adam ockelford (university of roehampton) graham welch (institute of education)

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‘Sounds of Intent’: a curriculum framework for making music with children and young people, including those with visual impairment Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education) Evangelos Himonides (Institute of Education) Sally Zimmermann (Royal National Institute of Blind People)

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‘ Sounds of Intent ’ : a curriculum framework for making music with children and young people, including those with visual impairment. Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education) Evangelos Himonides (Institute of Education) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

‘Sounds of Intent’: a curriculum framework for

making music with children and young people, including those with visual impairment

Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton)Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

Evangelos Himonides (Institute of Education)Sally Zimmermann (Royal National Institute of Blind

People)

Page 2: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

Why ‘Sounds of Intent’?

Initially, for young people like Abigail

Page 3: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

Learning difficulties

PMLD - functioning as though in the first –3 to 12 months of ‘neurotypical’ development

SLD – functioning as though in the 12-30 months of ‘neurotypical’ development

MLD – functioning as though in the first 30+ months of ‘neurotypical’ development

autism

Page 4: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

Approach

• Begin at the beginning - with observations of children and young people engaging (or failing to engage) in musical activity

• Many 100s of observations with different practitioners in different settings

• Examples …

Page 5: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

Examples of observations 1

• Abigail sits motionless in her chair. Her teacher approaches and plays a cymbal with a soft beater, gently at first, and then more loudly, in front of her and then near to each ear. Abigail does not appear to react.

• Rosina is lying in the ‘Little Room’, vocalising in an almost constant drone. Occasionally a sudden movement of her right arm knocks her hand against a bell. Each time, she smiles and her vocalising briefly turns into a laugh.

Page 6: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

Examples of observations 2

• Taybah brushes her left hand against the strings of guitar that someone is holding near to her. There is a pause and then she raises her hand and brushes the strings again, and then for a third time.

• Wendy giggles when people repeat patterns of syllables to her such as ‘ma ma ma ma ma’, ‘da da da da da’, or ‘ba ba ba ba ba’’.

• Carol copies simple patterns of vocalisation – imitating the ups and downs of her speech and language therapist’s voice.

Page 7: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

Examples of observations 3

• Emily makes up songs with short phrases that sound connected – and when her teacher listened carefully to a recording that she had made of Emily’s singing, she noticed that one phrase often started more or less where the other one left off.

• Faisal has severe learning difficulties and hemiplegia. He plays the keyboard with his left hand only, learning material by ear. He has recently joined the school’s band, and has found a role for himself playing the bass parts. Now he not only picks up on what the left hand of the other keyboard player is doing, but he has started to improvising around the harmonies too.

Page 8: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

The literature on ‘typical’ early musical development

• H. Moog (1968/1976)• W. Kessen, J. Levine & K. Wendrich

(1979)• W. J. Dowling (1982)• D. Hargreaves (1986)• C. Fassbender (1996)• M. and H. Papoušek (1996)• J.-P. Lecanuet (1996)• S. Malloch (1999/2000)• S. Trehub and T. Nakata (2001/2002)• C. Trevarthen (2002)

Page 9: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

‘Zygonic’ theory

• A theory of how music ‘makes sense’ through referring to itself – through repetition – forming a ‘metaphorical narrative in sound’

(Ockelford, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2012)

Page 10: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

Led to the conceptualisation

of six stages in musical

development …

Page 11: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

1. ‘Blooming, buzzing confusion’

Page 12: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

2. ‘Sound, silence and variation’

Page 13: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

3. ‘Relationships, repetition and regularity’

Page 14: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

4. ‘Groups, links and transformations’

Page 15: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

5. ‘Structures, frameworks and probabilities’

Page 16: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

6. ‘Articulating the narrative metaphor’

Page 17: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

Types of engagement with music

• Reactive(listening and responding to sounds)

• Proactive (causing, creating and controlling sounds)

• Interactive (participation in the context of others)

Page 18: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)
Page 19: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

The Reactive Domain

Page 20: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

The Proactive Domain

Page 21: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

The Interactive Domain

Page 22: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

Abigail

Level 3 (R, P, and I)

Page 23: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

Romy

Level 4 (R, P, and I)

Page 24: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

Becky

Level ?

Page 25: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

Nick

Level ?

Page 26: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

Derek

Level 5 (R, P, I)

Page 27: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

Recent research underpinning the new

websiteEvangeline Cheng (PhD thesis, IoE, 2011)

Page 28: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

Research

Ockelford, A., Welch, G., Jewell-Gore, L., Cheng, E., Vogiatzoglou, A. and Himonides, E. (2011) ‘Sounds of Intent, Phase 2: approaches to the quantification of music-developmental data pertaining to children with complex needs’, European Journal of Special Needs Education, 26(2), 177–199.

Page 29: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

Research

Ockelford, et al., 2011

Page 30: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

Research

Ockelfordet al.,2011

Page 31: Adam Ockelford (University of Roehampton) Graham Welch (Institute of Education)

The power of information!

• Teachers/therapists/parents can track individual pupil’s progress

• You can compare the effectiveness of different approaches

• You can compare how well different cohorts of pupils react to different interventions

• We can all share ideas that work …• … and improve provision for all