THE LATEST NEWS FROM TI:ME

  • Special Needs Students, Music, and Technology

    Diversity

    Are you a music teacher who uses technology to help reach children with special needs such as those with developmental disabilities ranging from autism, Down’s syndrome and mental retardation to brain injury, cerebral palsy or other issues? Have you developed techniques on your own for adapting the technology that is available to you, so that you could teach music to this group of special needs children?

    If you have, do you think that what you’ve developed could be replicated and offered to other music teachers who have a heart for working with special needs children, if only you had funding to expand your program and document the processes in a meaningful way? I’m eager to hear from you and learn about your program if you have anything to share about using technology in conjunction with your music program to help enrich the lives of special needs students. 

    Spend any time with me personally, and eventually you'll hear me talking about my three children, the music that is part of their lives, and the joy I find as a father in making music with my sons who play guitar, bass, drums, keyboards and more.

    You'll also learn that my daughter, Kelly, is a musician, on the autism spectrum.

    Read more...
  • TI:ME Awards 2012 Mike Kovins Teacher of the Year

    Barbara Freedman is the 2012 Mike Kovins TI:ME Teacher of the YearTOTY2012-small

    The Technology for Music Education is proud to honor music educator Barbara Freedman with the 2012 Mike Kovins TI:ME Teacher of the Year Award for the numerous ways she integrates music technology into music education. An avid educator, performer, author, and clinician, Barbara also shares her knowledge and resources on her website, MusicEdTech. As Barbara always promotes in her presentations, "Teach music. The technology will follow."
     
    Barbara Ann Freedman has been teaching music since 1997, and teaching Electronic Music & Audio Engineering at Greenwich High School in Connecticut since 2001. She is the Co-President of the Music Educator Technologists Association/Technology Institute for Music Educators (META/TI:ME), Connecticut Chapter, an association of music educators founded in 1989. She is an author, consultant, trainer, and frequent presenter/clinician at local, state, and national in-service conferences and events. Ms Freedman is also a survivor of the New York City Public Schools, both as a teacher and a student.

    She is a professional timpanist and percussionist working regularly with the Ridgefield, Bridgeport, and Norwalk (CT) Symphonies, and has worked with other New York Tri-state orchestras, opera and ballet companies. In addition to her work with orchestras, she has performed on Broadway, in popular and folk bands, and Renaissance ensembles. Barbara is the Music Director of the Sound Beach Community Band of Greenwich, Connecticut, one of the nation's oldest community bands. She holds a Bachelor of Science and Master of Music in Performance from Brooklyn College Conservatory of Music City University of New York and a Professional Studies Diploma from the Mannes College of Music. She studied conducting at the Hartt School of Music, Westminster Choir College, and The Julliard School. She is TI:ME Level 1 certified. 

  • 2012 TI:ME Central Regional Conference Announced!

    ohioThe Technology Institute for Music Educators and the Ohio TI:ME Chapter are pleased to announce the 2012 TI:ME Central Regional Conference, to be held Feb 16 - 18, 2012 in Columbus, OH at the Columbus Convention Center.

    Activities for the Ohio TI:ME Conference and the OMEA conference begin at 1:30 PM on Thursday with a Finale session, a digital recording presentation with PreSonus and a Concert of electronic music composed and performed by students from Lebanon HS. Other sessions on Thursday include a SMART Board presentation, Live Looping, Composing and Recording for Elementary Students, and ProTools in Education. If that doesn't get your electrons charged up, you can hang out in the SoundTree sponsored PlayRoom, and that's just Thursday!

    Friday sessions begin at 8:00 and conclude at 5:00. More sessions on Saturday morning with your last chance to visit the PlayRoom, check out a Finale session, or get in on the PreSonus action concluding at 1:30.

    The keynote speaker will be TI:ME Executive Director, Mike Lawson, from Nashville, TN. Lawson has served as the executive director of TI:ME since March, 2011, but has been an active TI:ME and advisory board member since 1997. He has previously served on TI:ME's publications committee, ocassionally managing publisher/author acquistion relations with TI:ME for publishing houses during his primary career in the music publications industry.

    Read more...

Quotable Notes!

I don't care much about music. What I like is sounds.
Dizzy Gillespie

I was born with music inside me. Music was one of my parts. Like my ribs, my kidneys, my liver, my heart. Like my blood. It was a force already within me when I arrived on the scene. It was a necessity for me-like food or water.
Ray Charles

Classical music is the kind we keep thinking will turn into a tune.
Kin Hubbard

Hell is full of musical amateurs.
George Bernard Shaw

Any good music must be an innovation.
Les Baxter

Composers shouldn't think too much - it interferes with their plagiarism.
Howard Dietz

I've said that playing the blues is like having to be black twice. Stevie Ray Vaughan missed on both counts, but I never noticed.
B. B. King

All good music resembles something. Good music stirs by its mysterious resemblance to the objects and feelings which motivated it.
Jean Cocteau

All music is beautiful.
Billy Strayhorn