Download Free Marching Band Drill Chart Programs For Kids
BANDTEK MARCHING BAND DRILL DESIGN I've got the idea that some bands don't march because they can't afford drill design and the director doesn't know how to write a marching band show. A stock show can cost hundreds of dollars and custom drill is even more expensive. Drill design software is also very costly. While a young teacher working with paper and pencil probably isn't going to create the next new trend in marching band show design, if you're in a school that hasn't marched, and you don't have a budget for drill, you can accomplish a lot by watching other bands on and sketching your own drill on paper. This page exists to show you how to get started.
From there it's a trial and error process. FREE MARCHING BAND SHOW DESIGN RESOURCES To get started you'll need a few tools. First of all you need to plan your lesson time and analyze your music. The drill and show design link on the left can help you with that. Then you need to decide what kind of maneuvers you feel comfortable teaching. Those are the ones you can write into the drill.
Then you'll be ready to put pencil to paper and create a marching band show. Click the linked picture on the right to download blank drill design paper. The pdf file requires Adobe PDF reader to open. Then you'll need to print it.
Printing it on legal sized paper at 1200 DPI is best. Then you can use a copy machine to enlarge it to 11'X17'. Make A LOT of copies, then plan on using a sharp #2 pencil for sketching and a razor fine sharpie for last draft 'inking in.' After you ink, you erase the pencil marks. This is the way people wrote drill in the decades before computer aided design.
You'll also need some drawing tools. Here's the bare minimum. A straight edge - I like the clear top of an audio cassette box. It has a cool built in handle and you can see right through it. Best of all, it's not only free - you're recycling!
Marching Band Drill Book - Band Camp 2017 Cover - 30 Sets [Band Camp Gear] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. This drill book for marching bands is meant to be used on the field by the student while learning their sets. Each page has a field for the set number.
You'll need some kind of french curve tool. Click the linked image to the right to see more. You can also find them at most dollar stores and supermarkets.
The usual price for a basic french curve tool is a dollar or less. Lead core flexible rulers are available from some office supply stores, drafting supply stores and art stores. They're handy and fun, but I don't think they're worth the price. A good one will cost you $15.00 plus shopping time. Then You'll use a folded sheet of drill paper to measure stride size and interval. Pick one basic interval and stick to it for the whole show. If it's a two step, you can mesh to a one step and unmesh to a four, and you can skew a line so that they're in a diagonal that goes two up and two over.
Keep it that simple and your home brewed drill will be teachable, cleanable, and fun to perform. One more thing - if you need free advice, don't hesitate to call...
The college professor who should have taught you all this in a methods class. There are several books that are very helpful drill design resources. Are great and is an essential read if you can find it. Both of those guys were doing great pencil and paper drill before I was even in beginning band. Don't be afraid to stand on their shoulders.
They're the giants of drill design.
If you are a marching band director or student then you know the pain and anguish we all go through each and every marching season – Those printed page after page of drill charts – or maybe your band uses those little tiny coordinate sheets. Either way ya gotta deal with them. Panic Prevention Jamie T Rar.
Over the years I have finally decided that the best way my bands and I worked was to print drill chart books for instructors and several to scatter throughout the sections. Everyone else gets coordinate sheets. Those little sheets were a life changer! Last season I picked up DrillBook Next and found the next revolution! This app is just simply amazing! I’d always wanted to bring my laptop with Pyware all loaded up, out onto the football field. I pretty figured that would be a disaster so I never did.
Now, this is actually BETTER! I have in my hands every kids charts, coordinate and I can animate the entire drill! This next marching season we are going to have 3-4 iPads on the field so every section can animate and see what the drill is supposed to do! I can not WAIT! (Well OK, that’s kind of a lie – I really CAN wait because honestly, I just got out of school and I haven’t even written the drill yet!) Which brings me to what this is NOT going to do. I just do not see this as ever replacing Pyware on my computer.
Instead what happens is I print the coordinate sheets from Pyware and THOS get imported into DrillBook Next. It’s very fast, easy and super simple. Updating the show as the season goes along makes things even easier with pushing out updates to my instructors. I push the update and their iPad downloads it. Boom – updated show!:)’ing instructors and more efficient teaching! Currently there are several flavors of the app – all of which are 50% off currently. For how long I don’t know – seriously, go download this if you are a Marching Band Director using Pyware (I know Pyware has their own app out but since I haven’t upgraded to v8 yet I can not use that app.
Pyware is amazing software but the yearly update costs are crazy high and I don’t “Need” the update. The new features do look absolutely astonishing though! But when you teach at a small school with a small budget and the kids are playing on 30+ year old instruments, it becomes difficult to justify the upgrade price every year!
It appears as though on Android the Reader App is available for $2.99 as well.