Texas Administrative Code
Title 19 - EDUCATION
Part 2 - TEXAS EDUCATION AGENCY
Chapter 117 - TEXAS ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS FOR FINE ARTS
Subchapter B - MIDDLE SCHOOL, ADOPTED 2013
Section 117.208 - Music, Middle School 1, Adopted 2013
Universal Citation: 19 TX Admin Code ยง 117.208
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) General requirements. Students in Grades 6, 7, or 8 enrolled in the first year of music may select from the following courses: General Music 6, Middle School 1 Band, Middle School 1 Choir, Middle School 1 Orchestra, Middle School 1 Instrumental Ensemble, or Middle School 1 Vocal Ensemble.
(b) Introduction.
(1) The fine arts incorporate the study of
dance, music, theatre, and the visual arts to offer unique experiences and
empower students to explore realities, relationships, and ideas. These
disciplines engage and motivate all students through active learning, critical
thinking, and innovative problem solving. The fine arts develop cognitive
functioning and increase student academic achievement, higher-order thinking,
communication, and collaboration skills, making the fine arts applicable to
college readiness, career opportunities, workplace environments, social skills,
and everyday life. Students develop aesthetic and cultural awareness through
exploration, leading to creative expression. Creativity, encouraged through the
study of the fine arts, is essential to nurture and develop the whole
child.
(2) Four basic
strands--foundations: music literacy; creative expression; historical and
cultural relevance; and critical evaluation and response--provide broad,
unifying structures for organizing the knowledge and skills students are
expected to acquire. The foundation of music literacy is fostered through
reading, writing, reproducing, and creating music, thus developing a student's
intellect. Through creative expression, students apply their music literacy and
the critical-thinking skills of music to sing, play, read, write, and/or move.
By experiencing musical periods and styles, students will understand the
relevance of music to history, culture, and the world, including the
relationship of music to other academic disciplines and the vocational
possibilities offered. Through critical listening, students analyze, evaluate,
and respond to music, developing criteria for making critical judgments and
informed choices.
(3) Statements
that contain the word "including" reference content that must be mastered,
while those containing the phrase "such as" are intended as possible
illustrative examples.
(c) Knowledge and skills.
(1) Foundations: music literacy. The student
describes and analyzes music and musical sound. The student explores
fundamental skills appropriate for a developing young musician. The student is
expected to:
(A) experience and explore
exemplary musical examples using technology and available live
performances;
(B) describe tonal
and rhythmic musical elements using standard terminology such as
instrumentation, voicing, intervals, solfege, absolute note names, rhythmic
values, and counting systems;
(C)
describe musical elements of rhythm, including whole notes, half notes, quarter
notes, paired and single eighth notes, sixteenth notes, corresponding rests,
and meter, including 2/4, 3/4, and 4/4, using standard terminology;
(D) identify musical forms presented aurally
and through music notation such as binary, ternary, phrasic, rondo, and theme
and variations; and
(E) explore
health and wellness concepts related to musical practice such as body
mechanics, hearing protection, vocal health, hydration, and appropriate
hygienic practice.
(2)
Foundations: music literacy. The student reads and writes music notation using
an established system for rhythm and melody. The student is expected to:
(A) identify music symbols and terms
referring to notation, including repeat sign; dynamics, including crescendo,
decrescendo, piano, and forte; tempi, including accelerando, ritardando,
moderato, and allegro; and articulations, including staccato and
legato;
(B) notate meter, rhythm,
pitch, and dynamics using standard symbols in a handwritten or
computer-generated format;
(C)
create rhythmic phrases using known rhythms and melodic phrases using known
pitches at an appropriate level of difficulty within an established system of
notation;
(D) read music notation
using appropriate cognitive and kinesthetic responses such as inner hearing,
silent fingering, shadow bowing, or Curwen hand signs; and
(E) sight read unison and homophonic music
using the appropriate clef in a minimum of two keys and three meters, including
2/4, 3/4, and 4/4.
(3)
Creative expression. The student demonstrates musical artistry by singing or
playing an instrument, alone and in groups, performing a variety of unison,
homophonic, and polyphonic repertoire. The student makes music at an
appropriate level of difficulty and performs in a variety of genres from
notation and by memory. The student is expected to:
(A) demonstrate, alone and in groups,
characteristic vocal or instrumental timbre;
(B) perform music alone and in groups,
demonstrating appropriate physical fundamental techniques such as hand
position, bowing, embouchure, articulation, and posture;
(C) perform independently and expressively,
with accurate intonation and rhythm, developing fundamental skills and
appropriate solo, small ensemble, and large ensemble performance
techniques;
(D) perform
independently and expressively a varied repertoire of music representing
various styles and cultures;
(E)
sight-read independently and expressively, with accurate intonation and rhythm,
demonstrating fundamental skills and appropriate solo, small ensemble, and
large ensemble performance techniques in known keys and rhythms;
(F) interpret music symbols and terms
referring to keys; clefs; dynamics, including crescendo, decrescendo, piano,
and forte; tempi, including accelerando and ritardando; and articulations,
including staccato and legato, appropriately when performing; and
(G) create rhythmic phrases using known
rhythms and melodic phrases using known pitches at an appropriate level of
difficulty.
(4)
Historical and cultural relevance. The student relates music to history,
culture, and the world. The student is expected to:
(A) perform music representative of diverse
cultures, including American and Texas heritage;
(B) describe written and aurally presented
music representative of diverse styles, periods, and cultures;
(C) identify relationships of music concepts
to other academic disciplines such as the relationship between music and
mathematics, literature, history, and the sciences; and
(D) describe music-related vocations and
avocations.
(5) Critical
evaluation and response. The student listens to, responds to, and evaluates
music and musical performance in both formal and informal settings. The student
is expected to:
(A) demonstrate appropriate
concert and stage etiquette as an informed, actively involved listener and
performer during live and recorded performances in a variety of
settings;
(B) identify criteria for
listening to and evaluating musical performances;
(C) describe processes and select the tools
for self-evaluation and personal artistic improvement such as critical
listening and individual and group performance recordings;
(D) evaluate the quality and effectiveness of
musical performances by comparing them to exemplary models; and
(E) demonstrate appropriate cognitive and
kinesthetic responses to music and musical performances.
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