Research Resources show playing, laughing, language and music are the common denominators that cross all barriers between all cultures.
2016 Austrailia
Foundation launches million-dollar plan to record Australia's
songlines
To try to capture these languages before it becomes too late, the
Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Studies (AIATSIS) has launched a foundation to record languages and
songlines.
NAIDOC Week: How elders are reviving Aboriginal language through children's songs
Singing the country to life The theme of this year's NAIDOC Week is Songlines. Sometimes called dreaming tracks, songlines crisscross Australia and trace the journeys of ancestral spirits as they created the land, animals and lore. To celebrate NAIDOC Week, we look at songlines from different parts of Australia.
4/2010 Research Confirms That
Motor And Cognitive Skills Are Improved By Hand-Clapping Songs
Clapping games continue to resonate across modern-day playgrounds.
Skipping Games
Children's Games
The British Library
celebrates and explores themes relating to childrens games, songs
and folklore through the use of audio, video, photographic and
manuscript collections ranging from 1900 to 2010. An educational
resource promoting the importance of childrens folklore amongst
children and adults.
African American religious institutions named them the Singing and
Praying Bands
.
This folksong and
ring shout tradition
began in Chesapeake Bay country in the early nineteenth century,
with a fusion of
Methodist prayer meeting
worship and African religious, danced song traditions. Although
scholars have assumed ring shouts died out long ago, Jonathan C.
David shows otherwise, ushering us inside tidewater communities of
Maryland and Delaware where they continue to thrive.
A traditional band service represents a cultural commitment to
mutual aid, called “help,” operating as a system of social
reciprocity, as a performance aesthetic, and as the foundation of
community spirituality.
Miami University Libraries Searching Books & More : "
Folk songs
"
American folk songs for children / [sung and played by] Mike and
Peggy Seeger --
English Folksongs
FILM
The Songcatcher, album released in 2001
Iris DeMent singing Pretty Saro
Oh Death from Songcatcher
Barbara Allen
O Brother Where Art Thou Grammy Performance 2002
The Singing Street
National Library of Scotland
It's a lovely short film from 1951 of children playing in the
streets of Edinburgh
.
Description: Collection of children's street games filmed in the
back streets of Edinburgh and Leith accompanied by traditional
children's songs. Publicity leaflet: Their progress is followed
along an ideal thoroughfare. In songs where ancient ritual, myth,
the mountain and the rose, mingle with taxis, telephones and
powder-puffs. Old rhymes rarely dying - something new always
appearing. No-one asks "What does this mean?" The world's accepted,
poetry's kept alive. Favourite topic, love and death. Not meant for
education or entertainment but belonging to the art of play. Shot in
six Easter days of boisterous weather, the cast, mostly girls,
numbering sixty. Made by teachers at Norton Park School, Edinburgh.
"Whistling" done by poet Norman McCaig. Shot of Councillor Pat
Murray in teddy boy outfit in scene at top of steps - founder/moving
spirit behind establishment of Museum of Childhood. Film shown at
UNICA festival Barcelona, 1952.
[Collection of children's street games filmed in the back streets of
Edinburgh and Leith, accompanied by traditional children's songs.
Includes shots of children with skipping ropes and variations of
Ring-a-ring-a-roses] (2.01) - Blank - (2.03) more street games
(2.16) children's rhyme written in chalk on the pavement (2.26) more
games (4.21) pan of Edinburgh up to the castle (5.10) shots of
tenements (5.20) shots of the words "The Singing Street" chalked up
on a wall (5.33) girl skips down Victoria Street (5.51) girl gazes
into a shop window and sings to herself (6.15) more street games
(6.24) city street (6.29) street games (7.20) city street (7.23)
more games (7.35) high shot of two girls crossing a railway
footbridge at Bothwell Street (8.01) More games and shots of city
streets (11.07) girls skipping down a road (11.54) city street
(12.02) boys singing a song while seated on steps [Leith Street],
girls look on (13.34) shots of a girl on roller skates [at Abbey
Mount] (13.53) city street (13.59) girls play hide and seek (14.55)
shots of Edinburgh rooftops (15.05) girls skipping (15.29) view of
Edinburgh rooftops (15.36) girls skipping (15.29) view of Edinburgh
rooftops (15.36) girls skipping (16.03) shots of a city street
(16.20) one girl skips her way home after play (17.48) shots of
bridges over river at Leith harbour (17.57) ecs (18.08)
NCFR EVOLUTIONARY SCIENCE RESEARCH ARTICLES PDF
Playing is serious work for the young and old from the novice to
the experienced. It's about all the different ways we play to
learn. Larger brains are linked to greater levels of play. In
other words, playing makes you intelligent.
