Roland MTLC-16 owner manual Visual Music Tutor Advantage

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The Visual Music Tutor Advantage

PARALLEL SIGHTREADING methods—The Best Readers are Frequent Readers

Good reading habits will be strengthened further by using the following two strategies: 1) insisting that the class methods and materials have correlating disks, and 2) have students read through other parallel methods with visual/SMF guidance.

Possible parallel methods/materials could be:

1)If the class text is Alfred's Piano Course for Adults, then one might use the chapters in PDM: Piano for the Developing Musician that use parallel concepts. So, when the class was learning the dotted quarter-eighth pattern in the text, supplementary—and parallel—reading materials from another book would not only reinforce the con- cepts, but provide fresh new examples for reading.

2)For younger classes using Alfred's Group Piano Method, parallel reading materials would be those from Bastien Piano Basics, Hal Leonard Student Piano Method, Noona's Comprehensive Piano Method, or any other disk-based method. Again, the emphasis is simple: the more one reads, the better one reads!

By insisting that the class method is accompanied by SMFs, every student has an individual, visual guide to help develop good reading. In addition, the Visual Tutor serves as a teaching assistant for the teacher.

A parallel reading method is an important adjunct; however, one must keep in mind that these “read throughs” are not aiming for perfection but, rather, the visual/tactile process. Either the OUTLINE or SHAD- OW options are suitable.

Provide students with a list of supplementary book/disk publications that they can read through, emphasiz- ing popular or standard tunes

Use other tutorial SMF disks for reading practice, especially the correlating POPULAR MUSIC materials from FJH Piano Adventure series, the Alfred Basic Piano Course, or the Hal Leonard Student Piano Method. In addi- tion, both the Looney Tunes and the Performance Plus series from Warner Bros. provide interesting, enjoyable and challenging reading materials. Best of all, students will enjoy reading through these tunes; they'll proba- bly forget they are learning.

Finally, there are two more SMF series, the first with accompanying books, the second without books. By using these SMFs with the Visual Music Tutor, students will be compelled to read along with professionally-record- ed MIDI files. In addition, the subtle propulsion of the SMF playback provides pressure to "keep up with the ensemble," further strengthening keyboard reading skills.

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Contents MTLC-16 Educator’s Foreword What Is It? MTLC-16 FeaturesPrinted Materials Qty MTLC-16 Features What Is Included?Hardware Qty Software QtyAudio Monitors MTLC-16 Features What Are the Options?External Audio Player/Recorder Visual MonitorsContents Names of Things and What They Do Names of Things and What They Do Room Preparation Music Lab Installation GuideMusic Lab Installation Equipment ChecklistSoftware MTLC-16 InstallationSet Up the Music Lab Connect CablesTest Components Music Lab Installation GuideInstall Software Power Up All Music Lab ComponentsTest the Teacher’s Station Test Student StationsSecure Equipment and Cables Chap -The Visual Music Tutor Advantage Developing Solid Reading SkillsPutting the Visual Tutor to Work Slow playing Preview playingVisual Music Tutor Advantage Chap -Surviving Your First Class Survival Checklist-Before the ClassInteractive models for successful learning Surviving Your First ClassTalking to the class Playing your first SMFSurviving Your First Class Surviving Your First Class Teacher’s Instrument Chap -Operating the MTLC-16Instructor Level Control Teacher’s MicrophoneSingle and Multiple Student Monitoring and Communication Operating the MTLC-16 Single Student PracticeGroup Monitoring and Communication Operating the MTLC-16 Group PracticeOperating the MTLC-16 Pairs Duet-Style PracticePairs Duet-Style Monitoring and Communication Student Broadcasting Class CommunicationExternal Audio Broadcasting Student Instrument Muting Operating the MTLC-16 Lab Performance RecordingClassroom Speaker Monitoring Options Additional Buttons Control Chap -Operating the Virtual MTLC-16Virtual Lab Control Roster Student SelectionOperating the Virtual MTLC-16 Static/Adjustable VMTLC-16 Display Customization Arrange/Control ButtonBox # 1 or 2 Buttons Operating the Virtual MTLC-16 Classroom Management Roster Adding Student NamesFile Delete Class GradebookAssignment Column Score ColumnHardware Detection What it does not do Chap -Operating the V-MT1 Visual Music TutorFunction 1 F1 the Panel View What it doesOperating the VMT-1 Visual Music Tutor Function 2 F2 the Notation ViewFunction 3 F3 the Rehearsal View Function 4 F4 the Tone or Mixer Window For More InformationArticles Annotated Group Teaching BibliographyAnnotated Group Teaching Bibliography Books Clark, Frances. Questions and Answers Practical Advice Ed planning form is found at the end of the chapter Page Additional References Connecting the Computer to the Teacher Keyboard Installing the USB MIDISport InterfaceHardware installation Software InstallationAppendix Using the MIDISport with your MTLC-16 Appendix JLCooper Electronics Limited Factory WarrantyPage ÂØÒňÎ