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Planning with Subjects Integration

Topic Sound - What is music and how is it made?

Questioning is the foundation of all learning.
The first step in rejecting not knowing is to ask, why?
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Introduction

This page discusses different kinds of integration and a framework for planning subjects integration with examples for the topic of sound and music.

Subjects integration is similar to lesson plans or other planning units. However, integration increases learning with the inclusion of additional ideas to be experienced and learned, which also increases the complexity of planning.

Subjects integration includes learning related to multiple subjects integrated into a plan for a topic or theme. Including more subjects increases the complexity for planning and if the dimensions of each subject are considered, this also increases the degree of complexity.

For example, if a planning framework for mathematics has 10 dimensions, and one for science has 16 dimensions and a reading framework has 20, then integrating them could include 46 categories. Therefore, as more subjects are added the number of categories becomes larger and planning becomes more complex.

  1. No integration. Planning for only the knowledge content of a subject, discipline, or other topic. Focus is on one topic or concept, sound for example.
  2. Subject integration. Curriculum or lesson sequences focus on the content that subjects or disciplines have created. Focus is on a topic or concept within different subjects or disciplines, for example sound as explained in science, used in music, used in literature or theater, story telling, history and geography in music around the world, and so on.
  3. Subject dimensions integration within a subject. For example this sound unit and planning integrates these different dimensions.
  4. Real life integration - Curriculum designed around big life ideas

Let's illustrate subjects or disciplines integration for the topic sound.

Integration of Subjects for the topic Sound

This table is a draft framework for subjects integration.

It includes seven traditional subjects or discipline areas. The last subject, science, includes six of its dimensions. Illustrating how the inclusion of a subject's dimensions increases the complexity of the framework, planning, and teaching.

There are limits to the complexity that is appropriate to introduce to learners, but the benefits for some integration increases learning, allows learners to make more connections in what they are learning, results in greater understanding, longer remembering, and inclusion of more ideas that are applicable to their life experiences.

Integrated subjects draft planning framework for sound
Music
  • Listen to songs, identify different pitches, length of sounds, volume of sounds, instruments, create instruments.
  • Watch videos with and without music.
  • Put music to play or story.
Art
Draw and illustrate sounds, diagram vibrations, pitch, illustrate people enjoying music,
Creative movement - physical education
Listen to different pieces of music and interpret each with body movement
Health
  • Loud sounds are harmful to hearing.
  • How loud is loud?
  • How do ears work and how do we hear?
  • How do we care for our ears?
Language arts
  • Read stories related to music, sound, science of sound, inventors of sound related technology
  • Poems and how they incorporate different sounds of words, hard, soft, onomatopoeia
  • Group discussion skills
  • Writing informational pieces - demonstration of musical instruments and sound
Mathematics
  • Chart instruments by type,
  • Make a date line showing historical development of different instruments
  • Explore equations for pitch, frequency, speed of sound,
  • Use computer programs to collect data for different sounds and speech, then describe their properties
Problem solving: critical thinking, and reasoning
  • May incorporate these by using the properties of sound to recognize, compare, and classify sounds.
  • Create a musical instrument and demonstrate how the properties of sound are changed when playing the instrument.
Science
Physical, Life, Earth Science Concepts
  • Properties of sound (vibrations, volume, tone/pitch/frequency)
  • Identify sounds in the world and space?
Inquiry Processes
  • Observation sound vibrations can be observed.
  • Sounds can be identified and classified by their properties.
  • A model can be used to represent volume and frequency.
  • Experiments can answer questions and lead to more questions.
Attitudes
  • Thinking of questions and investigating answers to the questions can be fun and challenging
Personal and social
  • Scientists work as individuals and groups
Technology
  • Creating technology is similar to experimentation
History and nature of science
  • The understanding of sound changed with time
  • Sound can be understood with science, but not appreciated.

 

Outline for Subjects Integration framework

1. Create a framework with subjects and any related dimensions for the subjects. This is time consuming. Planning time is essential to identify what is important for learners to know, how it should be organized, what they might learn, and how to assess their achievement. However, once you have a comprehensive framework it can be used again to plan subjects integration units for other themes and topic.

2.Brainstorm possible topics or themes. Students or teachers together or individually or in groups may do this. Areas for ideas to consider:

3. Select a theme or topic or a combination that makes a big idea. When it is identified think about how it can be focused yet broad based enough to capture big ideas. To make it more realistic and applicable to learners it is helpful to review the Real Life themes to include in big ideas and activities.