Rich or poor, young or old, male or female, play has evolved to
shape the overall architecture and to build big brains, explaining
why children need the playground just as much as the classroom. Play
is for Life Long Learners.
Babies are watching your language we know that young hearing babies acquiring spoken languages also use visual cues in this stunning way.
Indigenous Folksong Reading Curriculum
The study is the first to connect gesture, vocabulary and school
preparedness
.
Some of the robust differences in child vocabulary development at 54
months are likely to come from parents in higher-income groups using
gesture to communicate more different meanings when their children
were 14 months, the paper said.
skip c.1300, "to spring lightly," also "to jump over," probably from O.N. skopa "to skip, run," from P.Gmc. *skupanan (cf. M.Swed. skuppa, dial. Swed. skopa "to skip, leap"). Meaning "omit intervening parts" first recorded late 14c. Meaning "fail to attend" is from 1905. The noun is attested from mid-15c. The custom of skipping rope has been traced to 17c.; it was commonly done by boys as well as girls until late 19c.
Lore and Language of School Children
Collection of Children's Folksongs, Chants and Rhymes 38 page pdf
STANDARDS FOR FOLKLIFE EDUCATION
Children's handclapping games, featuring an interview with
folklorist
Bess Hawes.
Babies Can Learn Words as
Early as 10 Months
A two-year-old can quickly link an object--whether a flashy rattle
or a boring latch--to a word. Even a one-year-old can follow a
parent's gaze to an object and match it with a word being spoken.
But although anecdotal evidence seems to show that babies younger
than one year can learn words, it remains unclear whether they are
in fact mastering language.
Now a new study reveals that 10-month-old infants can link words
and objects, but only if the object is already interesting to
them
.
Psychologist Kathy Hirsh-Pasek of Temple University and her
colleagues tested 44 infants for the ability to learn words. The
infants averaged an understanding of nearly 14 words already,
according to their mothers. But the researchers paired four novel
objects--a blue sparkle wand and a white cabinet latch, a pink party
clacker and a beige bottle opener--with four nonsensical
words--modi, glorp, dawnoo and blicket--to test their ability to
associate new words with new objects.
Sitting on their mothers' laps, the infants were exposed to the
objects. First, they were allowed to play with an interesting and
boring object pair followed by seeing the two objects placed on a
rotating board. This was done to assess which object was more
interesting to the babies and, as expected, they preferred the
brightly-colored, noisy ones.
Then the researchers placed the two objects on a table in front of
the infant. If the baby was in one group, the experiment leader
pointed to the interesting object and labeled it with one of the
nonsense words. If the baby was a member of the other group, the
researcher pointed to the boring object and labeled it with the same
nonsense word. Regardless of the researchers' efforts, the infants
looked at the object they found interesting.
But subsequent tests showed that the babies were also learning to
associate it with the nonsense word. For example, when exposed to a
new nonsense word, the babies would look away from the interesting
object and search for a new one. Then the researchers returned to
the original word and, surprisingly, 80 percent of the infants
returned to looking at the original object.
This marks the first time such young infants have been shown
experimentally to associate a word--even a made-up one--with an
object, but, in contrast with their older peers, only one that they
found interesting.
"Ten-month-olds simply 'glue' a label onto the most interesting
object they see,"
notes Shannon Pruden, a doctoral student and lead author of the
study to appear in the journal Child Development.
"Perhaps this is why children learn words faster when parents
look at and name objects the infants already find interesting."
This inability to link social cues, words and objects may also
explain why early word learning is so slow but accelerates rapidly
around the age of 18 months.
"The 18-month-old is a social sophisticate who can tap into the
speaker's mind and the vast mental dictionary that the adult has
to offer,"
adds Hirsh-Pasek. "At 10 months, they just cannot take the speaker's
perspective into consideration."
Babies exposed to sign language babble with their hands
PLAY RESOURCES AND REFERENCES
The ordinary work of childhood is about connecting with the creative
impulse. Laughter originated in primates before humans, and it
represents a universal signal of well being in a playful situation.
In that way, it helps to regulate social interactions.
