All my resources are aimed to be engaging, interactive and help develop independent learning for all ages. They are all created on Microsoft PowerPoint and are either life-long tools or individual schemes of work with practical, theoretical and written tasks included.
All my resources are aimed to be engaging, interactive and help develop independent learning for all ages. They are all created on Microsoft PowerPoint and are either life-long tools or individual schemes of work with practical, theoretical and written tasks included.
The entire Music Business in one, easy-to-use and interactive PowerPoint, complete with work booklet filled with questions, tasks, revision and 8 Mark Question practice.
The idea behind this is that every student has their own copy and they take their time, working through various tasks and topics within the BTEC Music Industry Unit 1.
It is designed to be delivered at home in the current lock-down and can be streamed from a teacher’s computer or sent to individual students for them to control and operate it themselves. There are videos, hidden object research games and examples of how everything links together.
The resource covers all the roles and responsibilities of members of the Music Industry including:
Record Companies, Recording Studios, Touring, Licenses, Unions, Management, Journalism, Venues, Promoters, Agents, Making Money and Contracts. There are also 2 interactive revision games included in the form of a Million Pound Drop style quiz and a Bingo Revision game. There are also numerous 8 Mark Questions in the work booklet and there are 5 exemplars in the PowerPoint.
All you’ll need to do is download the PowerPoint file and then save it as a Slide Show and then send that file to the students. This way, they can access all the content without changing any of the information.
After that, you’re away! I’ve found the best way to deliver it is to teach the content and then once a topic is completed (say Unions for example), direct the students to the page in the booklet and the slide on the PowerPoint and for them to use the booklet as their neat copy for future revision. I also managed to print off the booklets and get them sent home to students so they have something in front of them to work from but if this is not possible, try emailing it to them instead.
Final note: this will only open and function 100% accurately in Microsoft PowerPoint. It will open in Google Slides but the functionality will be lost