Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Twenty-Four Hour Fruit Salad


We have this salad for Thanksgiving and Christmas. I wanted to share it with you! I can't resist not sharing a recipe for something so yummy. (We just had a mega-double recipe last week, so this fruit salad is on my mind :-)).


1 (20-ounce) can crushed pineapple in juice, undrained

1 (16 1/2-ounce can pitted white cherries (Oregon brand), drained

1 (11-ounce) can mandarin oranges, drained

3 egg yolks, lightly beaten

2 T sugar

2 T white vinegar

1 T butter

1/4 tsp. salt

2 1/2 C miniature marshmallows

1 C. whipping cream, whipped


DRAIN pineapple, reserving 2 T juice. Combine pineapple, cherries, and oranges; chill. COMBINE reserved juice, egg yolks, and next 4 ingredients in a saucepan; cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until mixture boils and thickens (about 5 minutes). Cool completely. STIR fruit into egg yolk mixture; fold in mini marshmallows and whipped cream, and chill for 24 hours. Yield: 8 servings. It will 'keep' for up to 2 days (if it lasts that long). :-)


What is a favorite tradition for your holiday meal? Post me a recipe if you please!

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

The Benefits of Early Childhood Music

Posted on the Music Education Madness website, by Karen Stafford

Can children from infancy through kindergarten really grasp the concept of music theory and principles? Why expose a child to music at such an early age when there's so much time?

If you've ever been around young children, you've probably noticed how they tend to try to skip rather than walk, dance rather than stroll, or sing when they're trying to drown out your instructions:-) The best argument for early childhood music education lies in the fact that children at this age, for the most part, are naturally receptive to the nuances of pitch and rhythm.

No one says that a teacher needs to sit down and start in on theory! The benefits go much deeper than that. Don Campbell, in his definitive study on The Mozart Effect, delved into the connection between music, body, and soul, stating case after case of real-life situations in which physical and mental health improved with measured and planned exposure to classical music. As early as 1962, Dr. Lee Salk demonstrated that the fetus is aware of the mother's heartbeat. Lullabies and tunes crooned to infants have been a centuries-old method of soothing babies to lull them to sleep. How natural it is, then, that this carries over to soothe younger babies and toddlers, and that they use the power of their inner music whenever they wish the comfort themselves.

More to the point, children at this age are less inhibited that they might be after they enter elementary school. They are ready to jump right in and give it a go! There is no pressure for a fantastic performance. The toddlers and preschoolers are free to experiment all the wonders of sound without the "standard" judgment of a preconceived notion of proper performance.
The physical benefits of early childhood music are outstanding, also. Fine and gross motor skills can be improved through improvisational dancing and handling of the instruments. Vocal and speech development can improve through singing. (Have you honestly ever noticed how some children who have to attend speech seem to do great with rhyming and poems?). Listening skills and concentration improve with aural training. The old-fashioned goals of sharing and cooperation are reinforced with the sharing of instruments and encouragement of other students.

The most important benefit, however, is the proven positive effects music has on brain development. This has been thoroughly researched and documented and is most crucial during the first 6 years, when the most important brain development takes place. NPR radio broadcast a program called "Gray Matters: Music and the Brain", which included Dr. Gordon Shaw, who first described "The Mozart Effect".

Imagine....if parents would expose their children to classical music at a young age, what the possibilities would be for these children at an older age! No one is guaranteeing that they'll all become performers, but the youngsters who have had this exposure have an advantage in academic abilities, self-esteem, and probably improved attitudes in general.

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Rich and holistic learning all year long


Kindermusik is the single best choice for children newborn to age seven. It "speaks" to children. It meets each individual child's unique needs. It contains activites that integrate all learning domains: social, physical, cognitive, musical, and language. It touches the WHOLE CHILD. More rhythmic activities, instrument play, singing and speaking activities, creative music activities, musical skill-building, and pure enjoyment of music await you next semester. What a great time we'll have together!

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Mozart 40 - by Wine Bottle Man

A Family Thanksgiving

Mom and Dad
And all the folks
Who sit around the table,
All give thanks to the Lord above
For the fact that we are able
To have the food and shelter
We all need to survive,
And have the love of family
That makes it good to be alive.
By Karl Fuchs

Happy Thanksgiving to my sweet Kindermusik Family. I love all of you.