Activities for RIGHT BRAIN LEARNERS
TEACHERS NEED TO
better understanding their own neurological strengths and weaknesses, so that they can adapt lessons to reach all the students in the room. Each Teacher has a left, a right, or a middle-brain preference which significantly influences their own teaching patterns.
The right-brain learner processes information holistically, seeing the "big picture" or the answer first, not the details. When analyzing a problem, this learner starts with the major concept and works backward to find the details and come to a conclusion. Right-brain learners may become impatient with the details of a problem unless they can "see" the conclusion or solution quickly.
The Right-Brain Teacher
Teachers with right-brain strengths generally prefer to use hands on
activities over a lecture format. In concert with the right brain
preference of seeing the whole picture, these teachers incorporate
more art, manipulatives, visuals, and music into their lessons. They
tend to embrace
Howard Gardner's multiple intelligences.
They like to assign more group projects and activities, and prefer a
busy, active, noisy classroom environment. The classroom of a strong
right-brain teacher will typically have materials and books
scattered all over.
The Right-Brain Student
Right-brain students prefer to work in groups. They like to do art
projects, industrial arts electives in middle school, and graphic
design. They would prefer to design and make a mobile rather than
write "another tedious term paper.
Who Needs Right Brain Teaching Strategies?
- Children who have underdeveloped memory skills / strategies
- Children who have an auditory processing problems.
- Children who have a focusing or attention issue.
- Children who have a visual/motor (writing) [Inadequate Brain Hemispheric Integration]
- Attention Issues [ ADD or ADHD ]
- Children who dislike school work.
- Children for whom the more common methods of teaching are not working.
- Right Brain Spelling and Phonics
-
A Right Brain Learner Stuck in a Left Brain Curriculum
Folksongs and Books
Sam Henry's Songs of the People Songs of the People is unquestionably the finest collection of Irish folk songs. There is no competition being staged on this matter, of course. It just simply is the finest. First, there is a tremendous number of songs. Second, despite the fact that they were collected in a single region, there is a great amount of diversity - native Irish songs and songs of foreign origin: Scotland, England, North American. Third, the work that went into organizing, annotating and presenting the songs is truly first rate. On May 2, 2007, John Moulden gave an address at the Library of Congress on the Sam Henry Collection (click) . It's worth a listen.
All in! All in!: A Selection of Dublin Children's Traditional Street-Games with Rhymes and Music. By Eilís Brady. 2009. Dublin: Four Courts Press. 195 pages. ISBN: 0-901120-85-5 (hard cover). Reviewed by Elizabeth Tucker, Binghampton University This wonderful collection of Dublin children's games, rhymes, pranks, and other forms of folklore was originally published in 1975 and reprinted in 1984. Its author, Eilís Brady (1927-2007), was a member of the editorial staff of Ireland's Department of Education. Brady gave a significant collection of Irish children's folklore to the former Department of Irish Folklore at University College in Dublin; this material now belongs to the college's National Folklore Collection. One of the book's strengths is its openness to the many forms that childlore takes. Rather than concentrating on a few genres, the author includes many expressive forms, some of which -- such as "Good v. Evil" and "Simple Pleasures" -- do not often get included in children's folklore anthologies. Her descriptions of children's play are both highly specific and pleasantly readable. Like Iona and Peter Opie, she helps the reader understand the complexity, exuberance, and durability of children's traditions. In her introduction, Brady describes the transition from "the Dublin of the tenements and the back-streets" to modern suburbs, such as her own housing estate, "The Park," in which roads far from traffic are "safer for playing games than the city centre where the families come from" (xiii-xiv). She notes that small changes in folk speech have resulted from this transition; terms such as "front parlour" and "back drawing-room" have yielded to "sitting-room" and "front garden," but children's lore has remained as popular as ever. Since Brady's years of living in The Park began when she was a child and continued through her adulthood, her understanding of the area's childlore is extensive. The book includes many black-and-white photographs of children playing together in a variety of settings. These photographs would be even more valuable if they were identified by date; nonetheless, they bring the author's written descriptions to life quite effectively. Similarly, her descriptions of games and other kinds of childlore are not identified by date or date range. She explains, "I have set down here the games and rhymes which I have played myself in The Park and which are still being played there. I have also included those games which are no longer played and new ones which have been accepted by the children and become part of their repertoire" (xv). In some cases, such as a rhyme about Nelson's Pillar, a landmark that was "blown up in 1966" (83), she specifies duration, but in most instances she presents her material as relatively consistent twentieth-century childlore. Some of the longest game records appear in the "Portraits of Life" section, which includes singing games played by children standing in a circle or in parallel lines. "The Roman Soldiers," for example, involves three pages of dialogue between Roman and Irish soldiers. As in her accounts of other singing games, Brady includes a transcript of the game's music. This transcript adds an important dimension to our understanding of the game. For those of us who want to look up specific forms of children's folklore, the classified index and index of first lines offer helpful guidance. We are fortunate to have such a well-organized, detailed, and delightful study of twentieth-century Dublin childlore.Hand Work
TEACH HISTORY THROUGH SONG
"Our destiny is written in the hand."
