F O R T E. A Theory Board Game Designed by Colleen Mayron Cole for The Mayron Cole Piano Method Copyrighted by Maryon Cole

Similar documents
Constructing a support system for self-learning playing the piano at the beginning stage

Unit Plan: Meter, Beat, and Time Signatures Music Theory Jenny Knabb The Pennsylvania State University Spring 2015

PCSD Lesson Planning Template

How to Use Text Features Poster

Sight Word Assessment

Activities for School

Rhythm Flashcards. Sample. 100 Large Colored Flashcards. Presented sequentially for students in K-8. q q qr q qttt qr qttt q q q q Q

Piano Safari Sight Reading & Rhythm Cards for Book 1

PART C: ENERGIZERS & TEAM-BUILDING ACTIVITIES TO SUPPORT YOUTH-ADULT PARTNERSHIPS

Andover USD #385 Elementary Band HANDBOOK

Interview with a Fictional Character

Curriculum Design Project with Virtual Manipulatives. Gwenanne Salkind. George Mason University EDCI 856. Dr. Patricia Moyer-Packenham

Mathematics Success Level E

Spinal Cord. Student Pages. Classroom Ac tivities

P a g e 1. Grade 4. Grant funded by: MS Exemplar Unit English Language Arts Grade 4 Edition 1

How long did... Who did... Where was... When did... How did... Which did...

Contents. Foreword... 5

SCISA HIGH SCHOOL REGIONAL ACADEMIC QUIZ BOWL

Why Misquitoes Buzz in People s Ears (Part 1 of 3)

TEACHING Simple Tools Set II

Spinners at the School Carnival (Unequal Sections)

Operations and Algebraic Thinking Number and Operations in Base Ten

Zoo Math Activities For 5th Grade

Using Proportions to Solve Percentage Problems I

Houghton Mifflin Online Assessment System Walkthrough Guide

RIGHTSTART MATHEMATICS

TCC Jim Bolen Math Competition Rules and Facts. Rules:

Sound Beginnings. Questions & Answers About Teaching Children to Read

Math Hunt th November, Sodalitas de Mathematica St. Xavier s College, Maitighar Kathmandu, Nepal

Division Strategies: Partial Quotients. Fold-Up & Practice Resource for. Students, Parents. and Teachers

Problem-Solving with Toothpicks, Dots, and Coins Agenda (Target duration: 50 min.)

Mathematics process categories

Consequences of Your Good Behavior Free & Frequent Praise

Measurement. Time. Teaching for mastery in primary maths

Starting primary school

Average Number of Letters

RAJASTHAN UNIVERSITY OF HEALTH SCIENCE

Student s Edition. Grade 6 Unit 6. Statistics. Eureka Math. Eureka Math

LAW ON HIGH SCHOOL. C o n t e n t s

Measures of the Location of the Data

Grade 2: Using a Number Line to Order and Compare Numbers Place Value Horizontal Content Strand

with The Grouchy Ladybug

Lancaster Lane CP School. The Importance of Motor Skills

Welcome to ACT Brain Boot Camp

Digital Fabrication and Aunt Sarah: Enabling Quadratic Explorations via Technology. Michael L. Connell University of Houston - Downtown

Work Stations 101: Grades K-5 NCTM Regional Conference &

Build on students informal understanding of sharing and proportionality to develop initial fraction concepts.

What's My Value? Using "Manipulatives" and Writing to Explain Place Value. by Amanda Donovan, 2016 CTI Fellow David Cox Road Elementary School

Association Between Categorical Variables

Writing that Tantalizes Taste Buds. Presented by Tracy Wassmer Roanoke County Schools

Robot manipulations and development of spatial imagery

Copyright 2017 DataWORKS Educational Research. All rights reserved.

Ohio s Learning Standards-Clear Learning Targets

Session Six: Software Evaluation Rubric Collaborators: Susan Ferdon and Steve Poast

Fluency YES. an important idea! F.009 Phrases. Objective The student will gain speed and accuracy in reading phrases.

PreAP Geometry. Ms. Patricia Winkler

Syllabus: CS 377 Communication and Ethical Issues in Computing 3 Credit Hours Prerequisite: CS 251, Data Structures Fall 2015

Preparing for the School Census Autumn 2017 Return preparation guide. English Primary, Nursery and Special Phase Schools Applicable to 7.

InCAS. Interactive Computerised Assessment. System

End-of-Module Assessment Task

Science Fair Project Handbook

One Way Draw a quick picture.

Characteristics of the Text Genre Informational Text Text Structure

Rover Races Grades: 3-5 Prep Time: ~45 Minutes Lesson Time: ~105 minutes

PreReading. Lateral Leadership. provided by MDI Management Development International

BLACKBOARD TRAINING PHASE 2 CREATE ASSESSMENT. Essential Tool Part 1 Rubrics, page 3-4. Assignment Tool Part 2 Assignments, page 5-10

What s Different about the CCSS and Our Current Standards?