Friday, November 16, 2007

Making a pitch for music

Published Monday October 8, 2007

Music is a mind-builder.

Research has found that playing a musical instrument activates parts of the brain involved with logic, creativity and emotions, said Lance Nielsen, president of the Nebraska Music Educators Association and a Lincoln high school band teacher. By contrast, people solving math problems or building things by hand use only the logical, left side of their brains. "That says a lot about music, how important it is," Nielsen said. Joan Reist of Lincoln, a past president of the Music Teachers National Association, said a foundation for music education can begin when children are babies and toddlers, with activities geared to a child's mental and physical development. Families can provide this themselves or join in a group experience with such parent-child activities as Kindermusik or performance-oriented Suzuki programs, Reist said.

For a more traditional approach to formal music education, starting at about age 7, both Nielsen and Reist like the piano. That's because it teaches a child how to read music — both the bass and treble clefs — as well as the principles of melody, harmony and rhythm.Although starting early is great, it's never too late, said Nielsen. "Anyone can play a musical instrument. It just takes a little time." — Staff writer Jane Palmer

http://www.omaha.com/index.php?u_page=1219&u_sid=10151715

The Kindermusik Philosophy


Every parent is the child's most important teacher.

Every child is musical.

The home is the most important learning environment.

Music nurtures a child's cognitive, emotional, social, language, and physical development.

Every child should experience the joy, fun, and learning which music brings to life.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

How I became a KM teacher


Back in 1997, I saw an ad in the paper for a Kindermusik storytime at a local bookstore in Lewisville. I took my then-pregnant self, my 2 1/2 year old daughter and didn't really have anything in mind except to have fun with music! After I left, I had the Kindermusik headquarters phone number in hand and the numbers of the two wonderful educators who conducted the storytime (and who I felt like I knew my whole life and not just 30 minutes!). It was one of those life-changing things: I just KNEW this was what I was meant to do. I can't explain it any other way! I called the number to get an information pack and the rest is history. I was in Houston, TX three weeks later for a week-long training and I started to teach after I had my second child. My children are Kindermusik graduates and were in some of my first classes back then! (Now I live with a vocalist and guitarist and love the music around this place!).

I tell people all the time about Kindermusik because of the deep belief I have in the program and what it does for families, for children's growth, and for their minds. I know you tell others too, because so many of your friends have come, and for that I thank you.

In-house re-enrollment is now in progress just for YOU before I advertise locally. Remit your deposit and pay the remainder on the first class in January. My website is http://www.msheidi.kindermusik.net/. Be sure to click on the spring icon when you register. Oh, and get your child's Kindermusik t-shirt when you come to your next class as my gift!

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Neil Marsden, a little bird in Kindermusik Village class...

Up, up in the sky
Bouncing to a songMy world is so new
Working on my vestibular system!
Playing with my new shaker Mommy, I love Kindermusik!

Monday, November 12, 2007

Music is...


Music is a Science. It is exact, it is specific and it demands exact acoustics. A conductor's score is a chart, a graph which indicates frequencies, intensities, volume changes, melody and harmony all at once and with the most exact control of time.


Music is Mathematical. It is rhythmically based on the subdivisions of time into fractions which must be done instantaneously, not worked out on paper.


Music is a Foreign Language. Most of the terms are in Italian, German or French; and the notation is certainly not English - but a highly-developed kind of shorthand that uses symbols to represent ideas. The semantics of music is the most complete and universal language.


Music is Physical Education. It requires fantastic coordination of fingers, hands, arms, lip, cheeks and facial muscles in addition to extraordinary control of the diaphragmatic, back and stomach muscles, which respond instantly to the sound the ear hears and the mind interprets. Music is all these things, but most of all,


MUSIC IS ART. It allows the human being to take all these dry, technically boring (but difficult) techniques and use them to create emotion. This one thing science cannot duplicate: humanism, feeling emotion, call it what you will. That is why we teach music! Not because we expect you to major in music. Not because we expect you to play or sing all your life. But, so you will be human, so you will recognize beauty, so you will be closer to God beyond this world, so you will have something to cling to, so you will have more love, more compassion, more gentleness, more good - in short, more life.

