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No Place Like by Kerry Andrew: An Exciting Introduction | Ten Pieces | BBC Teach

No Place Like is a brand new commission written specially for Ten Pieces on the theme of home by British composer Kerry Andrew. The song takes inspiration fr...

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Music makes an important contribution to the life of every school and should be celebrated, promoted and encouraged. It helps build pupils’ self-esteem and self-discipline and leads to higher standards across the curriculum. Today many more schools are benefiting from this transformational power that music brings to pupils, staff and parents alongside the wider whole school community.

This booklet summarises the 10 key benefits of music, from recognition within the ‘National Plan for Music Education ‘ that music is an educational building block through to the inclusive nature of music irrespective of abilities.

Music at St Giles' CE Primary School is an entitlement for every child, an integral part of school life and never  side-lined

Curriculum Overview - Music 

Year

Autumn 1

Autumn 2

Spring 1

Spring 2

Summer 1

Summer 2

Nursery

Sing up

Let’s be friends

Travel and movement

This is me!

Animal tea party

I’ve got feelings

Let’s jam

*Practice for musical showcase

Reception

Sing up and charanga

I’ve got a grumpy face

(Sing up- 3 weeks)

Me!

(Charanga)

My Stories (Charanga)

EYFS Christmas production

Witch, witch (Sing up- 3 weeks)

The Sorcerer’s Apprentice

(Sing up- 3 weeks)

Shake my sillies out (Sing up- 3 weeks)

It’s oh so quiet (Sing up- 3 weeks)

Down there under the sea

(Sing up- 3 weeks)

Five fine bumblebees

(Sing up- 3 weeks)

*Practice for musical showcase

1

Music 2pm-3pm

Fridays

Sing up and charanga

Hey you

(Charanga)

Menu song

(Sing up)

 

Colonel Haithi’s March

(Sing up-  3 weeks)

Little Angel lost her wings

Musical Aquarium

(Sing up- 3 weeks)

Musical conversations

(Sing up- 3 weeks)

 

In the groove

(Charanga)

 

 

Who stole my chickens and my hens

(Sing up)

*Practice for musical showcase

2

Music- Wednesday afternoons

Sing up and charanga

Hands, Feet Heart

(Charanga)

 

 

 

Composing music using bird song

(Sing up- 3 weeks)

 

Year 2 Christmas production

Carnival of the Animals

(Sing up)

Grandma rap

(Sing up)

 

Grandma rap

(Sing up)

 

Charlie Chaplin

(Sing up)

 

*Practice for musical showcase

 

 

3

Tuesday afternoons

Wednesday afternoons whole class recorders

Charanga and instrumental lessons

 

Let your Spirit Fly

(Charanga)

Glockenspiel- Stage 1

(Charanga)

Three Little Birds

(Charanga)

 

The Dragon Song

(Charanga)

 

 

Bringing us together

(Charanga)

*Practice for musical showcase

4

 

 

Mamma Mia

(Charanga)

 

Glockenspiel – Stage 2

(Charanga)

Stop!

(Charanga)

Lean on Me! (Charanga)

Blackbird (Charanga)

 

*Practice for musical showcase

5

Music- Thursday afternoons

Friday afternoons whole class recorders

 

 

Livin on a prayer

(Charanga)

Sea shanties

(Sing up)

 

Balinese Music (3 weeks)

(Sing up)

Why we sing (3 weeks)

(Sing up)

The Fresh Prince of Bel Air

(Charanga)

Classroom Jazz 1

*Practice for musical showcase

6

 

 

Happy

(Charanga)

Classroom Jazz 2

(Charanga)

You to me are everything (Disco)

(Sing up)

You’ve got a friend

(Charanga)

Race!

(Sing up)

Year 6 leavers

Songs and performance

 

*Practice for musical showcase

 

*Improvisation, composition and performance are expected in ALL units however, prioritise and focus on performance, improvisation and composition in the suggested.

*Improvisation, composition and performance are expected in ALL units however, prioritise and focus on performance, improvisation and composition in the suggested units.

The Charanga Musical School Scheme provides teachers with week-by-week lesson support for each year group in the school. It is ideal for specialist and non-specialist teachers and provides lesson plans, assessment, clear progression, and engaging and exciting whiteboard resources to support every lesson. The Scheme supports all the requirements of the national curriculum.

In line with the curriculum for music and guidance from Ofsted, this Scheme moves away from the previous levels and learning objective/outcome concepts to an integrated, practical, exploratory and child-led approach to musical learning.

Ofsted have stated that “We will not always know the learning outcomes” so segregated learning objectives at the start of each lesson are not appropriate. Instead the interrelated dimensions of music weave through the units to encourage the development of musical skills as the learning progresses through listening and appraising, differing musical activities (including creating and exploring) and performing.

How the Scheme is structured

Each Unit of Work comprises the of strands of musical learning which correspond with the national curriculum for music:

  1. Listening and Appraising
  2. Musical Activities
    1. Warm-up Games
    2. Optional Flexible Games
    3. Singing
    4. Playing instruments
    5. Improvisation
    6. Composition
  3. Performing

The Activity Manual

This manual will give you knowledge, understanding and support when preparing and delivering your music lessons. It will explain the supporting ideas and methodology and how each strand of musical learning within the Units of Work correspond with the national curriculum. Use it as a handbook, a teaching companion.