Going to School: Measuring Schooling Behaviors in GloFish

END TIMES Series Overview for Leaders

THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS RIO GRANDE VALLEY GRAPHIC IDENTITY GUIDELINES

Hands-on Books-closed: Creating Interactive Foldables in Islamic Studies. Presented By Tatiana Coloso

TASK 2: INSTRUCTION COMMENTARY

The Evolution of Random Phenomena

WE ARE STORYT ELLERS!

FORCE : TECHNIQUES DE DESSIN DYNAMIQUE POUR L'ANIMATION FROM PEARSON EDUCATION

WiggleWorks Software Manual PDF0049 (PDF) Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

More ESL Teaching Ideas

Hardhatting in a Geo-World

SMARTboard: The SMART Way To Engage Students

5.1 Sound & Light Unit Overview

Economics Unit: Beatrice s Goat Teacher: David Suits

Simple Random Sample (SRS) & Voluntary Response Sample: Examples: A Voluntary Response Sample: Examples: Systematic Sample Best Used When

Background Information. Instructions. Problem Statement. HOMEWORK INSTRUCTIONS Homework #3 Higher Education Salary Problem

SNAP, CRACKLE AND POP! INFUSING MULTI-SENSORY ACTIVITIES INTO THE EARLY CHILDHOOD CLASSROOM SUE SCHNARS, M.ED. AND ELISHA GROSSENBACHER JUNE 27,2014

Following Directions. Table of Contents

Grade 8: Module 4: Unit 1: Lesson 8 Reading for Gist and Answering Text-Dependent Questions: Local Sustainable Food Chain

English Nexus Offender Learning

COURSE DESCRIPTION PREREQUISITE COURSE PURPOSE

Unit 2. A whole-school approach to numeracy across the curriculum

Using SAM Central With iread

Fire safety in the home

REVIEW OF CONNECTED SPEECH

Bebop Books Page 1. Guided Reading with SPLASH! written by Dinah Johnson photographed by Maria Victoria Torrey

5 Guidelines for Learning to Spell

NAME: East Carolina University PSYC Developmental Psychology Dr. Eppler & Dr. Ironsmith

Tour. English Discoveries Online

Primary National Curriculum Alignment for Wales

CORRECT YOUR ENGLISH ERRORS BY TIM COLLINS DOWNLOAD EBOOK : CORRECT YOUR ENGLISH ERRORS BY TIM COLLINS PDF

Touchpoint Math Multiplication

ELP in whole-school use. Case study Norway. Anita Nyberg

Transcription:

F O R T E B I N G O G A M E A Theory Board Game Designed by Colleen Mayron Cole for The Mayron Cole Piano Method Copyrighted by Maryon Cole For Students in Level 2 or early Level 3 2-8 players FORTE Bingo is an ideal theory game for young students and/or large classes in Levels 2 and early Level 3. Since each child is involved with every question, FORTE Bingo holds all of the students attention throughout the duration of the game. Of course, older students and/or small classes enjoy FORTE Bingo as well! CONCEPTS COVERED FORTE Bingo is recommended for students that have reached at least page 40 in Level 2 (PIANO Bingo can be used for early Level 2 students). FORTE Bingo quizzes students knowledge of low bass clef notes, piano vocabulary, and the basic theory concepts covered in Levels 1 and 2. Students that have reached at least page 72 in Level 2 will know all of the concepts covered in FORTE Bingo. For students that are between pages 40 and 72, there may be a question here or there that the students will not know; this is a great time to go ahead and introduce that new concept to the students. PRINTING Have the 8 Student Game Cards, Teacher s Card, and Answer Card printed at your local print shop on material that will not tear such as vinyl. A Permission to Copy letter is attached to these instructions. Or you may print the pdf file at home and take the pages to your local print shop for lamination. BEFORE YOU PLAY You need to cut out each of the answers on the Answer Card and put them in a baggie before playing FORTE Bingo. YOU WILL NEED. You will also need approximately 100 coins which may be beans, paper clips, or bingo chips. Do not use real money or glass coins. GETTING STARTED Each student chooses a FORTE Bingo card. Pass out a few coins to each student. Students should place a coin on the FREE square in the middle of their card. HOW TO PLAY The teacher draws an answer card out of the red bag, and tells the students which letter s column to look under - F, O, R, T or E; then gives the students the corresponding clue (see CLUES on the following pages). If a student has the answer on his/her card, the student places a coin on the appropriate

