Music Listening Lessons for Spring

If you stepped into my classroom, you would quickly notice that music listening is a huge priority for me! I try hard to introduce each of my students to at least one new great piece of music every week. So, I am always looking for lessons to help them move to, visualize, describe all styles and genres of music.  Here are some of my favorite listening lessons for springtime:



Music & Movement

Butterfly Etude, Frederic Chopin

I love this piece because it’s the epitome of spring: lively, light, and cheery. I mostly let students just explore the motions and pathways of a butterfly, which is also a wonderful way to draw their attention to symmetrical movement. 

Here is my sequence; each number is a single listen through the song. I generally do 2 listens per class, which allows the lesson to stretch over 3-4 class periods.  (Sometimes I repeat an activity to allow for more exploration or fun!) 
  •        1st time through: Sit down and fold hands like a butterfly; follow the music with your hands. (Short discussion after about thoughts & ideas)
  •        2nd time: Move around the room like a butterfly. Put some of the movements you explored with your hands into your whole body.
  •        3rd time: Each student gets two scarves, one in each hand. Move around the room like a butterfly and use the scarves to extend those movements.
  •        4th time: Move in small groups while others watch. Ask the observing students what they noticed and what they liked.
  •        5th time: Each student receives a butterfly net. Use the nets to feel the larger phrases of the piece, arching dramatically as you follow those big phrase lines. You will probably want to join them to help demonstrate.
  •        6th time: Split into two groups, one with the butterfly scarves and one with the nets. Then switch and do it again!  Pro tip: Keep these two groups on opposite sides of the room or you will end up with someone’s net on someone else’s head. But you already knew that… 


Mystery Song

Flight of the Bumblebee, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov

This is my very favorite listening activity for just about any piece of music. It is versatile, engaging, and truly higher order thinking.  And, it can be done in the last few minutes of class, or it can be paired with history and a discussion for an entire lesson.

At its simplest, I hand students a blank piece of paper and say, “Draw the picture that comes to mind when you hear this piece.”

The Flight of the Bumblebee is a great piece for this exercise because it has distinct sounds that will provoke a variety of mental images. Even if they haven’t heard it before, many of your students will pick up on the idea that this sounds like a chase or running and some will even think of bees.
I do not tell students anything about the piece, they are just doing a cold listen. Typically, I play the piece a few times and allow them time to draw and then I suggest they give it a name. "If you were the composer, what would you title this piece?"

The most important part of this activity is the discussion afterwards. I find that students are almost always eager to share their artwork and explain what they noticed and how that translated to their picture.

As you discuss, connect their drawings to the elements of the music like: the quick tempo makes us feel like we are running or the ascending and descending runs in the violins make us picture something flying up and down.  Use as much music language and terminology as you can, and eventually they will begin to use it too.


Music Listening Egg Hunt

Morning Mood from Peer Gynt Suite, Edvard Greig

An awesome way to make a regular activity extra fun is to turn it into a scavenger hunt, and what could be more perfect for spring than an Easter eggs?

I print a list of listening questions on small slips of paper and hide them in eggs around the room. Students hunt quietly for a single egg while they listen to the music; when they find an egg they return to their spot, open the egg, and read the question. After listening through the entire piece, everyone should be back in their spot and it’s time to ask for volunteers to read their question and provide an answer.  
I print multiples of each question, so some students will be listening for the same thing. This fosters meaningful and somewhat organic discussion, because students will have the same questions but inevitably have different answers.  Here are the questions I used for this piece:
  •        Name one instrument that you heard.
  •        How would you describe the tempo (speed) of this piece?
  •        How would you describe the mood (feeling) of this piece?
  •        What do you hear in the music that reminds you of spring?
  •        If you heard this song on a movie soundtrack, which movie would you be watching?                 

Happy Listening!

Tutorial and Teaching Tips: Googly Eye Dice

Have you noticed that dice and googly eyes seem to be incredibly popular right now in teaching circles? They are all the rage at the moment, in both music and non-music settings, and I've seen some really fun music blog posts recently on using them in music lessons.

Reading those blog posts reminded me of a project I did several years ago that uses BOTH - yes BOTH dice AND googly eyes! Googly eye dice! They are a perfect tool to use in music lessons or in your classroom in a ton of different ways, so here's a really easy tutorial to show you how to make your own googly eye dice! Plus, they bring on the giggles, which is always a good thing  😁



Ready to get started on this fun little adventure? Let's go!




Favorite Music Education Resources

You all have a book like this...one that is coffee-stained, dog-eared, and almost falling apart. These books are the ones that we love so much we use them all the time! Today, I'm writing about my top ten favorite music education resources, ones that I use repeatedly and that have helped immensely with writing lessons, putting together programs, and more! Click on each picture to purchase the book on West Music. Here goes!

Favorite music education resources for any elementary music classroom: Includes song books, folk dancing resources, and more!


"An American Methodology" by Eisen and Robertson


This resource is a GREAT introduction to the Kodaly philosophy. It includes processes for using preparation, presentation, and practice strategies, specific ideas for each stage, and tons of songs and singing games! It also includes art music examples, which are great for expanding students' listening and literacy skills!

"Lesson Planning in a Kodaly Setting" by Rita Klinger


This is such a great resource for lesson planning, written by the late Rita Klinger. Even if you haven't been Kodaly trained, it has lots of great suggestions for writing lessons, creating transitions, and more! I've used it as a required resource when I've taught Kodaly Level I because it is truly so helpful.

Creative Ways to Use Instruments Every Day!

Ask any student what their favorite lesson in your class is and I bet you that 90% of them will tell you that they love any time they get to use the instruments!   Instruments are fun and exciting and make any lesson sparkle!  Sadly, I think that many of us leave our classroom instruments in their plastic tubs, cabinets, or closets far too much of the time.  Here are a few ideas about how to pull out and use any instruments you might have in fun and exciting ways!

Here are a few ideas about how to pull out and use any instruments you might have in fun and exciting ways!


Rhythm Echo/Reading – The Next Level
I’m sure that many of you spend time teaching rhythm patterns by having students echo your example or read notation along with flashcards.  It’s great practice for kids to echo patterns and helps them work on listening even as it improves coordination, steady beat, and rhythmic understanding.  It so easy to add in body percussion in the form of a clap, pat, snap, or stomp.  I love saying something like “I’m going to give you a rhythm and you need to take my words and turn them into claps.”  Students hear “ti-ti, ta, ti-ti, ta” and then they pat the rhythm they hear. You can have them turn your words into pats, claps, snaps, or anything else you want.  Kiddos can click their tongue, pat their tummy, nod their head, blink their eyes, and so much more.  You can easily do this with rhythm cards as well.  Ask students to read the cards and along with saying the words out loud, ask them to clap the rhythm at the same time.


Let students echo/read rhythms with instruments.  Then ask them to find a new way to play the instruments!


The next step is to take your words and put them onto an instrument.  Give your students rhythm sticks and then have then click the patterns that you speak to them.  Start with easy patterns and increase the difficulty slowly as they speak and click along.  To take this even further, ask them to find a new way to use the instrument.  Maybe they play on the floor, maybe they click the ends of the rhythm stick together, maybe they play behind their back… the possibilities are endless!  In the next lesson you can spend 5 minutes doing the exact same thing with tambourines, drums, wood blocks, etc.