
I could not have made a better decision! Finally, I had found what I had longed for: a different way of teaching where students could be themselves, perform, understand, develop, participate, play, have fun, learn, feel, and live the music!įrom that moment to the present, I have been interested in learning more about this new way of doing things and began my Dalcroze certification at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Then I thought, “For what purpose? Will it be necessary to be here sitting on the floor and not comfortably in our places for this class?” Nevertheless, I stood from my seat and went on stage with a few others to participate in the class. Herbert Henke, asked us to come on stage to take the class. At the time I had not heard of Dalcroze, so it was of great impact when the teacher, Dr.

I was struck by the name of the conference: Dalcroze, Orff, and Kòdaly: Similarities and Differences. In 2002, I was invited to a conference of music educators held at the Facultad de Música of the Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León and CONARTE in Monterrey, México.

It was also difficult for them to sight-sing, perform harmonic dictations, and conduct and read rhythms fluently, among other things. Although I tried to explain in detail the concepts of rhythms, scales, intervals, chords and their inversions, and play these on the piano, I realized my students still could not sing without losing the tonic. I always felt something more was needed, but I didn’t know what it was. However, I didn’t know whether my students truly understood everything they were learning in the classes. When I first began to teach these classes, I did so in the same traditional way in which I had learned-through lectures on theoretical concepts, learning to read notation using the Pozzoli Method (spoken and sung exercises dating from the nineteenth century used in solfège and music reading coursework), leading dictations, and read-ing rhythms.

For twenty years I have been teaching the ear training class, also called musical language or solfège, at the Escuela Superior de Música of the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura in Mexico City.
