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Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data Gregory J. Crowther, Ph.D. University of Washington & South Seattle College & SingAboutScience.org
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Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

Aug 15, 2015

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Page 1: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

Teaching science with music:

so many models, so little data

Gregory J. Crowther, Ph.D.University of Washington& South Seattle College& SingAboutScience.org

Page 2: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

How did I get here?

1985-1991 Piano lessons and choir

1987 Wrote my first science song

1991-1995 Wrote poem/song parodies for college cross-country team;B.A. in Biology

1996 Met Do Peterson

2002 Ph.D. in Physiology;started teaching

2004 Created science song database;Muscles & Magnets (CD)

2007-2013 Mostly lab research

2014 Back to teaching!

Do Peterson / Science Groove

Page 3: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

↑ readiness to learn

↑ absorption of content

↑ recall of content

↑ processing/ integration of content

↑ demonstration of knowledge

↑ Time on Task

↓ stress

↑ enjoyment↑ in-depthexploration

↑ memorability

↑ channels of content

delivery

M U S I C+MUSICHow might music aid learning?

Page 4: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

Can songs aid STEM learning?

Author (Year) Finding

C.R.W. VanVoorhis (2002)College students who learned jingles in a statistics class scored better on related test items than students who read definitions. Scores correlated with jingle familiarity.

S.M. McCurdy et al. (2008)

Certain subgroups of high school students (those taught by experienced instructors and those in small classes) scored higher on food-safety knowledge than control groups following exposure to 9 food-safety songs.

K. Smolinksi (2011)7th grade students who learned the “Cell Song” in chorus scored higher on a biology test than students who did not.

Page 5: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

Models of incorporating music into classes

1. Prerecorded song/video from outside source2. Teacher writes/performs own song3. Teacher & students perform together4. Song-based discussion or activity5. Students write songs

Advantages and limitations of each?

Page 6: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

Model 1: prerecorded song/video from outside source

• Example: Monty Harper, “My Molecular Eye”

Monty Harper, Stillwater OK Dr. Wooter Hoff, OSU

http://montyharper.bandcamp.com/track/my-molecular-eye

Page 7: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

Model 2: teacher writes/performs own song• Example: “Myofibrils”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GC_CUfLP6Pc

• Related issue: parodies vs. originals

Imag

e: B

iolo

gica

l Sci

ence

by

Sco

tt F

reem

an e

t al.

Page 8: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

Model 3: teacher & students perform together• Example: “Medulla Oblongata”

Medulla oblongata! Medulla oblongata! If you have never learned of its importance, then you oughta! Located in the hindbrain, the rhombencephalon, The medulla oblongata is just caudal to the pons. It regulates parameters such as your rate of breathing, The pressure of your blood, and the rate your heart is beating. Medulla oblongata! Medulla oblongata! Perhaps the lower brainstem is more vital than you thought-a!

http://faculty.washington.edu/crowther/Misc/Songs/medulla.shtml

Page 9: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

Model 4: song-based discussion or activity

• Simple example: “Smooth or Striated?”Smooth or striated? Smooth or striated?Smooth or striated? Smooth or striated?Your biceps’ two parts?The walls of your heart?The walls of your veins?The difference is plain…They are smooth or striated! Smooth or striated!Smooth or striated! Smooth or striated!

http://faculty.washington.edu/crowther/Misc/Songs/smooth.shtml

Page 10: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

Model 4: song-based discussion or activity• Complex example: Dr. Lodge/DEN video contest

Students in Mahoney, MI illustrate the song “Afraid of the Dark.”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e44NYisYavc

Page 11: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

Model 5: students write songs• Example: Tom McFadden’s Science History Rap Battles

“Rosalind Franklin Versus Watson & Crick” by Oakland 7th gradershttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=35FwmiPE9tI

Page 12: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

Model 5: students write songs• Songwriting as “Writing to Learn”• Example: Poiseuille’s Law of Laminar Flow

Figure: Smith & Kampen 1990

Page 13: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

Model 5: students write songs

• Example: Nernst equationEion = )

For a z (valence) of +1,

Eion = )

Find the concentration of ions out and in;Figure out the quotient, and find the log (base 10).To solve for the potential that’s sometimes known as E,You multiply by a constant like 58 mV.If the valence is plus-one (said Walther Nernst),

Your calculation’s done (said Walther Nernst)!

Page 14: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

Model 5: students write songs

• Example: Nernst equation (revised)Eion = )

Simplified,

Eion =)

Find the concentration of ions out and in;Figure out the quotient, and find the log (base 10).Multiply by a constant like 58 mV;Divide by ion valence to find potential E.At the voltage you have found (says Walther Nernst),

There's no flux in or out (says Walther Nernst)!

Page 15: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

A unified model of science music?

Page 16: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

My compromise: short sing-along jingles

Advantages:• Quick to create• Quick to perform• Quick to learn• Students are active• Easy for others to adopt• Relatively painless for

students who don’t want to learn science this way

Limitations:• Little student creativity• Non-professional music

limits engagement & outside adoption

Page 17: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

My (other) soapbox issue

Music is not just a scaffold on which to hang words!

We should use the music to encode/reinforce content!

Page 18: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

Encoding content in the music

http://faculty.washington.edu/crowther/Misc/Songs/calcium.shtml

Page 19: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

image from John W. Kimball (biology-pages.info)

[LEADING STRAND]

The leading strand elongates toward

The moving replication fork;

Continuously it extends

Out from the primer to the end.

[LAGGING STRAND]

Okazaki . . .

Okazaki . . .

Okazaki joined by ligase

Okazaki joined by ligase

Encoding content in the music

http://faculty.washington.edu/crowther/Misc/Songs/okazaki.shtml

Page 20: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

Dance: the final frontier?“Na Na Na Na Na Na – sodium can’t get in!”

Photo by Trevor Harrison

Page 21: Teaching science with music: so many models, so little data

Toward true kinesthetic movements

“Quads & Hamstrings”Let’s kick it! Muscles of the quads.Kick it! Muscles of the hamstrings.Kick it! Can you guess the oddsThat we’ll remember every one of these damn things?Vastus lateralis, vastus intermedius, Vastus medialis, rectus femoris.Semimembranosus, semitendinosis, Biceps femoris. Now let’s do it as a chorus!Vastus lateralis, vastus intermedius, Vastus medialis, rectus femoris.Semimembranosus, semitendinosis, Biceps femoris. Our teacher will adore us!

http://faculty.washington.edu/crowther/Misc/Songs/quads.shtml