::: Lenguas Extranjeras :::
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viernes, 24 de agosto de 2012
Musical Article 4
History
of Drums and Percussion
By:
Maeve Rich
The history of drums dates back
thousands of years. Originally a primitive form of communication and making
music, drums are a part of percussion instruments.
It's thought that drums have been around
since 6000 B.C. It's believed that percussion instruments were the first
musical instruments ever invented, largely because of their simplicity and easy
accessibility. Drums were originally used as a form of communication, to send
signals. Drums were used in Africa to communicate long distances and in Sri
Lanka as communication between the government and the citizens.
Drums have long been an integral part of
religious ceremonies. Drums were also originally used in China and Europe in
the military. Eventually, drums made the jump from marching instrument to the
orchestra.
When drums were first invented, they
were made of natural materials. Hollowed out logs made the base of the drums,
and animal skins covered the top. Drum sticks weren't around then, so people
used their hands to play the drums.
Drums have historically been hit by
different things to produce music. The body has long been a popular choice for
the obvious reason that it doesn't require extra equipment. Drum sticks are
probably the most popular modern choice because of the range in sound they can
produce.
Today, advancements are being made in
what was once a very simple instrument. There is a wide variety of drums, which
vary depending on their purpose. Musicians are tinkering with drums to allow
them to be tuned and drum sets are implementing new music technology and more
complicated setups.
miércoles, 22 de agosto de 2012
Connectivism. Article 2
Connectivism:
A Learning Theory for the Digital Age
A Learning Theory for the Digital Age
George Siemens
Introduction
Behaviorism,
cognitivism, and constructivism are the three broad learning theories most
often utilized in the creation of instructional environments. These theories,
however, were developed in a time when learning was not impacted through
technology. Over the last twenty years, technology has reorganized how we live,
how we communicate, and how we learn. Learning needs and theories that describe
learning principles and processes, should be reflective of underlying social
environments. Vaill emphasizes that “learning must be a way of being – an
ongoing set of attitudes and actions by individuals and groups that they employ
to try to keep abreast of the surprising, novel, messy, obtrusive, recurring
events…” (1996, p.42).
Limitations of
Behaviorism, Cognitivism, and Constructivism
A central tenet
of most learning theories is that learning occurs inside a person. Even social
constructivist views, which hold that learning is a socially enacted process,
promotes the principality of the individual (and her/his physical presence –
i.e. brain-based) in learning. These theories do not address learning that
occurs outside of people (i.e. learning that is stored and manipulated by
technology). They also fail to describe how learning happens within
organizations
Some questions
to explore in relation to learning theories and the impact of technology and
new sciences (chaos and networks) on learning:
- How are learning
theories impacted when knowledge is no longer acquired in the linear
manner?
- What adjustments need
to made with learning theories when technology performs many of the
cognitive operations previously performed by learners (information storage
and retrieval).
- How can we continue to
stay current in a rapidly evolving information ecology?
- How do learning
theories address moments where performance is needed in the absence of
complete understanding?
- What is the impact of
networks and complexity theories on learning?
- What is the impact of
chaos as a complex pattern recognition process on learning?
- With increased
recognition of interconnections in differing fields of knowledge, how are
systems and ecology theories perceived in light of learning tasks?
Connectivism
Connectivism is
the integration of principles explored by chaos, network, and complexity and
self-organization theories. Learning is a process that occurs within nebulous
environments of shifting core elements – not entirely under the control of the
individual. Learning (defined as actionable knowledge) can reside outside of
ourselves (within an organization or a database), is focused on connecting
specialized information sets, and the connections that enable us to learn more
are more important than our current state of knowing.
Connectivism is
driven by the understanding that decisions are based on rapidly altering
foundations. New information is continually being acquired. The ability to draw
distinctions between important and unimportant information is vital. The
ability to recognize when new information alters the landscape based on
decisions made yesterday is also critical.
Principles of connectivism:
- Learning and knowledge
rests in diversity of opinions.
- Learning is a process
of connecting specialized nodes or information sources.
- Learning may reside in
non-human appliances.
- Capacity to know more
is more critical than what is currently known
- Nurturing and
maintaining connections is needed to facilitate continual learning.
- Ability to see
connections between fields, ideas, and concepts is a core skill.
- Currency (accurate,
up-to-date knowledge) is the intent of all connectivist learning
activities.
