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This jazz cat is helping Irish kids learn about music (seriously)

It’s a brand new way of thinking about tunes.

CAN AN OCTOPUS called Igor and a feline named Jazz Cat help children learn about music?

That’s what Irish music programme Dabbledoo wants to prove. A new way of teaching music, it is based on animated graphic notation, and Shane McKenna (32) – who founded the programme – explained:

It’s an easy way to get a group performance going in the classroom, using colours and shapes. The kids can then learn through performances.

That means none of this:

shutterstock_108652397 Shutterstock / Supoj Pongpancharoen Shutterstock / Supoj Pongpancharoen / Supoj Pongpancharoen

And lots of this:

dabbledoo gif 1 Dabbledoo Music Dabbledoo Music

Dabbledoo is aimed at primary school children aged from six to 12, and Shane thought up the idea after studying alternative types of music notation (how music is written down) for his Masters in Trinity College Dublin.

He wanted to come up with a type of notation “that can be used by loads of different people, regardless of their previous musical experience”.

Animated graphic notation is being used within the avant garde music realm, but Dabbledoo brings it into the educational space.

The website is in beta mode right now, and is available for free, so that teachers can begin using it right away for no cost. The intention is that it fits right into the existing music curriculum.

dabbeldoo 2

But is it easy for children to understand?

“A lot of the way they learn from early primary school is making connections between symbols and sounds,” explained Shane. “When they’re learning the alphabet, they learn symbols, and connect sounds to each one, and create sounds out of that.”

A lot of the idea behind the whole graphic notation is we are born ready to listen to music. From a very young age we can distinguish different melodies and respond to different rhythms.

“Another big reason [for setting up Dabbledoo] was that in primary schools, teachers aren’t music specialists, and music – I find even after studying it for a few years – is a difficult subject to teach,” added Shane.

“In primary school, the majority of teachers don’t have specialist musical training.”
https://vine.co/v/OYAU9OB5iZg

Sound and vision

After setting up Dabbledoo in 2010, Shane held workshops in and outside of schools, to find out the best way to make the system work.

To come up with the symbols and shapes that are used in the notation, he had adults interpret abstract shapes and symbols vocally, and then correlated the results.

We found that there are loads of visual connections that we all would put the same sounds to.

Screen shot 2015-03-31 at 12.11.53

Cillian, a visual artist, came on board to work on the characters (which include Igor the Octopus and Jazz Cat) and artwork.

A Fundit was set up which raised €4,000 for the website, and designer Trevor Finnegan and software developer Brian Michael Thornton then became involved.

The site can be used with the interactive whiteboards that most Irish classrooms now sport.

Screen shot 2015-03-31 at 12.07.17

Making it sound good

“A lot of the kids’ music stuff is really twee, really badly produced, horrible-sounding stuff that people think is ‘good enough’ for kids,” said Shane. “We want to make it really good, really well-produced music.”

The music Jazz Cat plays, for example, is actually jazz musician Johnny Taylor, based in Dublin, tinkling the ivories.

Screen shot 2015-03-31 at 12.08.04

Though they haven’t been successful in getting to meet officials at the Department of Education or Department of Arts, Heritage and Gaeltacht, Dabbledoo have had a lot of contact with teachers, who have invited them into their classrooms to introduce their pupils to the music.

But the idea is that teachers can just use the programme without needing their help. In order to gather some funds, they will be introducing a subscription element in the future with some extras, such as new lesson plans and tutorial videos, but the site will remain free.

It’s also notable that Dabbledoo is for students of all abilities. “We didn’t want to put any barriers in the way for teachers,” said Shane.

What do you think of the Dabbledoo idea? Tell us in the comments.

Read: Ireland is going to be in the Junior Eurovision for the first time ever>

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6 Comments
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    Mute Maurice O Neill
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    Sep 20th 2021, 11:03 AM

    18 months later and they are still discussing antigen testing. This Country never fails to amaze me

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    Mute potnoodle
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    Sep 20th 2021, 11:35 AM

    @Maurice O Neill: more money in PCR tests

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    Mute Tommy Roche
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    Sep 20th 2021, 11:38 AM

    @potnoodle: more accuracy in PCR tests.

