Unlock Your 'Butterfly Ball' Benefits: Certificates and Discounts Awaiting!
Откройте для себя преимущества «Бала Бабочек»: начинаем производить сертификаты и назначать скидки!
¡Desbloquea tus beneficios de la Gala de Mariposas: Certificados y descuentos te esperan!
Opening this topic for my 24 month old toddler who started piano about 10 days ago. Listening the Do to Do song. Playing with flash cards saying name of notes. Also trying to name fingers and working on positioning thumb in central Do. She is begging to understand the Guess the Key Game and so far gets three correct in a row naming them but soon looses atention.
lorenn@3 wrote: Opening this topic for my 24 month old toddler who started piano about 10 days ago. Listening the Do to Do song. Playing with flash cards saying name of notes. Also trying to name fingers and working on positioning thumb in central Do. She is begging to understand the Guess the Key Game and so far gets three correct in a row naming them but soon looses atention.
Please, keep in mind that our goal is the best interest f the child. We have to stop or simplify the game to the point, when your child is feeling comfortable and engaged.
About the Gueas Key Game: She knows the name of the notes and understands what to do. But she just thinks its funny watching the spider come out to pick the fruit. And saying "oops it fell" when she presses the wrong key on porpouse.
This will require a lot of patience. She wants to play with her own rules!
She enjoys listening to the do to do solfeggio and showing the flash cards to her stuffies. It's been difficult to catch her on video at any activity due to the short attention span.
This short video is from a couple days ago.
lorenn@3 wrote: About the Gueas Key Game: She knows the name of the notes and understands what to do.
I watched your video. You have a very smart and focused girl.
But she just thinks its funny watching the spider come out to pick the fruit. And saying "oops it fell" when she presses the wrong key on porpouse.
Lorenn, it is natural stage of learning. I am teaching educators about it (hope to finish writing my book about this issue very soon!)
I call first stage in learning ANYTHING 'autistic'. We all - not just our babies - at first don't know, where to focus and what is priority, when we learn something absolutely new. Wish me luck to write it ASAP to share it with you.
This will require a lot of patience.
Knowledge. When you know, where she is coming from, no patience is required.
She wants to play with her own rules!
We all are! We want to rely on established skills (neuron pathways that had been built already in our cortex)
She enjoys listening to the do to do solfeggio and showing the flash cards to her stuffies.
Yes! Because she already relies on her
echoic memory
and vision.
It's been difficult to catch her on video at any activity due to the short attention span.
This short video is from a couple days ago.
Even shortest video worth 1000 words and even 1 picture: what I see so far that your daughter is:
1. Be-lingual
2. Has excellent abstract thinking for her age (she already call the cards without saying the entire name)
3. She can focus
4. She gives her fullest attention to the task (saying all cards from Do to Ti)
We had to stop practice for about a week as Isabel was sick. However today as I was setting up a table to practice the note alphabet I caught her playing with the cards and singing repeatedly do re mi... (only three notes) on her own. I don't have perfect pitch but their relative pitch sounded good to me. I was very excited because it's the first time that she not only says their names but actually sings them.
Last edit: 04 Feb 2016 18:51 by lorenn@3. Reason: Spelling
lorenn@3 wrote: We had to stop practice for about a week as Isabel was sick. However today as I was setting up a table to practice the note alphabet I caught her play with the cards and singing repeatedly do re mi... (only three notes) on her own. I don't have perfect pitch but their relative pitch sounded good to me. I was very excited because it's the first time that she not only says their names but actually sings them.
Excellent! Many Soft Mozart students develop perfect pitch with our modules. Especially with the Guess key. Singing out loud is greatly promoting the ear development.
If she will sing the songs that she plays solfeggio, she also will develop music memory and many other skills.