- Decision-making is
itself a learning process. Choosing what to learn and the meaning of
incoming information is seen through the lens of a shifting reality. While
there is a right answer now, it may be wrong tomorrow due to alterations
in the information climate affecting the decision.
Para ver Artículo Completo:
Connectivism. Article 1
Connectivism is a learning theory for the digital age. Learning has
changed over the last several decades. The theories of behaviourism,
cognitivism, and constructivism provide an effect view of learning in many
environments. They fall short, however, when learning moves into informal,
networked, technology-enabled arena. Some principles of connectivism:
§ The integration of cognition and emotions in meaning-making is
important. Thinking and emotions influence each other. A theory of learning
that only considers one dimension excludes a large part of how learning
happens.
§ Learning has an end goal - namely the increased ability to "do
something". This increased competence might be in a practical sense (i.e.
developing the ability to use a new software tool or learning how to skate) or
in the ability to function more effectively in a knowledge era (self-awareness,
personal information management, etc.). The "whole of learning" is
not only gaining skill and understanding - actuation is a needed element.
Principles of motivation and rapid decision making often determine whether or
not a learner will actuate known principles.
§ Learning is a process of connecting specialized nodes or information
sources. A learner can exponentially improve their own learning by plugging
into an existing network.
§ Learning may reside in non-human appliances. Learning (in the sense
that something is known, but not necessarily actuated) can rest in a community,
a network, or a database.
§ The capacity to know more is more critical that what is currently
known. Knowing where to find information is more important than knowing
information.
§ Nurturing and maintaining connections is needed to facilitate
learning. Connection making provides far greater returns on effort than simply
seeking to understand a single concept.
Learning and knowledge rest in diversity of opinions.
Learning happens in many different ways. Courses, email,
communities, conversations, web search, email lists, reading blogs, etc.
Courses are not the primary conduit for learning.
Different approaches and personal skills are needed to learn
effectively in today's society. For example, the ability to see connections
between fields, ideas, and concepts is a core skill.
Organizational and personal learning are integrated tasks. Personal
knowledge is comprised of a network, which feeds into organizations and
institutions, which in turn feed back into the network and continue to provide
learning for the individual. Connectivism attempts to provide an understanding
of how both learners and organizations learn.
Currency (accurate, up-to-date knowledge) is the intent of all
connectivist learning.
Decision-making is itself a learning process. Choosing what to learn
and the meaning of incoming information is seen through the lens of shifting
reality. While there is a right answer now, it may be wrong tomorrow due to
alterations in the information climate impacting the decision.
Learning is a knowledge creation process...not only knowledge
consumption. Learning tools and design methodologies should seek to capitalize
on this trait of learning.
Activity. Connectivism
READ THE TWO ARTICLES OF CONNETIVISM AND
ANSWER THE QUESTIONS:
A.
What is
connectivism?
B.
How is
it different from other learning theories?
C.
What is
it based on?
|
Answer A
|
Answer B
|
Answer C
|
Article
1: “Connectivism.
A learning theory
for today´s learner”
|
El conectivismo es una teoría
de aprendizaje de la era digital
|
Se diferencia de otras
teorías del aprendizaje por su integración de la cognición y las emociones
|
Principios:
·
La cognición y las emociones se influyen mutuamente.
·
El objetivo final del aprendizaje es el aumento de la capacidad de
"hacer algo".
·
El aprendizaje es un proceso de conectar fuentes de información
especializados.
·
El aprendizaje puede residir en dispositivos no humanos.
·
La capacidad de conocer más es más importante que lo que se conoce
actualmente.
·
Saber dónde encontrar la información es más importante que conocer la
información.
·
Fomentar y mantener las conexiones es necesaria para facilitar el
aprendizaje.
|
Article 2: “Connectivism:
A Learning Theory for the Digital Age” |
El conectivismo es la
integración de los principios del caos, la red y la complejidad explorados por las teorías de
auto-organización.
|
Otras teorías de aprendizaje se
basan en que el aprendizaje se produce en el interior de una persona. El conectivismo aborda el aprendizaje que
tiene lugar fuera de las personas (el aprendizaje es almacenado y manipulado
por la tecnología).
|
Principios:
·
El aprendizaje y el conocimiento se basa en la diversidad de
opiniones.
·
Aprendizaje como proceso de conectar fuentes de información
especializados.