— Renate Hiller, co-director of the Fiber Craft Studio at the
Threefold Educational Center in Chestnut Ridge, New York Practicing
mindfulness. Paying attention. Listening generously.
For Renate Hiller, the fiber artist whom you see in the film above,
these majestic phrases apply in all their richness. Her German lilt
of the tongue reaffirms this exquisite eloquence as she connects the
importance of using our hands with the way in which we understand
and find value in ourselves and in others. There's something so
honest and pure about her thought — that we gain a deeper, more
meaningful relationship with our own humanity and our greater world
by using our hands.
HOW AND WHY MUSIC MAKES YOU SMARTER
- LANGUAGE IS MUSIC TO THE BRAIN
-
Study Ties Mental Abilities To Interaction of Emotion and
Cognitive Skills
"Since the beginning of time, children have not liked to study. They would much rather play, and if you have their interests at heart, you will let them learn while they play; they will find that what they have mastered is child's play." -- Carl Orff -
Music Leaves it's mark on the brain.
Speech Recognition: Consider William Condon's observation of conversational synchrony, that motions and gestures of listeners are closely synchronized with the rhythms of a speakers voice. - Having fun builds better brains.
-
How Does Your Brain Work
How is the brain of a young child different from the adult? Children who have musical training also have significantly better verbal memory than children who don't, and the difference increases the longer they study. Music training during childhood contributes to the reorganization and increased development of the [4]brain's left temporal lobes in musicians. After administering verbal memory tests that calculated the number of words children could recall from a list, and a comparable visual memory test for images, the researchers found that students with musical training had better verbal memory. Musically trained students retained more words even after a 30 minute delay. Even though having fewer than six years of musical training can boost verbal memory, the researchers say that more training boosts cortical reorganization in the left temporal region and improves the ability to handle other functions such as verbal learning. And the benefits of musical training appear to be long-lasting. Students who dropped out of the advanced training group were tested after a year and found to retain the verbal memory advantage they had gained earlier. -
Evolutionary relationship between music and language -
HANDS AND SPEECH
The parts of the brain that control hand movement and speech sounds are very close together. The origin of language. Communication evolved hand-in-hand with social bonding. "The work tells us that communication is right there at the base of social behaviour and that having a larger vocal repertoire allows you to have a more complex social set up," says Karen McComb , at the University of Sussex, UK -
The building blocks of music are to be found in speech.
The Journal Nature Neuroscience devoted a special issue to the topic. And in an article in the August 6 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience, David Schwartz, Catherine Howe, and Dale Purves of Duke University argued that the sounds of music and the sounds of language are intricately connected. http://www.jneurosci.org/cgi/content/abstract/23/18/7160
Children aged 3 who are musiking with their parent are building a foundation for reading and are learning better language skills. In the first 5 years of life, almost everything they need to know, can and should be taught in a playful way. Play can build a strong foundation on music, mathematics, science and reading.
JOURNEY FROM THE REAL PLAYGROUND TO THE CYBERPLAYGROUND 1976 - 2006 Background Story
- Literacy - Dialect speakers use music as a bridge to the standard.
- Linguistics - What is a dialect?
- TEACH READING THROUGH SONG - With a Simple Tune, Students Improve In School
-
Melody and Language learning for children
The memetic origin of language: modern humans as musical primates. Interdisciplinary connections between Language, Music, Evolution, and Reading. -
Dr. Ward's Home page
What led to this study
Quick Overview
Importance of Study
Dissertation PDF - THE EXTENT TO WHICH AMERICAN CHILDREN'S FOLK SONGS ARE TAUGHT BY GENERAL MUSIC TEACHERS THROUGHOUT THE UNITED STATES
Song Lists
State Rankings