How to Help Kids Read Music
Children are often confused when they try to correlate the notes on the page to the keys below. When kids read music, they look from the page to the keys. The drawing below shows the elements with which a child is expected to start reading music. They are given five horizontal lines, and a piano keyboard below.
This is what kids first see in conventional piano lessons. Notice that there is no visual reference point on the piano keyboard. To a child, the piano keyboard is an ocean of white and black buttons with no apparent organization. Equally confusing is the series of five horizontal lines (above the keyboard.) These five lines have no apparent pattern and bear no apparent relation to the confusing, different pattern of the piano keys. Confused yet? Your six year old is. A ten year old might get it if you really try.
I Can Read Music e Book Download
A Different Method
Given a reference point, as in the drawing above, children relax and start developing visual habits. This builds confidence in the basics of reading music. Here you’ll see a piano keyboard with the colored stickers applied.
Above that you’ll see a “musical staff,” which is the group of five horizontal lines. Each black arrow in the diagram above points down to a white piano key with a blue sticker. “Middle C” is the white key with the red sticker.
Why Piano Stickers Work For Children
The blue stickers define the location of the five lines of the musical staff. The red sticker defines the location of Middle C. The stickers reduce uncertainty about note reading to a minimum. The note you’re looking for is either on a line or a space. This is a simple question the child quickly surmounts.
With the stickers in place, kids will fumble much less at reading music. You can get more done than just finding notes on the page, like playing music and exploring the piano.
Concentrate on Middle C First
The first step after applying the stickers is to make the child aware of the circular symbol for Middle C, which is the circle in the drawing below with the little horizontal line through it:
This is Middle C, the first note that children learn at the piano. Look through some pages of music and help the child identify the graphic symbol for the note Middle C. Here’s page with lots of Middle C’s for kids to hunt and find. If you click on the page in most browsers it will enlarge and you can print it.
Doodley Doodley Game
Make a game of it, saying “Who can point to Middle C on the page first?” Let them win every time after a few tries. I make a silly game of it called “Doodley Doodley” in which I say “Doodley, doodley” repeatedly and quietly as I scan my finger across the page slowly under each note. When the child sees a Middle C (the circle with the line through it) they get to ring a library bell. We both laugh, and then we continue, “Doodley, doodley…..”
Then play some games in which the child sees the note Middle C on a page, and then has to play it on the piano keyboard, finding the white key with the red sticker. All that is necessary for quite a while is for the child to be familiar with three basic elements.
Find the location of Middle C. Locate the lowest of the five lines, the first blue sticker. The location of the second of the five lines, the second blue sticker. All piano lessons for beginners concentrate on the note Middle C and the five white piano keys directly above that. It’s an easy game that kids get right away, and the location of the lines of the staff are burned into their memory.
The Line and Space Game
You are making a game out of finding note locations. Notes are found on either one the five lines, or the spaces in between them. The result of this method is kids that are able to sight read. The ability to simply read the music that is put in front of you is a quite valuable skill in music. Almost all kids that I have seen taught by the “old school” method (read first, play later) are really memorizing the music in order to get through the lessons.
They have no idea of the actual geography of the keyboard. Give these “old school” students a simple, unfamiliar piece of music and they have no idea how to read it. This is because they have memorized their way through their piano lessons. It’s not necessary to name the notes, nor is it necessary to make the child use a certain finger to play a certain note, at first.
Why Piano By Number First?
You stand a far greater chance of success at reading music if you first make the child comfortable with playing the piano using a simple, transparent and immediate method such as Piano By Number. Then slowly begin to introduce the elements of reading music using the careful steps outlined above on this page.
REFERENCES
Reading Music
Why Delay Reading Music
What Comes After Numbers In Kid’s Piano
You Say Read, I Say Play
Reading Music for Kids Step By Step
The Basic Piano Curriculum for Kids
The Transition From Numbers To Notes
Preventing Kid’s Struggle To Read Music
Resistance To Reading Music Is Age Based
Stay Sane Teaching Kids To Read Music
Helping Children Read Music
Helping Your Child Find Middle C
What Kids Understand About Sheet Music
An Effective Strategy for Kids Reading Music
How To Help Kids Read Music
The Battle To Read Music
Stickers for Reading Music
Why Is Middle C So Important?
What Comes After Numbers?
Start With Numbers, Then Read Music
Start Kids With Numbers, Then Read Music
Helping Children Read Music
From Numbers To Notes
Why Kids Resist Reading Music
How To Help Your Kids Read Music
Start With Numbers, Then Read Music
Beginner Piano Sheet Music for Kids
Don’t Start With Reading Music
Easy Piano Songs Sheet Music
Piano Letters