Instrument Play | Vocal | Beat/Rhythm | Creating Music | Reading and Writing | Creative Movement | Dramatic Play/Games | Music Literature | Musical Expression | Performance | |
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1 | Use a variety of basic percussion instruments as improvised or directed accompaniments | Sing songs in various tonalities, keys and meters | Chant rhythmic rhymes and sing songs in various meters, including triple, duple and unusual | Create spontaneous variations in songs and rhythmic rhymes to represent daily tasks and other situations | Respond to pictorial notation and some traditional notation, such as dynamic markings | Use all areas of space (low, middle and high) | Play the role of a particular character, using purposeful movements | Respond to high quality live and recorded music, including a variety of styles, genres, and cultural backgrounds | Create and respond to changes in dynamics | Sing and chant solo or as part of an ensemble |
2 | Experiment with found sounds to create accompani‐ ment sound pictures | Use vocal play to encourage vocal exploration and flexibility | Respond with consistent beat and accurate spacing while chanting, singing or using an instrument | Create nonsense syllables for use in songs | Use movement to represent musical form | Free exploration through movement | Participate in games that focus on a particular musical concept, such as pitch, beat, rhythm and dynamics | Participate in music traditions from other cultures | Create and respond to changes in tempo | Share feedback about performances |
3 | Explore high and low instrumental sounds | Respond vocally to upward and downward directed movements | Chant rhythm patterns while tapping to the beat | Create new sounds and conversations for music, either in a whole group or partner setting | Use movement to represent phrasing | Participate in dyad (partner) play | Play call and response games | Communicate musical preferences | Create and respond to the emotions and moods expressed in music | Modify performances based on personal opinion and feedback |
4 | Choose instruments carefully for free musical play | Sing tonal patterns | Move to the macrobeat and microbeat, accurately transfering the beat to various body parts and surfaces | Continue to play/sing when the music stops (audiation) | Move in response to melodic contour (direction) | Use movement to direct or lead activities | Use a variety of props, such as scarves, to encourage dramatic play | Give reasons for favorite songs and rhythmic rhymes | Use musical expression in the creation of a character or action | Follow the direction of a leader |
5 | Identify short and long sounds | Use singing to create social connections and community | Begin to transfer rhythm patterns from voice, to movement to instruments | Create accompaniments using basic percussion instruments, found sounds and body percussion | Use sound picture notation to represent created music | Participate in simple structured dances | Use a fermata to convey a pause or anticipation | |||
6 | Use instruments to respond to changes in soft and loud | Use nonsense syllables for singing | Create rhythm and tonal patterns | Hear and begin to use musical vocabulary | Use a variety of props, such as scarves, to encourage creative movement | |||||
7 | Aurally identify sound sources | Sing the resting tone and participate in resting tone play to establish key of song | Create compositions using a variety of instruments and/or found sounds | Use body movement to respond to melodic contour | ||||||
8 | Sing songs, accompanied and unaccompanied | Share musical ideas and creations with others | ||||||||
9 | Sing call and response songs | Improve upon musical ideas and creations | ||||||||
10 | Sing ostinatos |