What are these classes? All our classes are research-based, developmentally appropriate music
and movement programs for children ages birth through five, and the
adults who love them.
Check out the various types of classes we offer!
What kinds of things will we do in class?
In class we sing, dance, chant and play along with instruments to a
variety of musical styles, melodies and rhythms. You and your child
will also participate and experience creative movement, improvisation,
finger play and lap songs. Above all else, we have fun while creating a
rich and lively musical community.
Is my child too young for music class?
All children are musical. The same way that a child has the innate
ability to speak and understand his native language, he also has the
ability to do the same with the language of music. Do you wait to talk
to your child until you are sure that he can answer you back? He talks
when he is ready, because he has been immersed in a language from
birth. He walks when he is ready because he has felt your movement
while in yours arms. Giving a child this same kind of immersion in
musical experiences will provide him opportunities to not only learn to
sing in tune and keep a steady beat, but to develop his own special way
of expressing music through movement.
Do infants really benefit?
Yes! Infant participation will seem passive at first, as they actively absorb what they are seeing, hearing, and feeling.
By viewing your parent guide and through parent education in class, parents will learn to recognize their infant's musical responses and observe them reaching musical milestones. As their bodies and nervous systems mature, the infants often show progressively more complex musical responses and evidence of song recognition. Parents will learn in class how to enhance their child's music development and to create or enhance the musical bond with their child. For more info, see this page specifically about babies.
May I bring my three-year-old as well as my 10-month-old to the same class?
Not only may you, but we encourage it! Research shows that
preschoolers learn best in a mixed-age environment. The little ones
learn by watching and imitating the older children. The older children
love being the "big kids" and showing the little ones how it is done.
This family-style learning environment facilitates participation and
involvement in the music for every child, at whatever developmental
stage they may be.
Why aren't there separate classes for different age groups?
In the 1980s, Music Together® pioneered the development ofthe mixed-age approach in early childhood music. In each class we strive tocreate a musically rich, developmentally appropriate environment where the whole family can enjoy music and nurture skills at the level right for eachchild. Mixed-age classes also provide a rich learning environment because children of different ages thrive when they interact with each other; this approach is based on researchfrom music education, early childhood development, and family relationships, as well as our 20 years experience in the field.
What is my role in the class and why is it important for me to be there?
Because you are your child's most important role model, she will
learn best by watching you and listening to you. Therefore, your
participation as a music-maker is vital to your child's developing love
of music.
I am tone deaf! Won't I ruin my child musically if I sing to him?
No! We promise that you will not hurt your child's musical prowess
by singing to him, even if you are not always in tune. He will hear
plenty of "in tune" music through other mediums, but your voice and your
presence are most precious to him. What you (and/or other primary
caregivers) do, he wants to do too. Although we, as teachers, are able
to help your child learn skills, your child must gain the positive
disposition toward active music making from you.
My child just sits there in class (or my child just wanders around in class). Is my child bored?
There are many different learning styles. Some children may be
visual learners who need to watch before they experiment on their own.
Others are aural learners who are listening, even when they are across
the room. Kinesthetic learners need to move! Tell a kinaesthetic
learner that he can't move and you are actually hurting his learning
process. Therefore, a child's learning in class happens in a
multi-layered way - through active participation, watching others move,
experimenting with instruments and even by just being there and
listening to you sing. Instead of waiting for your child to do
something in class, let yourself go and do it yourself. Then, watch and
listen to her at home, and you will see and hear how much she is
learning and absorbing in class.
What happens after we complete a semester?
There are nine Music Together song collections and three Canta y Baila song collections. We're making our first Share a Shirah prototype CD right now! A different song collection is used
each semester, so when you register for your next semester, you can
look forward to new songs and chants, taught with the same kinds of
activities. Because your child will be at a different place
developmentally, an activity will be exciting to him whether it is
because of its familiarity or because he can grasp it in a new way.
What if I didn't start in the fall?
Has my child missed something?
Because the semesters are non-sequential and the activities are designed
to be accessible to a child at his own developmental stage, a child can
enter the program at the beginning of any semester and
at any age.
How do I sign up?
Look at our class schedule and find a time and location that works for
you and your child; then register. If you like, take a free trial class first!