Unit 1 Ongoing Skills: Extension and Future Learning
Unit 1 Ongoing Skills: Extension and Future Learning
Unit 1 Ongoing Skills: Extension and Future Learning
ENRICHMENT
The class could attend concerts given by a variety of different
singing groups.
Professional singers could be invited into the school to perform
and sing with the children.
Parents could be encouraged to contribute to concerts
and assemblies.
The class could attend concerts and meet performers to discuss
and share different styles of singing, eg operatic, soul, gospel,
jazz, Asian.
R E P E RTO I R E
The suggestions given in the unit are only examples that could be
used with the activities given in the unit. Wherever possible,
teachers should use their own repertoire.
Unit 1
YEAR 1/2
Ongoing skills
WH E RE T H E U N I T F I T S I N
The intention is that this unit will form the heart of the music programme at key stage 1. It will be extended by, and support, all the
other units for this key stage. When teaching material from this unit, attention should be given to the learning objectives of the other
units being taught at the same time.
This unit can make a significant contribution to literacy by developing pupils confidence in the use of their voices. It also contributes
to all other learning through the development of listening skills and aural memory. Singing, in particular, can contribute to the
childrens spiritual and social development by lifting spirits, focusing concentration and developing group identity.
PRIOR LEARNING
VO C A B U L A R Y
RESOURCES
Stimulus:
songs
music
words
Sound sources:
voices
body percussion
classroom instruments
EXPECTATIONS
at the end of this unit
Ref: QCA/00/440
Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA) 2000
sing simple songs from memory with enjoyment, some expression and a sense of the
shape of the melody; use their voices confidently in a variety of ways; listen carefully
and recall short rhythmic and melodic patterns; show physical control when playing
musical instruments and responding to music
recognise that their voices can be used in different ways, and begin to find their
singing voices; clap short rhythmic patterns, but will need help when recalling longer
phrases or talking about pieces of music; respond physically to music
sing simple songs accurately at a given pitch and with clear diction and expression;
identify subtle changes in sounds and recall complete phrases; show considerable
physical control of instruments and of their bodies when performing and responding
to music
Ask the children to use their voices to make sound effects for stories and poems, eg animal sounds in
Old Macdonald, spooky sounds in stories about castles, the voices of the three bears in Goldilocks.
Explore different types of voice using a question and answer activity, eg Teacher: Have you brought
your whispering/talking/loud/humming/singing voice? Class (using the appropriate voice): Yes we have!
Yes we have! Repeat the activity. Ask a child to lead.
Use a hand puppet and ask individual children to help the puppet talk and sing using different voices.
Play call-and-response games based on the minor third, eg
Create activities where the children practice selected phrases and/or passages of songs using different
voices, eg whispering, high voice, etc.
Show the children how to use the thinking voice by singing words or phrases in their heads, that is,
mouthing the words without making any sound.
Show phrases in songs by drawing a rainbow shape in the air as the class sings each phrase.
Follow the leader: Get the children used to looking at a conductor for instructions while they are
singing. At first it should be the teacher. Agree a range of gestures that mean start, stop, slower, faster,
louder, quieter.
Sing songs in large groups, eg two classes together, or the whole school, to develop confidence and
enjoyment of a shared experience. Focus on improving the quality of singing by applying everything
learned in class singing.
Play singing games that use actions and movement, eg London Bridge, Head and shoulders, If youre
happy and you know it. Make the actions match the speed and rhythm of the singing. Help the class to
keep together.
Use chants and rhymes to show the children how to keep to a steady beat, eg One potato, two potato.
Get them to tap the pulse on different parts of the body as they sing, eg shoulders, chest, thighs.
Explore the effect of making it faster/slower.
Ask a child to set the tempo for a song or chant by tapping their knees to a steady beat before they
begin. The rest of the class listen to catch the speed before they join in.
Ask the children to clap the rhythm of the song while singing (the word rhythms), showing silent beats
(rests) with the movement of the hands.
Clap the rhythm of a song known to the children. Can you identify which song? Stop in the middle.
Can you clap the rest of the song?
Continued over
to control pitch
Play Blast off: the children crouch down on their haunches, then, after countdown, slowly rise like a
rocket and take off into space. As they rise, their voices rise in pitch.
In Splash down they reverse the procedure.
Play Switchback: the children swoop up and down over and over again as though they are on a
switchback at the fair. The pitch of their voices should rise up and down as they do.