·
El aprendizaje puede residir en dispositivos no humanos.
·
Facilitar el aprendizaje continuo.
·
Capacidad para ver las conexiones entre ideas.
·
La capacidad de conocer más es más importante que lo que se conoce
actualmente.
·
La toma de decisiones es en sí mismo un proceso de aprendizaje.
|
Music Article 3
Different
Types of Pianos
By: Jaceson Maughan
Different
types of pianos are sized and suited to particular events, so not just any
piano will do. For personal playing and for classrooms, one piano is
appropriate, while a different type of piano may fit better in a recital stage
or concert hall. Sizes and tonal quality all vary from piano to piano as well.
Depending on the use of the particular piano, learning about the different
types available for purchase helps pianists hone in on what variations will
best suit their needs.
Grand
Pianos
Grand pianos need plenty of space in order to include it in any room décor. A grand piano includes the petite grand (usually under 5 feet tall) and the baby grand (from 5 to 5 ½ feet tall). The next size up is the parlor grand or medium grand, measuring around 6 feet tall. A ballroom size of grand piano is second largest, about 6 feet 4 inches, and a concert grand can top out at 9 feet tall.
Grand pianos need plenty of space in order to include it in any room décor. A grand piano includes the petite grand (usually under 5 feet tall) and the baby grand (from 5 to 5 ½ feet tall). The next size up is the parlor grand or medium grand, measuring around 6 feet tall. A ballroom size of grand piano is second largest, about 6 feet 4 inches, and a concert grand can top out at 9 feet tall.
Vertical
Pianos
Vertical pianos are positioned upright with the strings running parallel to the back of the piano. These upright pianos are certainly the most popular, as they require less space and are generally less expensive as well. The spinet is the smallest of the verticals at around 37 inches tall, with the console being the next piano variety up. The console is generally the next size up at around 43 inches tall. Studio verticals (at around 48 inches tall) and professional styles (60 inches tall) are the tallest vertical pianos.
Vertical pianos are positioned upright with the strings running parallel to the back of the piano. These upright pianos are certainly the most popular, as they require less space and are generally less expensive as well. The spinet is the smallest of the verticals at around 37 inches tall, with the console being the next piano variety up. The console is generally the next size up at around 43 inches tall. Studio verticals (at around 48 inches tall) and professional styles (60 inches tall) are the tallest vertical pianos.
Electric
Pianos
For those short on space, an electric piano has the advantage of being affordable and portable. While the electric piano won't sound as perfect as a stringed instrument, the convenience and price make the electric piano a viable choice. Electric pianos can also be used to generate other sounds, such as percussion accompaniments. Many people interested in learning to play the piano will start out with electric keyboards to decide if learning to play is something they'd like to pursue. This way, the cost is minimal in case the piano is just not the instrument for them.
For those short on space, an electric piano has the advantage of being affordable and portable. While the electric piano won't sound as perfect as a stringed instrument, the convenience and price make the electric piano a viable choice. Electric pianos can also be used to generate other sounds, such as percussion accompaniments. Many people interested in learning to play the piano will start out with electric keyboards to decide if learning to play is something they'd like to pursue. This way, the cost is minimal in case the piano is just not the instrument for them.
martes, 14 de agosto de 2012
Music Article 1
Classification of Musical
Instruments
Sachs-Hornbostel System
Curt Sachs (1881 - 1959) was a German musicologist
known for his extensive study and expertise on the history of musical
instruments. Sachs worked alongside Erich Moritz von Hornbostel (1877 - 1935),
an Austrian musicologist and expert on the history of non-European music. Their
collaborative work is now known as the Sachs-Hornbostel system, a method of
classifying musical instruments according to the type of vibrating material
used to produce sound.
Classification of Musical
Instruments
Idiophones - Musical
instruments in which a vibrating solid material is used to produce sound.
Examples of solid materials used in such instruments are stone, wood and metal.
Idiophones are differentiated according to how you make it vibrate. Such as:
1.
Concussion - A pair of similar
instruments that are struck together or struck against each other to create
sound. Examples: cymbals, castanets
2. Friction -
Instruments that produce sound when rubbed. An example of these are musical
glasses in which the musician rubs his moistened fingers on the rim of
the glasses to produce sound.
3.
