Lessons Learned
Music Builds Community
Six
languages in one first grade classroom. Swedish. Greek. Japanese.
Afganistan. Spanish. English. Our hope was to teach them all to
read. Our priority was to build a community, to communicate, but the
first few days of school made that priority seem quite remote and that hope
nearly impossible. We had no means by which to connect and our only
apparent common ground right then was that we shared a classroom, a cold,
lonely one at that. After lunch each day, we had a twenty minute window of time
during which we played acoustic instrumental music, and the students were
encouraged to either look at a picture book, quietly draw a picture, or simply
relax and listen to the music. Surprisingly, most students opted to listen to
the music. It was calm, soothing, peaceful, and biased toward no one language.
Each mind processes music in its own language. Perhaps music held a key.
We wrote a song about counting to ten. We asked each student to count to ten in
his or her primary language, which we phonetically wrote down. We all
learned how to count to ten in each of our class languages with great and
enthusiastic help from each other. It was a spectacular song, made
exponentially better by the robust participation and growing esprit de
corps of our classroom community. By sharing a little piece of each
other’s language, we were able to share a little piece of each other’s
heart. Our community grew. Our trust grew. Our learning grew. We became
readers. We became friends. We shared a song.
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