Looks like Wii Music is starting to fulfill its intended
purpose.
Nintendo has announced plans to incorporate Wii Music into
their lesson plans with select schools and teachers. Among the company’s
collaborators are MENC: The National Association for Music Education, San
Francisco’s Blue Bear School of Music, and New
York’s Opus 118 Harlem School of Music.
The partners will work with Nintendo and teachers in
integrating the video game into the curriculum in 51 cities throughout America.
Famed designer Shigeru Miyamoto has stated that he intends
Wii Music to be less of a game and more of a tool to get people interested in
music.
Taken that way, Wii Music is a perfect fit for classrooms.
While gamers have heavily criticized Wii Music for its lack of challenge and
sometimes unresponsive controls, the software could be beneficial for younger
children.
Compared to the Guitar Hero and Rock Band games, Wii Music
is meant to introduce the musically-uninitiated to various instruments, rhythm,
tempo, melody, harmony, and improvisation.
Although the game is by no means comprehensive or deep
enough to replace a lesson plan, it can be a fun and interesting part of a
music plan – particularly if a school’s budget makes it impossible to stock the
school with actual instruments.