Our School Music Month Thoughts and Activities

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You don’t need to be a music teacher to celebrate music with your students! March is the music of our school month (Miosm®), which brings new rhythms to the classroom. Learn how to integrate music into one vibrant foundational course and your school community in our school months’ activities, games and other creativity.
Ideas for Music Billboards in Our School Month
Decorating with musical images is a great way to bring music into the lives of students and school visitors. Choose to inspire primary school learners’ ideas and teach them all the different types of music from the moment they walk through the door.
The National Association for Music Education (NAFME) sponsors Miosm®, which usually chooses a new theme every year. This theme can serve as the basis for your bulletin board design.
Topics include:
- Unity through music
- I saw me in music education
- Music is all of us
- Music: My inner voice
- Music changes life
- All music. Everyone.
Our School’s Simple Music Month Bulletin Board Ideas
Start with the theme of the year, or just about the idea of powerful music, for everyone, you can create unique original bulletin boards year after year.
- Music favorites: Have students write their favorite songs, artists, instruments, musicals and/or music genres and write their own photos using colorful markers or paints.
- Famous musician: Have each student choose a famous musician to write and hang their report on the bulletin board.
- 3-D DIY Instruments: Help students create 3D instruments using recycled materials and then hang them up.
- Music Art: Play a specific music genre and ask students to create artworks that inspired their feelings with music.
Authorize young musicians with “I can” poster
Inspirational music posters around the bulletin board or classroom center the stage and give musical curiosity. You can also turn them into a lesson where students write their own musical “I Can” statements or write narrative stories about their relationship with music.
In music classes, we… Music Advocacy Bulletin Boards According to National Standards
David Row
Topics: Drama, music, vocal music
Twenty music posters happily announce what students can do in this set of music. Whether it is “creation,” “dance,” or “performance,” they set expectations for music lessons in a colorful and engaging way.
Equip students with music vocabulary
Hang posters around your classroom to introduce and enhance musical terms and concepts. Posters and word walls often create great reference tools and help with learning awesome, as students are easy to refer to when writing, discussing, and listening to others.

What to listen to in the Musical Bulletin Board Set
By Cori Bloom
Topic: Musical instrumental music, sound music
The set includes 15 music term posters and comes with other vocabulary cards, all of which are printable in black and white or color of your choice. Each poster gives a definition and question to make your students think and discuss music. With all the materials in this combination, you can also use it as a word wall in your music room and change content year-round when working on different units.
Music activities in our school
Music activities for elementary school students may be held anywhere in school or community! Use these music in our school months for music classes, math classes, reading stations or other places where optimism rhythms can be used. These activities are consistent with national art education standards wherever possible.
Practice identifying symbols that match activities
Can your music major recognize half of the notes? What about the sixteenth rest? Add this annotation-matched activity to the course on reading music, or put cards and clothespins in ready-made bags for students to use when completing other works.

Clothespin Matching Card: Pay attention to symbols and pay attention to name | Great for music centers!
Music with Mrs. Dunc
Theme: music, music creation, vocal music
Teach primary school students the difference between notes and symbols between activities by matching clothespins. The resource is equipped with eight pages of printable cards that cover full notes and breaks, half notes and breaks, quarter notes and breaks, and more.
Strengthen the rhythm and rhythm of the music station
The center can help students explore the differences between things like rhythm and rhythm at their own pace. You can use the Radio and Music Expert Course to create a cross-course project or enter the unit of children’s poetry.

Kindergarten Music Center/Radio – Rhythm and Rhythm
Erin Miracle
Topics: Musical instruments, music, vocal music
You need to find everything you need to beat in a kindergarten classroom! This resource includes cards for setting up music centers, shading paper, and symbols in the event. All you need is the instruments played by students!
Solve the problem of music escape room
The puzzle of the escape room is even the most reluctant musician, perfect for non-campus band day or music theory review courses. Have the student team work together to address this activity or use it as a step-by-step understanding activity for the first week of school.