Friday, November 9, 2007

Pachelbel Bedtime

Pachelbel Bedtime

I am Kindermusik



study taken from:





study taken from:


http://204.15.99.18/abcschools/GMUKinderMusikFinal%20Report.doc



Sometimes it's hard to explain why Kindermusik is so important to a child's life. So, here are some visual aids that might help explain all the things Kindermusik can do--and how it's scientifically proven to help children become exactly who they're supposed to become. And then some.

Also, click the website, and you'll link straight to the study from which these pretty pictures were created.

Thursday, November 8, 2007

The Butterfly




by Kazantzakis from Zorba the Greek


'I remember one morning when I discovered a cocoon in the back of a tree just as a butterfly was making a hole in its case and preparing to come out. I waited awhile, but it was too long appearing and I was impatient. I bent over it and breathed on it to warm it. I warmed it as quickly as I could and the miracle began to happen before my eyes, faster than life. The case opened; the butterfly started slowly crawling out, and I shall never forget my horror when I saw how its wings were folded back and crumpled; the wretched butterfly tried with its whole trembling body to unfold them. Bending over it, I tried to help it with my breath, in vain.

It needed to be hatched out patiently and the unfolding of the wings should be a gradual process in the sun. Now it was too late. My breath had forced the butterfly to appear all crumpled, before its time. It struggled desperately and, a few seconds later, died in the palm of my hand.That little body is, I do believe, the greatest weight I have on my conscience. For I realize today that it is a mortal sin to violate the great laws of nature. We should not hurry, we should not be impatient, but we should confidently obey the eternal rhythm.'


Kindermusik is process not performance oriented, and just because we don't see them do something, doesn't mean that they don't understand. What goes on at home is more important than what goes on in class. So, let's give our 'butterflies' time to grow and unfold on their own; not just in Kindermusik, but in life. The results will be beautiful, natural, and will amaze us!

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

a little quip


"Speak sweet words if you expect sweet echoes."

Tuesday, November 6, 2007

A gift that lasts

From a book called, "This is your Brain on Music: The Science of a Human Obsession," by neuroscientist Daniel J. Levitin (this author was a guest speaker at our recent Kindermusik convention in Chicago):

"We know that there are critical periods for acquiring new skills, such as language. If a child doesn't learn leanguage by the age of six or so (whether a first or a second language), the child will never learn to speak with the effortlessness that characterizes most native speaker of a language. Music and mathematics have an extended window, but not an unlimited one: If a student hasn't had music lessons or mathematical training prior to about age twenty, he can still learn these subjects, but only with great difficulty, and it's likely that he will never "speak" math or music like someone who learned them early. This is because of the biological course for synaptic growth. The brain's synapses are programmed to grow for a number of years, making new connections. After that time, there is a shift toward pruning, to get rid of unneeded connections."

What a long-lasting impression you are making on your child by enrolling them in Kindermusik. I have such an honor and blessing to be their teacher.

Re-enroll for next semester today!

Behavior Labeling

If an adult is reinforced for behaving, we call it recognition.
If a child is reinforced for behaving, we call it bribery.
If an adult laughs, we call it socializing.
If a child laughs, we call it misbehaving.
If an adult writes in a book, we call it doodling.
If a child writes in a book, we call it destroying property.
If an adult sticks to something, we call it perseverance.
If a child sticks to something, we call it stubbornness.
If an adult seeks help, we call it consultation.
If a child seeks help, we call it whining.
If an adult is not paying attention, we call it preoccupation.
If a child is not paying attention, we call it distractibility.
If an adult tells his side of the story, we call it clarification.
If a child tells his side of the story, we call it talking back.

Friday, November 2, 2007

Kindermusik Educators Have a Ball

You ask me what we did at the Kindermusik convention?

Thursday, November 1, 2007

A few facts on MOMS

Today's mom is 27 on average.
She is interested in having more than two children.
Only 27% of young moms read the newspaper.
There are 82 million moms in the U.S. today.
U.S. moms control 85% of the household spending.
Moms 50+ are the fastest growing group of entrepreneurs in America.