square. For young students and beginning students, the teacher should look at each student s card to see if he/she has found the correct answer. THE TEACHER S CARD The teacher should place the teacher s card on a different table than the students cards. After giving a clue, place the clue under the appropriate letter on your Teacher s Card. At the end of the game, you will be able to quickly reference which clues have been given for each letter. ENDING THE GAME When a student has 5 coins in a row, either vertically, horizontally, or diagonally, the student says FORTE! The teacher should check the student s five winning squares against the teacher s card to confirm that the student is in fact the winner. If the student was incorrect, take off the incorrect coin(s) and continue the game. A LITTLE MORE SUSPENSE For older students and/or students who have played FORTE Bingo a few times, the teacher can tell the students which letter s column to look under, give the students the clue, but then does not help the students in any other manner. Each student will need to know the answer on his/her own and find it on his/her card, or miss out on that square. When playing the game under these rules, it is very important for the teacher to confirm the answers of the winner because there might be more mistakes on the student s part.

F CLUES Have the students look under the F column Clue for the students: This note is F. Clue for the students: This note is E-flat Clue for the students: This note is B. Clue for the students: This note is F-sharp.. Clue for the students: This note is E. Clue for the students: This note is G. Clue for the students: This note is B-flat. Clue for the students: This note is A. Clue for the students: This note is G-sharp. Clue for the students: This note is C. Clue for the students: This note is D. Clue for the students: This note is C-sharp.

O CLUES Have the students look under the O column Clue for the students: This is the Italian word for medium-soft. Clue for the students: This is the Italian word that tells you to gradually slow down. Clue for the students: This is the Italian word that tells you to play the key like it s hot. Clue for the students: This is Italian for go back to the beginning and play until you see the word Fine. Clue for the students: This is the Italian word for medium-loud. Clue for the students: This is the Italian word that tells you to gradually play softer. Clue for the students: This is the Italian word for play an octave higher or lower. Clue for the students: This is the Italian word for soft. Clue for the students: This is Italian for go back to your original speed. Clue for the students: This is the Italian word that tells you to hold the note a little bit longer. Clue for the students: This is the Italian word for very soft. Clue for the students: This is the Italian word for loud.

R CLUES Have the students look under the R column Clue for the students: This harmonic interval is a third. Clue for the students: This harmonic interval is a second. Clue for the students: This harmonic interval is a fourth. Clue for the students: This finger is pointing to the number in the time signature that tells you that there will be 3 beats in each measure. Clue for the students: This finger is pointing to the number in the time signature that tells you that the quarter note will receive one beat. Clue for the students: This is a half rest. Clue for the students: This is a whole rest. rhythm I m counting: 1 2; 1 +; 1 +. rhythm I m counting: 1 + 2; +; 1; 1. rhythm I m counting: 1 2; 1 + 2; +. rhythm I m counting: 1 ; 1 + 2 ; +. rhythm I m counting: 1 + 2; +; 1-2.

T CLUES Have the students look under the T column Clue for the students: As you are wiggling your thumb say, You are going to play this F with this finger. Clue for the students: As you are wiggling your ring finger say, You are going to play this F with this finger. Clue for the students: As you are wiggling your thumb say, You are going to play this A with this finger. Clue for the students: As you are wiggling your middle finger say, You are going to play this A with this finger. Clue for the students: As you are wiggling your ring finger say, You are going to play this B with this finger. Clue for the students: As you are wiggling your index finger say, You are going to play this B with this finger. Clue for the students: As you are wiggling your middle finger say, You are going to play this C with this finger. Clue for the students: As you are wiggling your little finger say, You are going to play this C with this finger. Clue for the students: As you are wiggling your little finger say, You are going to play this D with this finger. Clue for the students: As you are wiggling your ring finger say, You are going to play this D with this finger. Clue for the students: As you are wiggling your index finger say, You are going to play this E with this finger. Clue for the students: As you are wiggling your little finger say, You are going to play this E with this finger.

E CLUES Have the students look under the E column Clue for the students: This is a natural sign. Clue for the students: This is a flat sign. Clue for the students: This is a sharp sign. Clue for the students: This is a tie. Clue for the students: This is an accent mark. Clue for the students: This is a slur. Clue for the students: This is a dotted half note. Clue for the students: This is a dotted quarter note. Clue for the students: These are two-eighth notes. Clue for the students: This is one eighth note. Clue for the students: This is a repeat sign. Clue for the students: This is a split measure, also known as a pick-up measure or an anacrusis. If the students have trouble identifying the answer, ask What is a split measure? It s when there are less than the correct number of beats in the first measure.

Permission to Copy The Mayron Cole Piano Method Although Mayron Cole owns the copyright to this pdf file, she is granting permission to copy it only under the following condition: Teachers and students may print this pdf file at home, school, or at their local print shop; and teachers and students may download, view, copy and/or share this file digitally. If you have any questions, please contact The Mayron Cole Piano Method at staff@freepianomethod.com. f r e e p i a n o m e t h o d. c o m