By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close

Forums - Music Discussion - Did you have Music lessons during secondary school ?

 

Did you have Music lessons during secondary (or any other) school ?

Yes, I attended lessons at school 14 73.68%
 
Yes, I had an optional course 1 5.26%
 
Yes, I attended to private lessons 0 0%
 
No. 4 21.05%
 
Total:19

This is a topic that always interested me because depending on where you live school can be extremely different from place to place so I decided to ask one of the most basic questions that came to my mind: Did you have Music Lessons AT School ?

First of I'll explain my conception of Music class solely based on MY experience in MY country:

In Italy during the three years that define secondary school (from 11 to 13 yo) students take 2 hours of Music lessons per week, this music lessons are counted as regular school lessons, similarly to Math, Grammar, P.E. and so on. EVERY STUDENT must attend the lessons and they get a grade for Music as a subject based on how well you play your instrument and how well you score in exams for "History of Music" which is the study of how Music was born and evolved through History.

The instruments are pre-established, studends can choose to play either Flute, Guitar or Keyboard and every student must purchase by himself his chosen instrument (excluding people with financial problems who usually are helped by the municipality or families that due to having multiple children had to purchase multiple instruments). Depending on the school there's the possibility that the school owns different other instruments, for example, my school owned a Piano, four professional keyboards, a bass, various acoustic and electric guitars, drums and three clarynets. Usually this instruments are used by the Teacher or by the most skilled students and prove to be an incentive for students to do their best so that they can play them.

Without dwelling about how lessons work I'd like to know if you attended to Music lessons during secondary  school (or any other school if it's in a similar way).



Around the Network

Why is this thread in nintendo discussion ?

Anyways yes I had music lessons, but I was never good at them (and I also lack the interest)



                                                                                     

Mike321 said:
Why is this thread in nintendo discussion ?

Anyways yes I had music lessons, but I was never good at them (and I also lack the interest)

 


whoops, too many NX threads aren't any good for my health



No, I never had music lessons.



Yes.. I think for 3 years from age 12 to 15.. Learning how to Read notes, history, singing (usually I skipped that part) and musical plays..



 

Face the future.. Gamecenter ID: nikkom_nl (oh no he didn't!!) 

Around the Network

Moved from Nintendo Discussion to Music Discussion :p



Zekkyou said:
Moved from Nintendo Discussion to Music Discussion :p

 


thanks ! sorry for the mistake :c



No, never had any music lessons on school. But since I always liked music, I started taking piano (classical) / music theory lessons since I was 5 or 6. I still train/study a lot to this day, there's always a way to improve.



Bet with Teeqoz for 2 weeks of avatar and sig control that Super Mario Odyssey would ship more than 7m on its first 2 months. The game shipped 9.07m, so I won

I think in elementary school, we were forced to practice Chorus and play the Recorder.

Starting from middle school, music was pretty much optional, but I started taking Violin lessons in Orcherstra class, and I still do, not sure if I will continue practicing when I go to university.



"Just for comparison Uncharted 4 was 20x bigger than Splatoon 2. This shows the huge difference between Sony's first-party games and Nintendo's first-party games."

Yes, in 9th grade we were required to take a music class. We didn't play instruments in the class. We just learned about music and its history, did some singing, learned about instruments. People who were more interested in music could join chorus or the various bands (Jazz band, Concert Band, Marching Band) for fun. There was also an AP Music Theory course offered, but only those who were truly interested in music took it (about ten students per year out of 170.)