Isle of Tune: Create a musical journey
What it is: Isle of Tune is a site that has just significantly impacted my productivity today- I can’t stop playing! Thanks to @Matt_Arguello and @dancallahan for this share today on Twitter! Isle of Tune lets students create musical journeys out of street layouts. Roadside elements act as instruments and cars are the players. Students can create whole islands of music by creating a street layout, adding objects that generate different sounds and adding cars to play the music. Each object has an object panel where students can adjust the sound, volume or clone the object. Students can determine when a sound will be played based on the ground lighting up when the car passes. Junctions change the course of passing cars or can “loop” a sound. It is easy for students to get started, they just click “Create a new island” and away they go. Students can name their island anything and save to return to it later. No need for registration, the Internet browser they are using just needs to have cookies enabled (this is a bit of a problem for shared classroom computers with a single account).
How to integrate Isle of Tune into the classroom: Isle of Tune is an enchanting place for creation. The sky is the limit as students create music based on visual creation. Aside from teaching some great music principles, Isle of Tune would be a fantastic way to teach students pattern. Students can use Isle of Tune to construct patterns of objects and actually experience the connection between math and music as they “play” their pattern tune.
Isle of Tune would also be a fun place for students to learn about maps and ordinal directions and basic graphing. Students can start with oral directions about where to lay their street “Four street squares North East, two street squares West”. After directions are given, students can customize their islands with trees, houses, lamp posts, etc. You can quickly tour the room for some formative assessment while students complete their island. Let students take turns listening to each other’s Isle of Tune, noting similarities and differences based on the patterns made.
Use Isle of Tune as a creative writing prompt. Students can create an island and tune and write an imaginative story about the island they created. The saved island makes a nice visual-aid and soundtrack for their finished story.
Isle of Tune makes a great interactive whiteboard, or projector-connected computer activity. Students can work together to create a giant island of tunes. Use the annotate over the desktop feature to label directions, coordinates and patterns.
The shared songs are pretty incredible- many of the “top” shares are popular music that has been created using Isle of Tune.
Tips: Isle of Tune is currently available on the web, keep an eye out for the iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad versions coming soon! If Isle of Tunes inspires your students to want to become architects or engineers, point them toward online CAD Drafting classes.
Please leave a comment and share how you are using Isle of Tune in your classroom!