “New Nellie Mae Education Foundation Research Reveals that Summer Learning is more important than previously believed.” R READ MORE

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Dick Clark: From 'American Bandstand' to 'New Year's Rockin' Eve' Dick Clark, who died of a massive heart attack on Wednesday at age 82, left behind hundreds of hours of television footage from a lifetime of hosting. Though Clark didn't hold the record for having the most hours of his life broadcast on TV (that distinction goes to Regis Philbin), he was a reliable TV presence from the 1950s into the 21st century. Although he made his TV debut as host of the country music program "Cactus Dick and the Santa Fe Riders" on a Utica, N.Y., television station in the mid-1950s, he didn't become a household name until "American Bandstand" began broadcasting nationally on ABC in 1957. (Previously, he had been fill-in host of the show, then called "Bob Horn's Bandstand" and broadcast only in Philadelphia). The series ran weekdays until 1963 and then became a weekly show until 1987. Here's Clark opening the broadcast in 1966, two years after it moved from Philadelphia to Hollywood. VIDEO READ MORE

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

History of Bassooon

History of Bassooon Early Bassoon The modern day bassoon evolved from an instrument invented pre 16th century. This instrument was called the dulcian. It was a wooden instrument all in one piece. The dulcian was used to add a strong bass line in a wind ensemble that consisted of mostly recorders and shawms. There were 8 dulcians used during the 16th century, which included a soprano down to bass ranges. The dulcian also had a conical bore similar to the modern day bassoon. There were only 8 finger holes and 2 keys on the dulcian. Click Here to hear a sample of what a tenor dulcian sounds like. (Quicktime is needed) Modern Bassoon The 1800’s brought new demands on the bassoon and it had to be altered to meet the new needs of players, ensembles, and orchestral halls. Heckel System Carl Almenräder (a performer, teacher, and composer) and Gottfried Weber (acoustic researcher) designed a 17-key bassoon in 1823. The new design helped to improve intonation, improve response, and make playing easier for performers. J.A. Heckel (Almenräder’s partner) continued to make improvements on the bassoon along with 2 generations of his descendents. By the 1900’s Heckel was the main company producing bassoons with 4,000 bassoons produced by the turn of the century. The modern Heckel bassoon has between 24-27 keys and five open finger holes. Buffet System This system was stabilized before the Heckel system, but it was invented in a more conservative manner. The Buffet System mainly focused on improvements to the key work and not a complete overhaul of the instrument. This bassoon has a conical bore that is less in diameter than the Heckel bassoon. This system did not stay around because it wasn’t as consistent as the Heckel system and wasn’t as easy to play. READ MORE