Why a tough day in class?

Part of my job is teaching music to undergraduate science and engineering majors – both teaching about music and teaching music. Yesterday’s music appreciation class did not work. Now, there are many ways a class can fail to work. The class crashed on a technological problem that resulted from my efforts to make the class work better…

The problem I’m trying to solve:

One of the chief difficulties in teaching music appreciation is that music comes at you linearly in time ([not always->http://infosthetics.com/archives/2006/09/giant_steps_music_animation.html]); after hearing a piece through, there’s no way to physically point at part of it (music notation is a topic for another day). The listener has to rely on memory to analyze, compare, describe. (Similar to Edward Tufte’s rants about PowerPoint [here->http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/11.09/ppt2.html] or [here->http://www.edwardtufte.com/tufte/powerpoint] – layering of information in time, instead of space.) And for a piece of music that is unfamiliar — and one that is word-free, no text to hold on to — this is extremely difficult. Most untrained listeners can only manage comments such as “I liked it,” or “that one sounded happier than the other one.” That’s not deep enough. So, how to get around the memory issue? Sure, memory can develop, especially when it is given a framework of concepts to work with, to enable some realtime analysis/processing. But in the meantime, before the listener’s ability to use memory has evolved — can we discuss music in some substantial way?

What I tried:

For yesterday’s class, I spent an extra couple of hours ahead of time chopping up the pieces we were going to discuss into small soundbites. Just got started in class, and the iPod froze, at the end of the first clip. A student helped me reset it, and we went on. But then the iPod froze again. And again. I was trying to stop the clip near the end, so it wouldn’t go on precipitously to the next clip, but the iPod did not like it, and threw in the towel.

Meta:

The soundbite approach is worth me spending more time to figure out, but I was very frustrated. I know the class will be better for this, and I’m all for experimentation. But to add some self-observation — I just wanted it to work, and it didn’t, and I got very unhappy. Welcome to innovation – fail as rapidly as possible – I wonder if I can re-tune myself to enjoy that part.

P.S.:

I was able to get something to work by converting the music into audiobook format and adding chapters, using a [tool->http://www.macosxhints.com/article.php?story=20050628120738853&query=chapters] from Apple and a [GUI add-on->http://www.oldjewelsoftware.com/products/podcastav/]. Thanks to student Jim Slutz for showing me chapters.

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