Date: Sep 4, 2007
Contact:
Mary Wimberley
,
mlwimber@samford.edu, 205-726-2922
Samford University School of Performing Arts dean Dr. Joseph Hopkins will pay close attention to Apple's expected announcement on Wednesday of its revamped iPod. He wants to be among the first in line when the newest iPod music and video player goes on sale.
Students and faculty will be linked by two new websites: one created for Samford by the new
"Students will be able to go to the site and see recent Samford performances, listening assignments, video podcasts of classes and lessons, and other instructional and learning downloads," said
Apple experts will provide training in podcasting and other creative uses of the iPod.
"Designing an iPod community challenges us to rethink what are the limits of the library, classroom and practice room," said
"We envision students reliving lessons in the practice rooms, hearing a recital they missed as they drive down the highway, or reviewing a lecture as they walk across campus. We are working to make learning more accessible."
"We too often forget that estate planning can be transforming. This gift is trendy and powerful," said
Dance---After the first day of choreography, a student has trouble remembering details of the class. He downloads a podcast of the rehearsal (posted on the iTunes U website), and returns to the studio with his iPod to review the instructor's directions. He can then learn the choreography by himself on the dance floor.
Music---A singer has a breakthrough in a voice lesson but cannot recreate that moment in the practice room. She downloads a podcast of the lesson, and notices that every time she sang the high notes she used a certain technique. With the iPod in the practice room, she relives the lesson daily for a week. When she goes to her next lesson, she delights her teacher with her mastery of the new technique.
Theatre---Using one of today's popular techniques in acting pedagogy, students read their parts and record them with the instructor offering suggestions and prompts along the way. Students can later return to the stage, or other locations, on their own and step through the staging, miming the actions of the recorded dialogue.
Faculty member---An opera history instructor is answering questions about Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro when a student notices similarities from a listening assignment in a prior class on Pergolesi's La serva padrona. The teacher is impressed that the student recognized the simile and easily finds the referenced excerpt on her iPod files from the previous class. The entire class is soon listening and perhaps watching the excerpt as they build on the student's discovery.
Samford School of Performing Arts claims more than 350 students majoring and minoring in art, graphic design, theatre, dance, music theatre, instrumental music (band and orchestra), church music, music education, theory, music history, vocal/choral music, piano, organ and composition. The school is also proud of its community outreach through its preparatory music program and