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    Mute Aidan O' Neill
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    Sep 20th 2021, 12:23 PM

    @Tommy Roche: they are not supposed to replace PCR tests. They are another measure to help catch cases that may not otherwise be caught. A strategy for using them should have been in place months ago.

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    Mute Alan Byrne
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    Sep 20th 2021, 11:55 AM

    Why not use both ? Denmark does this and are managing it quite well. Or does hiqa think antigen testing is just snake oil.

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    Mute Mac Muinteoir
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    Sep 20th 2021, 12:05 PM

    Glad to see that HIQA intend to review advice around masks in a few weeks. With our overcrowded classrooms making distancing impossible, and the fact that this is an airborne virus, masks are a cheap, simple and effective mitigation strategy.

    https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/science/science-briefs/masking-science-sars-cov2.html

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    Mute Franny Ando
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    Sep 20th 2021, 12:47 PM

    @Mac Muinteoir: Not for primary schools and rightly so.

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    Mute Mac Muinteoir
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    Sep 20th 2021, 12:54 PM

    @Franny Ando: not for the schools themselves, no. Just the kids.

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    Mute Franny Ando
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    Sep 20th 2021, 12:57 PM

    @Mac Muinteoir: Not for use on primary school children if you want to be pedantic. They are not being recommended and won’t be getting children under 12 to wear them.

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    Mute Mac Muinteoir
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    Sep 20th 2021, 1:24 PM

    @Franny Ando: as things stand. But to be reviewed in a few weeks. Hopefully they will recommend that for all children that can manage them. Especially if other mitigation strategies are removed.

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    Mute Franny Ando
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    Sep 20th 2021, 1:32 PM

    @Mac Muinteoir: Maybe re-read the article and listen to the news. It is not going to be reviewed. They are quite satisfied with the status quo. Masks will not be required for under 13′s.

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    Mute Mac Muinteoir
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    Sep 20th 2021, 1:39 PM

    @Franny Ando: “Given the evolving epidemiological situation it was considered prudent that the potential requirement for face masks in primary school-aged children should be kept under review. It was suggested that the evidence be reviewed six to eight weeks after the schools have fully reopened.” – p23 of the report. https://docs.google.com/gview?embedded=true&url=https://www.hiqa.ie/sites/default/files/2021-09/Advice-to-NPHET-Facemasks.pdf

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    Mute Franny Ando
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    Sep 20th 2021, 4:47 PM

    @Mac Muinteoir: Yet they announced today they have decided against it.

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    Mute Mac Muinteoir
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    Sep 20th 2021, 7:34 PM

    @Franny Ando: no, the report was published today, so it’s being reported on today. They decided against recommending masks for primary school kids back in August, wrongly in my view, but said they would review that advice six to eight weeks after schools reopened. It’s OK to be wrong Franny, everyone makes mistakes.

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    Mute Franny Ando
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    Sep 20th 2021, 10:08 PM

    @Mac Muinteoir: I’ll forgive you this time though its not your first time getting confused. When questioned today regarding masks for under 13′s they categorically stated the would not be mandating them.

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    Mute Mac Muinteoir
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    Sep 20th 2021, 11:24 PM

    @Franny Ando: imagine you want to go for a walk after lunch. It’s dry out now, but pretty cloudy. It looks like it might rain later. Should you a) decide that you don’t wouldn’t need an umbrella right now, but you might need one later, so you go and get it from the boot of the car before your wife takes it to go shopping, or b) see that it’s dry right now, and so dig a really deep hole in your garden, set your umbrella on fire and bury the ashes? If you chose option b), congrats, you’ve chosen the HIQA approach. Make a decision now, but review it later when you have more information.

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    Mute Pádraic Ó Braonáin
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    Sep 20th 2021, 12:55 PM

    Thanks Journal…this is good to nose…will saves money an alls.

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    Mute Jonathan O'Riordan
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    Sep 20th 2021, 10:52 PM

    What is HIQA involved in this for?

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