A capella
5 minutes to get the 8-measure example, with no singing from the teacher
2 or 3 parts, depending on what they sang on stage.
Skips as wide as an octave
Dotted quarter/8th note combos, 8th notes, quarter notes, half notes, whole notes, dotted half notes, and their rests
(except no 8th rests, thank goodness).
Students must work independently without collaboration
The teacher can only give the chord and sing scales or arpeggios to establish “DO”
This is the final example of Level One that my 6th and 7th graders had to successfully sing a capella the week before state assessment to ensure readiness.
teaching approach.
I also decided to record the sight-singing portion of the lessons so that teachers could see me do it. The program is part philosophy and part method so showing my approach was important to me plus I always wanted to see teachers teach. Each day, I also made teaching tips for the lessons because I wanted the teachers to be successful too! I looked directly into the camera and shared where the pitfalls might be for that specific lesson.
Each night for 18 months, I came home from school, uploaded the videos to YouTube, put the links into my PowerPoint
lessons, and uploaded the lessons to TpT for $3 each until I finished Level Two. Teachers devoured the lessons and left reviews on TpT about how helpful the lessons were and how much fun it was to teach S-Cubed. By April 2014, I had finished Level One, so I bundled them for sale on TpT.
S-Cubed Assessment Tools on MusicFirst
In 2015, a company similar to MusicFirst contacted me to create some homework/practice examples for their platform to add an assessment feature to S-Cubed. That company later stopped offering the assessment examples, and around the same time, MusicFirst asked me to offer both my full curriculum PLUS the assessment examples.
Here’s how you can use these assessment examples: Imagine you have a class of 60 students, and you notice a student
struggling with pitch or rhythm. So you give the class an S-Cubed "homework" assignment. A couple of days later, you take a look in the MusicFirst folder, and you can listen to the specifc child’s work to help you determine what they need most from you to help them improve.
The homework/assessment examples are one-to-one. For example, if you covered Lesson 4, Day 1 in class, you could have the class go home that night and complete the homework example for Lesson 4, Day 1.
The students get immediate feedback as they sing. It uses color coding to tell them whether they are sharp or fat. It
recognizes rhythm mistakes. It can give them a numerical grade. In the settings, you can decide how much information the students get as they sing.
By offering both the full S-Cubed curriculum and the homework examples, MusicFirst has set itself apart from any other company in this space.
About Dale Duncan
In 2022, Dale Duncan retired from teaching public school after teaching middle school in North Carolina, New Jersey and Georgia for 30 years.. Dale is known by the choral music educator community worldwide as the creator of the S-Cubed Sight Singing
Program for Beginners. So far, in 2024, Dale has conducted the Colorado and Mississippi Allstate Choirs, regional choirs and has given professional development to teachers all over the country. During his career, he was honored as a Grammy Music Educator Semi-Finalist. One of Dale’s most important life’s missions is and always will be to help middle school chorus teachers. Dale loves his crazy cat, Odie, and sweet doggie Beaux…and he’s currently obsessed with coaching and competing in Pickleball.
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Click this link to see my program "How to Teach Sight Singing to Middle School Beginners. S-Cubed! Successful Sight Singing for Middle School Teachers and their Students
Thanks!
Dale
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