Music is a unique way of communicating that can inspire and motivate children. It is a vehicle for personal expression, and it can play an important part in the personal development of our children. Music allows our pupils to reflect and link closely with their overall development. Besides being a creative and enjoyable activity, music can also be a highly academic and demanding subject.
Music reflects the culture and society we live in, and so the teaching and learning of music enables children to better understand the world they live in and develops curiosity for different cultures and ideas. It also plays an important part in helping children feel part of a community. We provide opportunities for all children to create, play, perform and enjoy music, to develop the skills, to appreciate a wide variety of musical forms, and to begin to make judgements about the quality of music.
The objectives of teaching music in our schools are to enable children to:
Throughout their school journey, children will developtheir skills in the interrelated dimensions of music to be able to listen and appraise, compose, perform and evaluate. The interrelated dimensions of music are:
Music is a universal language that embodies one of the highest forms of creativity. A high-quality music education should engage and inspire pupils to develop a love of music and their talent as musicians, and so increase their self-confidence, creativity and sense of achievement. As pupils progress, they should develop a critical engagement with music, allowing them to compose, and to listen with discrimination to the best in the musical canon.
At Grasmere, music plays an important part in our wider curriculum. It is sometimes integrated into topics and sometimes taught to ensure the coverage of skills and knowledge.
Through each year of work the children develop their understanding, make musical judgements, apply their new learning, develop their aural memory, express themselves physically, emotionally and through discussion and create their own musical ideas. The wide range of core resources have been developed specifically to motivate and capture each individual’s personal interest.
The children not only learn about music; they become musicians who are able to share and perform using their new skills.
The musical progression through EYFS, KS1 and KS2 is demonstrated in the PDF documents below. The instrumental work is differentiated allowing children to move through the relevant parts as they need to. Remember that an integrated approach to musical learning means that the whole musical experience is important, children are learning music through these activities.
Our Music Curriculum overview can be found at the bottom of this page.
This includes:
At LEAP we use Charanga as a resource to support our LEAP music curriculum. It has some great listening resources to support children’s exposure to different music genres, as well as built in apps that help children compose their own music as well as play and sing along to different pieces of music.
One of the most exciting and rewarding things you can do at home with your children to support the Music curriculum is to listen to music and talk about the types and styles of music you listen to now and what you used to listen to when you were younger.