🎬 Documentary

Music Lessons: The Kodaly Method in the American Classroom

1981 41m Dir. Joyce Chopra

About this movie

Hungarian composer Zoltán Kodály believed that music could be taught to children as readily as reading. The method he developed uses a child's own natural instrument, the voice. Beginning with simple musical intervals, the child progresses from folk tunes and children's songs to the complex notes and rhythms of composed music--from Bye baby bunting to Bach. [The film] is a look at the Kodály method of music training in public elementary schools in San Jose, California, and West Hartford, Connecticut. Ordinary children are shown in the film, but they exhibit extraordinary self-confidence, discipline, concentration, and an eagerness to learn. There is no such thing as failure in a Kodály classroom; in fact, the children are able to correct their mistakes themselves. Moreover, the children will bring much of 'how' they learn in their music lessons--counting and problem-solving, left-to-right progression, following directions--to their study of reading, writing and arithmetic.

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Quick facts

Year
1981
Runtime
41m
Genre
Documentary
Director
Language
EN

Cast

🎭 Documentary 🎬 Joyce Chopra 👤 Tom Cole

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Questions about Music Lessons: The Kodaly Method in the American Classroom

Music Lessons: The Kodaly Method in the American Classroom has a runtime of 41m ( and 41 minutes).
Music Lessons: The Kodaly Method in the American Classroom was directed by Joyce Chopra and released in 1981.
Music Lessons: The Kodaly Method in the American Classroom is a Documentary film (1981).
The cast of Music Lessons: The Kodaly Method in the American Classroom includes Tom Cole.

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