Mastery in your music lessons

Charanga Musical School Units of Work enable children to understand musical concepts through a repetition-based approach to learning. Learning about the same musical concept through different musical activities enables a more secure, deeper learning and mastery of musical skills. The Activity Manual guides you through each strand of musical learning from Reception to Upper Key Stage 2 in order for you, as a teacher, to plan for your teaching and to see the opportunity to embed a deeper learning, knowledge, understanding and skills.

Musical teaching and learning is not neat or linear. The strands of musical learning, presented within the lesson plans and the on-screen resources, are part of the learning spiral. Over time, children can both develop new musical skills and concepts, and re-visit established musical skills and concepts. Repeating a musical skill doesn’t necessarily mean their progress is slowing down or their development is moving backwards! It's just shifting within the spiral. Mastery means both a deeper understanding of musical skills and concepts and learning something new.

Scheme Progression Overview With Teaching And Learning Outcomes (see documents, right) is a new document that can be used for a teaching and learning overview of each unit, year and Key Stage. This document brings all the possible musical learning outcomes together for the end of year and Key Stage, linking to the Progressive Teacher and Childrens’ Statements within the Assessment Framework. It highlights differentiated and deeper learning for each child, that constantly builds through each step/lesson, unit and year.

Resources/Instruments

  • A class set or half a class set of glockenspiels - this is the most important resource along with any un-tuned percussion instruments you might have in school
  • iPad app - glock or un-tuned percussion app can be used
  • Recorders - use if you have experience playing and teaching this instrument
  • If children play band/orchestral instruments, encourage them to use those instruments in the music lesson
  • A combination of the above

Mixed Year Groups

If you are delivering the scheme in a school with mixed age or year groups, please do adapt it to suit your needs. Remember that the Units of Work are progressive but can also be delivered as stand-alone units due to the depth of learning and spiral progression methodology. This means you can choose a Unit of Work for your class by looking at the suitability of the main unit song for the age group that you are teaching.

Various ways/ideas to tackle the mixed-age group issue

  1. Deliver a two-year rolling programme - this will alleviate repetition.
  2. Build your own scheme from the Units of Work, topics and other resources in Freestyle. In order to do so you will need extra units if you have extra classes so:
    1. You could deliver less Units of Work in each year so perhaps you might deliver something different in Autumn 2 linked to what is taking place at Christmas time - perhaps use one of the productions. This means that you will have some spare units.
    2. Use Summer 2 for revision and practise for a concert. Summer is notoriously difficult anyway due to SATS, Sports Day etc. Again, you will have spare units.

Learning Progression

The diagram above depicts the depth of learning that occurs as the children move through the year groups. As they progress, the colour deepens and the learning widens:

All musical learning in this scheme is built around the Interrelated Dimensions of Music: pulse, rhythm, pitch, tempo, dynamics, timbre, texture, structure and notation. These dimensions are at the centre of all the learning.

From Reception to Year 6, the learning consists of six half-termly Units of Work. The final unit in each year - Reflect, Rewind and Replay - allows for revision and more extension activities.

What is included in each Unit of Work?

  1. Listen and Appraise
  2. Musical Activities include Games, Singing, Playing, Improvising and Composing
  3. Perform/Share

Each lesson in the Scheme is designed to last for one hour but can be taught in 45 minutes if there are time constraints. It is difficult to teach a credible music lesson in less than 45 minutes. If you are in this situation you may prefer to use the Musical School Freestyle approach where you can build your own lessons to suit your circumstances (click the Freestyle tab at the top of this page).

How to structure an hour long lesson:
Listen and Appraise - 20 mins
Musical Activities - 25 mins
Perform/Share - 15 mins

How to structure a 45 minute lesson:
Listen and Appraise - 15 mins
Musical Activities - 20 mins
Perform/Share - 10 mins

1. Listen and Appraise

This overview diagram includes all the listening opportunities in this Scheme through historical periods to present day.

This Style Indicator guide will support learning and is printable

2. Musical Activities

All activities are based around a song. The Activity Manual provided is to support the teaching and learning here.

  1. Games embed the Interrelated Dimensions of Music through repetition
  2. Singing is at the heart of all the musical learning
  3. Playing instruments with the song to be learnt - tuned/un-tuned classroom percussion and an option to play any band instrument. A sound-before-symbol approach is used but scores are provided as an understanding of notation is introduced to the children
  4. Improvising with the song using voices and instruments occurs in some Units of Work
  5. Composing with the song using instruments occurs in some Units of Work
  6.  

3. Perform/Share

Share what has taken place during the lesson and work towards performing to an audience.

Musical Progression

The musical progression through KS1 and KS2 is demonstrated in the diagram 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.

Assessment

The Musical School Assessment Framework uses a Plan-Do-Check-Review approach and is supported by planning and assessment documentation, with the facility for you to upload and store digital evidence.

Visit ‘Assessment’ in the ‘My Workspace’ tab to use the full Musical School Assessment Framework (you can refer to the assessment documentation on the right hand side of this page too).

Scheme Overview Documents

Click document title to view, or click the arrow to download.

Charanga Musical School

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