Percussion - Musical instruments that
produce sound by striking or using a striker. Examples:xylophones, triangles, bells, gongs, steel drums
4. Plucked - Also
known as linguaphones, these are musical instruments that need to
be plucked to create sound, such as the Jew's harp in
which the player plucks the "tongue" of the instrument.
5.
Scraped - As the name implies, these are instruments
that when scraped, produce sound. Examples
of these are cog rattles and washboards.
6. Shaken -
Musical instruments that need to be shaken to create sound. A perfect example
aremaracas which are believed to have
been invented by native Indians of Puerto Rico.
7. Stamping -
Instruments that produce sound when stamped on a hard surface, such as the
shoes used by tap dancers.
8. Stamped - When
sound is produced by the material itself that's being stamped on.
Membranophones -
Musical instruments that have vibrating stretched membranes or skin that
produce sound. Membranophones are classified according to the shape of the
instrument.
1. Kettle Drums - Also
known as vessel drums, these are rounded at the bottom and may be tunable or
non-tunable. The vibrating membrane is either laced, nailed or glued to the
body and the player uses his hands, a beater or both to strike it.
2. Tubular
Drums - Are further classified into barrel, cylindrical, conical, double
conical, goblet, hourglass and shallow. Tubular drums may either be tunable and
nontunable. Like the kettle drums, it may be played by using both the hands or
a striker and the vibrating membrane is either laced, nailed or glued to the
body.
3. Friction
Drums - Instead of striking, the stretched membrane vibrates when there
is friction. These are non-tunable and the player uses a cord or stick to
create sound.
4. Mirlitons -
Unlike other musical instruments belonging to the membranophones, mirlitons are
not drums. The membranes produce sound with the vibration of a player's voice
or instrument. Mirlitons are non-tunable, a good example of this type arekazoos.
5. Other
membranophones are called frame drums in which the skin or
membrane is stretched over a frame such as tambourines.
Also, pot drums and ground drums fall under
the membranophone category.
Aerophones - Music instruments which produce sound by a vibrating
mass of air. This is more commonly known as wind instruments and there are
three basic types:
1.
Brasswinds - Made of metal, particularly
brass, these instruments create sound through the vibration of a player's lips
on the mouthpiece. The air that passes from the player's lips goes to the air
column of the instrument and thus creates sound. Examples:trombone, trumpet, tuba
2. Woodwinds -
Originally made of wood but now other materials have also been used. On reed
instruments like the saxophone and
the clarinet, a thin
material is placed on the mouthpiece so that when the player blows into it the
air is forced to go to a reed and sets it to vibrate. In double-reed
instruments such as bassoons and oboes, the material placed on the opening of the mouthpiece
is thicker. In woodwinds such as flutes, the player
blows air into the edge of a mouthpiece thus creating sound.
3. Free-reed -
Refers to wind instruments that has a freely vibrating reed and the pitch
depends on the size of the reed. A good example of this type of instrument is
the accordion.
Chordophones - Music instruments that produce sound by means of a
stretched vibrating string. There are 5 basic types based on the strings'
relationship with the resonator. When a string vibrates, the resonator picks up
that vibration and amplifies it giving it a more appealing sound.
1. Musical bows - May
or may not have resonators; the strings are attached and stretched over a
wooden bow.
3.
Lyres - The strings run through a crossbar holding it
away from the resonator. Lyres
may either be bowed or plucked.
4.
Lutes - These instruments have
necks; the strings are stretched across a resonator and travel up the neck. Lutes may be bowed or plucked.
5.
Zithers - Have no necks; strings are stretched from one
end of the board to another end. Zithers
may be plucked or struck.
Chordophones also have subcategories depending on how
the strings are played. Examples of chordophones played by bowing are double bass,violin and viola. Examples of chordophones that are played by plucking are banjo, guitar, harp, mandolinand ukulele. The piano, dulcimer
and the clavichordare examples of chordophones that
are struck.
Electrophones - Refers to music instruments that produce sound
electronically or produce its initial sound traditionally and then amplified
electronically. Some examples of instruments that produce sound electronically
are electronic organs and electronic synthesizers. Electric guitars and electric
pianos are examples of traditional instruments that are electronically
amplified.
In conclusion, when we speak of music instruments of
the Western orchestra we refer to them as brass, percussion, strings and
woodwinds. But if we want a more accurate classification of music instruments
we refer to the Sachs-Hornbostel System which categorizes each instrument
according to how the sound is produced and what material is used to produce
sound.
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