[nobe-l] Question about Teaching Music
J Acheson
listsetal at aol.com
Thu Apr 21 01:11:26 UTC 2016
Greetings!
Do you read braille music code? If you are good with literary braille, then you won't have trouble learning braille music. You can then get books that you teach from in braille and have the print books for your sightd students. If you or someone you know has software from dancing dogs that will allow you to convert any sheet music into braille, so much the better. It will make you a much more versatile teacher. Don't let anybody tell you the braille music is too hard. It's a myth that sighted people like to spread.
Sent from my iPhone
> On Apr 20, 2016, at 6:37 PM, Michelle Creedy via NOBE-L <nobe-l at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>
> Hello
>
>
>
> I am very interested in finding a way to do some basic music teaching. I'm
> very musical but haven't done a music degree or anything like that. I'm
> really just wanting to start people off and I'm thinking of adults who
> always wanted to take music and never had the chance.
>
>
>
> My question is around teaching sighted people music as a blind person. How
> do you teach them to read music? Do any of you on this list teach programs
> where folks can learn by ear?
>
>
>
> Michelle
>
>
>
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