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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year music shifts from simply singing and playing along to making real choices as a young musician. Students come up with their own short musical ideas, shape them, and practice until a piece is ready to share. When they listen, they start explaining why a song sounds the way it does and what the composer might have meant. By spring, a student can perform a short piece for the family and say what they were going for.

  • Singing and playing
  • Composing ideas
  • Performing
  • Listening
  • Music and culture
Source: Maine Maine Learning Results
Year at a glance
How the year usually goes. Every school and district set their own curriculum, so treat this as a guide, not official pacing.
  1. 1

    Listening with a musical ear

    Students start the year by listening closely to songs and short pieces. They notice things like beat, mood, and the instruments they hear, and begin describing music with words a classmate can picture.

  2. 2

    Making up musical ideas

    Students try out their own short rhythms and tunes, sometimes by clapping, singing, or tapping on simple instruments. They learn that a first try is a draft, not the finished song.

  3. 3

    Shaping a piece to perform

    Students pick music to share and practice it on purpose. They work on starting together, keeping a steady beat, and playing or singing loud and soft on cue.

  4. 4

    Music in the wider world

    Students connect songs to where they come from and why people wrote them. They link music to their own lives, family traditions, and stories from other times and places.

  5. 5

    Sharing and reflecting

    Toward the end of the year, students perform for an audience and talk honestly about how it went. They use simple guidelines to judge their own work and offer kind, useful comments to classmates.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 3.
Connecting
  • Synthesize and relate knowledge and personal experiences to make art

    Students connect what they already know and have lived through to the music they create or perform. A personal memory, a feeling, or something learned in another class can shape how a piece of music sounds.

  • Relate artistic ideas and works with societal, cultural

    Students look at a song or piece of music and ask where it came from. They connect what they hear to the time, place, or people that created it.

Creating
  • Generate and conceptualize artistic ideas and work

    Students come up with their own musical ideas, like inventing a short melody or rhythm pattern, and explore how to develop those ideas into something they can share or perform.

  • Organize and develop artistic ideas and work

    Students take a musical idea and shape it into something more complete, choosing how it starts, changes, and ends.

  • Refine and complete artistic work

    Students revisit a piece of music they composed, fix the parts that feel off, and decide when it's ready to share.

Performing/Presenting/Producing
  • Analyze, interpret, and select artistic work for presentation

    Students choose a piece of music to perform and explain why it suits the moment. They think about what the music expresses before they play or sing it for an audience.

  • Develop and refine artistic techniques and work for presentation

    Students practice a song or piece of music, then make small fixes to improve how it sounds before performing it for others.

  • Convey meaning through the presentation of artistic work

    Students perform a song or piece of music with purpose, not just accuracy. The way they play or sing should reflect what the music means to them.

Responding
  • Perceive and analyze artistic work

    Students listen to a short piece of music and describe what they notice, like changes in speed, loudness, or mood. They begin to explain what the composer might have been trying to express.

  • Interpret intent and meaning in artistic work

    Students listen to a piece of music and explain in their own words what feeling or idea the composer was going for. They support their thinking with details from the music itself, like rhythm, tempo, or mood.

  • Apply criteria to evaluate artistic work

    Students listen to a piece of music and use a short checklist or set of reasons to explain what works well and what could be stronger. They back up their opinion with specific details, not just "I liked it."

Common Questions
  • What does music class look like this year?

    Students sing, play simple instruments, and make up short pieces of their own. They learn to read basic rhythms and notes, listen carefully to music, and talk about what they hear. By the end of the year, students perform for others and explain the choices they made.

  • How can I help my child at home if we are not musical?

    Singing along to songs in the car counts. Clap the rhythm of words, tap a steady beat on the table, or ask what instruments they hear in a song. Five minutes of paying attention to music together does more than any app.

  • Does my child need an instrument at home?

    No. A pot and a wooden spoon, a shaker made from rice in a jar, or just clapping and humming gives plenty to work with. If there is a keyboard or recorder around, students enjoy picking out songs by ear.

  • How should I sequence creating, performing, and responding across the year?

    Most teachers weave all three into every unit rather than teaching them in blocks. Start a unit by listening and responding to a piece, then create a short version of it, then perform and revise. Each unit revisits the same loop with harder material.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching?

    Steady beat under changing rhythms trips up many students, as does telling the difference between beat and rhythm. Reading basic notation also needs repeated short practice, not one long unit. Plan to revisit these every few weeks instead of teaching them once.

  • What does mastery look like by the end of the year?

    Students can sing a song in tune with a steady beat, clap or play a simple written rhythm, and make up a short musical idea of their own. They can also listen to a piece and say something specific about how it sounds and why it might have been written that way.

  • My child says they are bad at singing. What should I do?

    Sing with them anyway, and keep it low pressure. Pitch matching grows with practice, like learning to throw a ball. Songs with a small range, like Happy Birthday or Twinkle Twinkle, are easier to match than pop songs on the radio.

  • How do I assess music without turning it into a test?

    Short performance tasks work best: clap this rhythm back, sing this phrase, make up four beats using these two notes. Keep a simple checklist per student and update it across the year. Recordings on a phone or tablet show growth better than a written quiz.

  • How do I know my child is ready for next year in music?

    They can keep a steady beat with a group, sing familiar songs roughly in tune, and read simple rhythms with quarter and eighth notes. They can also listen to a short piece and describe what they noticed using words like fast, slow, loud, soft, or repeating.