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6 - Taking Advantage of Structure to Improvise in Instruction

Examples from Elementary School Classrooms

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Frederick Erickson
Affiliation:
University of California, Los Angeles
R. Keith Sawyer
Affiliation:
Washington University, St Louis
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Summary

Quite early in my career I published a chapter titled “Classroom discourse as improvisation” (Erickson 1982). In it I observed that improvisation is less “free” than popular imagination would have it. Improvisation depends on structure – it works within it, taking advantage of aspects of pattern in order to create new patterns in real-time performance. For example, the improvised performance of a jazz ensemble is based in three levels of structure, each embedded within the next. First, there is the overall form of the song, the chorus structure of sixteen or thirty-two measures, typically in an AABA or ABAC organization of a succession of phrases – constituent units within the overall chorus. Second, within each phrase there is a sequence of chords that, taken together, form a harmonic progression that is sometimes called “changes.” In addition, at the level of time duration of adjacent chords within a phrase sequence, each musician has a repertoire of licks, formulaic melodic contours that he has developed through years of practice, which can be inserted into improvised solos at appropriate moments. The improvisations that emerge are guided by these three levels of structure.

Research shows that expert teachers also are guided by similarly embedded levels of structure. Regarding the first two types of structure — the overall form that guides the song or the classroom and the constituent sequences of “moves” — predetermined chord sequences or oral discourse sequences — Borko and Livingston (1989) found differences in how expert and novice teachers plan in advance.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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