Listening with a purpose
Students start the year learning to really listen. They notice the beat, the mood, and the instruments in a song, and begin describing what they hear in plain words.
This is the year music shifts from singing along to making real musical choices. Students come up with their own short musical ideas, then practice and polish them for an audience. They also learn to listen with a purpose, talking about what a piece of music is trying to say and why it works. By spring, students can perform a short piece they helped shape and explain what they were going for.
Students start the year learning to really listen. They notice the beat, the mood, and the instruments in a song, and begin describing what they hear in plain words.
Students try out their own rhythms and short tunes. They play with sounds on instruments or with their voices and pick the ideas they like best to share.
Students practice a piece and work on it until it sounds the way they want. They focus on staying together, keeping the beat, and singing or playing with care.
Students connect songs to where they come from and why people wrote them. They link music to holidays, history, and their own lives, and talk about what a piece means.
Students share music with classmates and an audience. They also learn to judge their own work and a friend's work using simple things to look for, like steady beat and clear singing.
Students connect something they already know or have lived through to a piece of music they're creating or listening to. Personal experience becomes part of how they understand and talk about music.
Students connect songs and musical pieces to the time, place, or culture they came from. That context helps explain why the music sounds the way it does.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Synthesize and relate knowledge and personal experiences to make art | Students connect something they already know or have lived through to a piece of music they're creating or listening to. Personal experience becomes part of how they understand and talk about music. | MU:Cn10.3 |
| Relate artistic ideas and works with societal, cultural | Students connect songs and musical pieces to the time, place, or culture they came from. That context helps explain why the music sounds the way it does. | MU:Cn11.3 |
Students brainstorm musical ideas, such as a simple melody or rhythm pattern, and start shaping them into something they could perform or share.
Students take a musical idea they've started and shape it into something more complete, deciding which sounds, rhythms, or patterns to keep and how to put them in order.
Students revisit a piece of music they started, make changes to improve it, and finish it as a polished, complete work.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Generate and conceptualize artistic ideas and work | Students brainstorm musical ideas, such as a simple melody or rhythm pattern, and start shaping them into something they could perform or share. | MU:Cr1.3 |
| Organize and develop artistic ideas and work | Students take a musical idea they've started and shape it into something more complete, deciding which sounds, rhythms, or patterns to keep and how to put them in order. | MU:Cr2.3 |
| Refine and complete artistic work | Students revisit a piece of music they started, make changes to improve it, and finish it as a polished, complete work. | MU:Cr3.3 |
Students choose a piece of music to perform and think through how they want to play or sing it, making decisions about tempo, dynamics, and expression before they present it to an audience.
Students practice a song or piece until they can perform it the way they intended. That means fixing mistakes, adjusting rhythm or tone, and repeating parts that need more work.
Students perform a song or piece of music for an audience and make intentional choices, like tempo or dynamics, to express a specific feeling or idea.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Analyze, interpret, and select artistic work for presentation | Students choose a piece of music to perform and think through how they want to play or sing it, making decisions about tempo, dynamics, and expression before they present it to an audience. | MU:Pr4.3 |
| Develop and refine artistic techniques and work for presentation | Students practice a song or piece until they can perform it the way they intended. That means fixing mistakes, adjusting rhythm or tone, and repeating parts that need more work. | MU:Pr5.3 |
| Convey meaning through the presentation of artistic work | Students perform a song or piece of music for an audience and make intentional choices, like tempo or dynamics, to express a specific feeling or idea. | MU:Pr6.3 |
Students listen to a piece of music and describe what they notice: the rhythm, the instruments, or how the mood shifts. Then they explain what makes it work.
Students explain what a piece of music is trying to express, using what they hear in the melody, rhythm, or dynamics to back up their thinking.
Students listen to a piece of music and use specific criteria, like rhythm, melody, or dynamics, to explain what works and what doesn't. They back up their opinion with reasons, not just "I like it."
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Perceive and analyze artistic work | Students listen to a piece of music and describe what they notice: the rhythm, the instruments, or how the mood shifts. Then they explain what makes it work. | MU:Re7.3 |
| Interpret intent and meaning in artistic work | Students explain what a piece of music is trying to express, using what they hear in the melody, rhythm, or dynamics to back up their thinking. | MU:Re8.3 |
| Apply criteria to evaluate artistic work | Students listen to a piece of music and use specific criteria, like rhythm, melody, or dynamics, to explain what works and what doesn't. They back up their opinion with reasons, not just "I like it." | MU:Re9.3 |
Students sing, play simple instruments, and start making up their own short pieces. They learn to read basic rhythms and notes, perform for others, and talk about what they hear in a song. A lot of the year is about trying ideas, then making them better.
Play music in the car and ask what they notice: the beat, the mood, the instruments. Clap rhythms back and forth while making dinner. Ask them to teach a song they learned in class. None of this requires reading music or owning an instrument.
No. Everything taught in class uses voice, body percussion, and classroom instruments. Lessons and home instruments are nice if a student is interested, but they are not expected or needed to do well this year.
Keep a steady beat, sing in tune with a group, read simple rhythms, and perform a short piece for an audience. They should also be able to say what a piece of music makes them feel and point to one or two reasons why.
Build steady beat and singing posture in the first weeks so performing has a foundation. Layer in notation and listening vocabulary by mid-year, then push composition and refinement in the spring once students have enough musical material to work with.
Steady beat under a changing melody, and the difference between high or low pitch and loud or soft volume. Plan to revisit both across the year rather than teaching them once. Short warm-ups at the start of class work better than full lessons.
Students make up a short rhythm or melody, try it out, get feedback, and change something to make it better. Ask at home what they changed and why. The thinking behind a revision matters as much as the final piece.
Pick one or two songs per unit with a clear story behind them and spend five minutes on where the song came from and who sang it. Let the music carry most of the weight. Connections stick better when students perform the piece, not just discuss it.
Sing with them anyway, even badly. At this age, matching pitch is still developing and gets stronger with practice, not pressure. Avoid commenting on whether they sound good and focus on whether singing together was fun.
They can hold a steady beat in a group, sing a familiar song from memory, read simple quarter and eighth note rhythms, and give a short opinion about a piece of music with a reason. Performance nerves are normal and not a readiness issue.