The Effects of Learning Tonal Harmonic Function on the Sight Singing Skill of High School Students


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Abstract: Sight singing has long been a challenge for performing choral ensembles. Sight singing is defined as the ability to reproduce music symbols vocally at first sight by converting them into actual pitch sounds. Using the movable do system has provided many teachers with a method with which to teach sight singing in a choral setting. However, although many students have success with the movable do system there are still many strides to make in the teaching of sight singing. Prior research has suggested that students perform sight singing exercises more successfully with the addition of harmonic accompaniment to traditional movable do exercises. It has been hypothesized that knowledge of tonal harmonic function would improve students chances of sight singing success. This experiment was designed to teach twenty-six high school students using two different methods of instruction. Both groups received traditional sight singing instruction using movable do solfege and harmonic accompaniment. The treatment group received additional instruction in the form of tonal harmonic theory. Students were randomly assigned to each group and performed a pretest consisting of eight measures written in common time. Students then received ten weeks of instruction, consisting of two lessons a week for twenty minutes each lesson. At the conclusion of the instruction students performed a posttest similar to the pretest. After the experiment was concluded, two independent evaluators judged the pretests and posttests. Evaluators listened to tapes of the students' pretest and posttest performances and judged the number of pitches sung correctly by each student. There was no significant difference between groups on either the pretest or the posttest. However, when the groups were combined, there was a significant difference between the pretest and posttest performances.







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The Effects of Vocal Improvisation on Kod©Łly-based Sight Singing Technique in High School Choral Music Students


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Music literacy is a key component in a fully enriching music education. Nearly all pedagogical approaches emphasize music reading and writing. However, sight singing, a specialized component of music literacy, is a skill that remains a challenge for many young singers. The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of vocal improvisation on Kod©Łly-based sight singing instruction for high school choral music students. Based on results of the AMMA (Advanced Measures of Music Audiation, Gordon, 1989), participants (n = 52) were assigned to an experimental group (n = 27) or control group (n = 25). Both groups received sight singing instruction using the Kod©Łly method. The instructional strategies associated with this method included (a) tonic solfa, (b) Curwen hand signs, and (c) Chev©♭ rhythm syllables. The experimental group, however, participated in researcher-compiled vocal improvisation activities for 10-15 minutes of the 30-minute lessons. Improvisation activities included (a) learning selected repertoire by rote, (b) sequentially developing a vocabulary of tonal syllables and rhythmic syllables, (c) improvising with voice and body percussion tonic, dominant, subdominant, and submediant tonal patterns within the context of major and minor tonalities, and (d) improvising with voice and body percussion macrobeat, microbeat, division, elongation, and rest rhythm patterns within the context of duple meter. The Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used to determine if there were statistically significant differences between sight-singing performance pre-assessment and post-assessment, as well as pre-experiment and post-experiment AMMA administration. The Wilcoxon rank sum test was used to determine significant difference between control and experimental groups. Results suggest that regular sight singing instruction using the Kod©Łly method benefited sight singing achievement (pitch accuracy, rhythmic precision, intonation, tempo). Incorporating vocal improvisation helps students build rhythm and tonal vocabulary and aurally explore the functions of harmonic structure. These practices seem to benefit overall music audiation, particularly rhythmic audiation. Survey findings suggest students' perception of their sight singing ability and of their ability to "hear music internally" (audiate) are positively impacted by vocal improvisation practices.