Music Escape Room #1 (The team uses music theory clues to solve the code)
Chat Shop Director by Band
Topic: Talented and talented musical instruments, music
Playing music involves a lot of logic, and this escape room activity has tested the logic skills of senior students. After leveraging their musical knowledge to solve secret codes, no crawling information and complete rhythm math problems, learners put their clues together to “escape” the music room.
Sing a math song to illustrate this concept
Songs can help students learn a variety of facts and information. For example, you can play a math song for students in a course on graphical scores, or you can ask them to write their own songs about another math concept.

Number song score
By music notes
Topic: Applied Mathematics, Basic Operations, Scores
Standard: CCSS 3.NF.A.2
This score song is definitely a summer song – at least in your classroom! This compelling song explains how to draw scores on a digital line, and these students can use some help to visualize the concepts.
Write emotional reactions to music
Incorporate music diary activities into your language arts class when writing narratives or poetry analysis. Have students share their answers in class speeches for public speaking practice.

Music listening journal
Mathematics to Music
Topics: Musical instruments, music, vocal music
The best music brings our true emotions. Record these real responses in music journal resources, including diary tips, listening to journal worksheets, and signs for classroom doors to keep people quiet during work.
Music games for our school
What do music and games have in common? They are both fun – playing with them can help kids learn other important skills. In our school months, the music concept is reinforced to make elementary school students want to play over and over again.
Play bingo
Bingo is a classic game that all kids know how to play, and it can cover any subject area. Bingo is used as a formative assessment after lessons for different instrument families. You can also set it up as a study station for students to do other tasks.

Music Bingo Instruments Basic Music for Non-Litigation Percussion
Linda McPherson
Topics: Musical instruments, music, vocal music
Young elementary school students recognize untriggered percussion instruments in this bingo game. This resource teaches you the instruments you may already have in music class, including the cymbals, maracas and Rainsticks of your fingers. It comes with a color-coded card and instructions for calling the teacher.
View music symbols with fascinating card games
In Music Theory Courses, use music symbol cards to play a simple card game in any elementary level music theory class. Keep a set of music symbol cards for alternative teachers or music students when they do not practice instruments.

Basic Music Music Game – Who do I have? Symbols, dynamics, etc.!
Melody Payne – Music for a lifetime
Topics: Musical Instrumental Music, Music, Others (Performing Arts)
Can your students identify large staff or part of the key on the piano? They will play “Who do I have?” After that, they will come back with resources to test them on the concept of starting and intermediate music. With full color and black and white cards, as well as teacher instructions and answer keys, this resource is a one-stop music review store.
Roll dice to identify notes and rest
Music games can help students practice music knowledge and arithmetic skills at the same time. Pair them with math courses on addition, subtraction, or multiplication to enhance the basics of mathematics as well as musical concepts.

Music Dice Activity – Whole, Half and Quarter Values
Music with Sara Bibee
Theme: Music
Combine music, math and the fun of rolling dice with resources for notes and rest. After constructing paper dice with musical notation on both sides, students rolled and scored through the worksheets provided in the study.
Our school’s music coloring page
Music and art go hand in hand! Capture the beauty of music with instructive coloring pages that make excellent finishers, homework or music classroom decorations in our school months.
Use decorative coloring pages to view the instrument
Print out coloring pages with musical instruments and provide them year-round for early finishers. You can also group them by music family and assign them as you learn from each person in music class.

♫ 80 basic music classes music coloring pages➜Education and fun!
Daliana Jiminez
Topics: Arts and Music, Music, Others (Performing Arts)
These coloring pages are inspirational quotes, useful concepts and beautiful backgrounds behind the instrument, and are a creative addition to any music theory course. The resource has 80 coloring pages, with various skills, and has different grade levels.
Beautiful musical symbols and clefs in color
Ask students to dye the music pages while playing classical music. This resource also brings great sub-day options to music classes.

Music coloring page (music notes)
By Heidi Babin
Topics: Musical Instrumental Music, Music, Others (Performing Arts)
Gorgeous musical records and symbols inspired young musicians and enhanced the decor in the classroom. Students use their favorite coloring vessels (ideal thin markers and colored pencils) to make the complex design more colorful and detailed while enhancing important musical knowledge.
Feel the music in the classroom
Music is one of the most valuable gifts we can give students no matter which classroom they are currently in. Music is celebrated throughout the year with music from TPT offering music major courses, language arts classes, math activities and more.