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"Salt pepper vinegar mustard"

The following chart show how the new A & C Black scheme can be used to provide broad coverage in line with the National Curriculum for Music for England.

This guidance is designed to supplement the materials available in this new scheme of musical activities.

Special Note: I am grateful for the work of Alison Keates and Dot Atkin (Shropshire Music Service) who worked with me in the preparation of this new support material.

  Music 2000 Programme of Study for Year 3  
  Key Stage 2 A & C Black 'Music Express' "Salt pepper vinegar mustard"
  Pupils should be taught how to: Objectives Activities
  Controlling sounds through singing and playing - performing skills   Page/Activity
1a sing songs, in unison and two parts, with clear diction, control of pitch, a sense of phrase and musical expression To sing playground songs; 50/1;
1b play tuned and untuned instruments with control and rhythmic accuracy To use untuned percussion to play rhythmic patterns; 57/2;
1c practise, rehearse and present performing with an awareness of the audience To perform singing games; 53/1; 57/3; 61/1; 61/2; 61/3;
  Creating and developing musical ideas - composing skills   Page/Activity
2a improvise, developing rhythmic and melodic material when performing To perform with two pulses; To compose a melody for a singing game; 56/3 59/3;
2b explore, choose, combine and organise musical ideas within musical structures    
  Responding and reviewing - appraising skills   Page/Activity
3a analyse and compare sounds    
3b explore and explain their own ideas and feelings about music using movement, dance, expressive language and musical vocabulary To add movement to singing games; To discuss musical features; To move in time to a steady beat; 50/2; 50/3; 56/1; 56/2;
3c improve their own and others' work in relation to its intended effect    
  Listening, and applying knowledge and understanding   Page/Activity
4a to listen with attention to detail and to internalise and recall sounds with increasing aural memory To copy melodic phrases; 59/2;
4b how the combined musical elements of pitch, duration, dynamics, tempo, timbre, texture and silence can be organised within musical structures and used to communicate different moods and effects    
4c how music is produced in different ways and described through relevant established and invented notations To relate musical notation to rhythmic pattern; 57/1;
4d how time and place can influence the way music is created, performed and heard To discuss musical characteristics of playground games; 53/3;

 

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