4. When related ideas, topics, and activities are thought of, it is time to start to fill out a framework. Begin by adding the topic, theme, focus question or big idea and categorize the ideas in subjects integration framework. The planning outline above has been expanded to include planning categories in the table or matrix.

A sample:

Integrated subjects planning framework for sound
Topic Sound - What is music and how is it made?
Music
Inference or naive ideas Facts, observations Concepts, relationships Activities Instructional
procedures and Transformations
Assessment levels
     
  • Listen to songs, identify different pitches, length of sounds, volume of sounds, instruments, create instruments.
  • Watch videos with and without music.
  • Put music to play or story.
   
Art
Inference or naive ideas Facts, observations Concepts, relationships Activities Instructional
procedures and Transformations
Assessment levels
      Draw and illustrate sounds, diagram vibrations, pitch, illustrate people enjoying music,    
Creative movement
Inference or naive ideas Facts, observations Concepts, relationships Activities Instructional
procedures and Transformations
Assessment levels
      Listen to different pieces of music and interpret each with body movement    
Health
Inference or naive ideas Facts, observations Concepts, relationships Activities Instructional
procedures and Transformations
Assessment levels
  Loud sounds are harmful to hearing.  
  • Research ear health to answer student generated questions.
Decide as a class how to answer the following questions:
  • How loud is loud?
  • How do ears work and how do we hear?
  • How do we care for our ears?
 
Language arts
Inference or naive ideas Facts, observations Concepts, relationships Activities Instructional
procedures and Transformations
Assessment levels
    When students work in groups they are more efficient when they set goals, design a plan, and work towards achieving the goals.
  • Read stories related to music, sound, science of sound, inventors of sound related technology
  • Study poems to explore how they incorporate different sounds of words: hard, soft, rhyme, beat, onomatopoeia
  • Writing informational pieces
Work in groups and introduce an agenda to use to focus a discussion and improve the skills of students group work.  
Mathematics
Inference or naive ideas Facts, observations Concepts, relationships Activities Instructional
procedures and Transformations
Assessment levels
   
  • String instruments have strings that vibrate.
  • Woodwinds have reeds or metal mouthpiece that vibrate the air in the instrument
  • Brass have metal mouthpieces that vibrate the air and brass instrument
  • Percussion have solid parts that vibrate when struck.
  • Chart musical instruments by type: brass, woodwind, percussion, & string.
  • Make a date line showing historical development of different instruments
  • Explore equations for pitch, frequency, speed of sound,
  • Use computer programs to collect data for different sounds and speech, then describe their properties
   
Problem solving: critical thinking, and reasoning
Inference or naive ideas Facts, observations Concepts, relationships Activities Instructional
procedures and Transformations
Assessment levels
     
  • Use critical thinking and problem solving to describe how to recognize, compare, and classify sounds.
  • Create a musical instrument and demonstrate how the properties of sound are changed when playing the instrument.
   
Science - Planning categories
Dimensions Inference or naive ideas Facts, observations Concepts, relationships Activities Instructional
procedures and Transformations
Assessment levels
Science content  
  • Properties of sound
  • Vibrations cause sound,
  • Volume is the amount of energy causing the vibration
  • Tone/pitch/frequency is the rate at which the object or matter vibrates when making sound.
  Identify sounds in the world and space?    
Inquiry Processes  
  • Observation can be used as evidence to answer questions.
  • Sound vibrations can be observed.
  • Sounds can be identified and classified by their properties.
  • A model can be used to represent volume and frequency.
  • Experiments can answer questions and lead to more questions.
 
  • Demonstrate sound by drawing and labeling a drum head.
  • Draw and label sound coming from vibrations of the drum head, traveling through the air, going into an ear, vibrating the eardrum, and sending nerve impulses to the brain.
 
Attitudes     Thinking of questions and investigating answers to the questions can be fun and challenging      
Personal and social    
  • Scientists work as individuals and groups
  • I can work as a scientist to answer my questions using observations as evidence and reasoning to suggest explanations.
     
Engineering & Technology     Creating technology is similar to experimentation      
History and nature of science    
  • The understanding of sound changed with time
  • Sound can be understood with science, but not appreciated.
     

 

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