Just like many other band programs in Texas, my students have specific objectives they have to complete each nine-weeks. On my band objective cards I have in bold lettering “Only the band director can pass off objectives!” At my school however, I am the only band director so the 1 to 143 teacher-to-student ratio means it can take a long time to get through even one objective.
I was becoming frustrated with how slow my students were achieving there objectives. It took forever to pass off our “Alphabet All-Star” lines, and we were only counting a few rhythm lines a day. The students weren’t engaged, and I felt like they were losing momentum. I took my problem to a colleague and asked him how he passes off so many objectives so quickly. He mentioned that he had band aides, a luxury my program does not have. He then suggested having the students who have already achieved the objective help me pass off other students.
I started by having students who have completed the entire objective help me pass off others. These top achieving students loved getting to walk around to pass off other students, but we were still moving slowly. Then I realized that a student who has only passed off one line can still teach another person how to be successful on that same line.
So, I changed the rules of the game.
Students who are ready to pass off a line raise their hands waiting for a classmate to help.
My high achieving students are excited to move faster. They are also less likely to become bored. I can teach them more challenging concepts individually so they can continue to move forward without waiting for others. Then they can teach those concepts to the other high achievers (sometimes with my assistance). When I have a student who needs help learning a new concept, I can simply say, “Aaron, come show Josh how we count 8th notes.”
A student teaching another student how four eighth notes beamed together are counted the exact same way as they counted it on the previous rhythm chart where the eighth notes are only in pairs.
The middle students don’t usually get the chance to show off, but this process allows them to step up and become leaders. While my high achieving students have a tendency to focus on their own advancement, my middle students are always willing to help their peers.
Notice that the girl being helped in the last image is now working with another student.
My lower achieving students get one-on-one time with me. I can spend the entire time working with one individual instead of feeling pressure to keep everyone moving forward: my class is moving forward without me. If I am having problems explaining a concept to a low achieving student, I can once again ask another student who can use “kid talk” and maybe they will understand it that way.
The best thing about giving my students the “power of the stickers” was watching my lower achieving students helping others. I had students walking around the room holding a finger up and saying with excitement, “Who needs help with line one?” How exciting it must be to be that kid! They get to show off for a brief second that they nailed a line and they get the chance to help another student.
So far I’ve only experimented on this with the “Alphabet All-star” pass offs and our rhythm chart lines. I’m not sure if this could work with playing, but I am willing to try it out. It might require more training on what I’m expecting from a passed off line. I might alter it so I’m more selective with my sticker people. We already have group discussions on whose tone is the best and who played the most rhythmically accurate. They tend to have a good idea of what they need to sound like. I worry more about the feedback that they might give each other and may limit it to specific comments or sections of our rubric.
Overall, giving the power of the stickers to my students has improved the learning environment of my classroom. My students are moving much faster and are excited to play our new game.