Play Hump bridge: the children hum for a long time on one note then suddenly make a rising and
falling sound to illustrate travelling over the bridge. They return to the starting note.
Play Upstairs and downstairs: the children describe climbing up and down stairs by making their
voices rise and fall in pitch. Help the children move up and down in steps to match the notes of a scale,
eg C D E F G. They can sometimes only go halfway up.
Tell the children to take their voices for a walk by making a vowel sound and following the
movements of the teachers hand. The voice can go up, down or stay the same.
Sing songs based on the minor third, eg Its raining, its pouring.
Draw lines on the board using the different shapes, eg hump bridge, and ask the children to sing the
line using an open vowel sound, eg ah. Point to the line and use the board to travel along it as the
children sing. Ask individual children to act as conductors and explore going faster and slower.
Blast off
Splash down
Downstairs
Hump bridge
Sing songs that will stimulate the childrens imagination, eg songs about interesting people, animals,
themselves. Ask them questions. Is it happy, sad, cross, calming? Which are the key words that portray
the setting, mood or action of the song? Can you find a way of singing these words to create the
intended effect?
Sing songs in different moods, eg Rain, rain, go away using a cross voice. Does it work if you sing it
dreamily? See-saw using a calm lilting voice. Does it work if you sing fast?
Sing songs that are accumulative, eg One man went to mow, and ask children to add their own verses
this will give them a sense of ownership and provide opportunities to explore different ideas and
feelings.
Sing songs written for different purposes, eg lullabies, worksongs, singing games, and explore how
they should be sung.
Upstairs
Facial expressions can help reinforce the mood of the song and help
change the timbre of the voice. Talk about how we use our voices
to stress words and show how we feel.
Extension activity: Discuss different purposes of songs and how
these may change the way the song is sung, eg a sea shanty.
Draw attention to sounds as they happen. What sounds can you hear now? What is making the
different sounds? What sounds are close/far away?
Help children improve their own work. How can you improve your work? What was good? What could
have been better?
Help children focus their listening. Can you hear the way the sounds get louder and quieter? When
does the music change?
Play Copy cats: Clap short rhythmic phrases and sing short melodic phrases for children to copy, eg a
phrase from a song without the words sung to a vowel sound.
Help children recall and remember sounds. How does this piece of music start (and finish)? What
happens in the middle? Encourage the children to learn songs, chants and rhymes by heart.
Encourage the children to respond to music using body percussion, eg clapping, tapping knees,
stamping.
Encourage the children to move, eg stamping, shivering, to sounds made by individual percussion
instruments and recorded music. Make up simple dance patterns, eg step, step, jump, curl, and
respond to different moods through dance.
ENRICHMENT
The class could attend concerts given by a variety of different
singing groups.
Professional singers could be invited into the school to perform
and sing with the children.
Parents could be encouraged to contribute to concerts
and assemblies.
The class could attend concerts and meet performers to discuss
and share different styles of singing, eg operatic, soul, gospel,
jazz, Asian.
R E P E RTO I R E
The suggestions given in the unit are only examples that could be
used with the activities given in the unit. Wherever possible,
teachers should use their own repertoire.
Unit 1
YEAR 1/2
Ongoing skills
WH E RE T H E U N I T F I T S I N
The intention is that this unit will form the heart of the music programme at key stage 1. It will be extended by, and support, all the
other units for this key stage. When teaching material from this unit, attention should be given to the learning objectives of the other
units being taught at the same time.
This unit can make a significant contribution to literacy by developing pupils confidence in the use of their voices. It also contributes
to all other learning through the development of listening skills and aural memory. Singing, in particular, can contribute to the
childrens spiritual and social development by lifting spirits, focusing concentration and developing group identity.
PRIOR LEARNING
VO C A B U L A R Y
RESOURCES
Stimulus:
songs
music
words
Sound sources:
voices
body percussion
classroom instruments
EXPECTATIONS
at the end of this unit
Ref: QCA/00/440
Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA) 2000
sing simple songs from memory with enjoyment, some expression and a sense of the
shape of the melody; use their voices confidently in a variety of ways; listen carefully
and recall short rhythmic and melodic patterns; show physical control when playing
musical instruments and responding to music
recognise that their voices can be used in different ways, and begin to find their
singing voices; clap short rhythmic patterns, but will need help when recalling longer
phrases or talking about pieces of music; respond physically to music
sing simple songs accurately at a given pitch and with clear diction and expression;
identify subtle changes in sounds and recall complete phrases; show considerable
physical control of instruments and of their bodies when performing and responding
to music