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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year music shifts from playing along to making real choices. Students come up with their own short musical ideas, then practice and clean them up so others can hear what they meant. They also start listening with a purpose, saying what a song sounds like and why a performer might have made it that way. By spring, students can perform a short piece they helped shape and explain one thing they liked about another student's music.

Illustration of what students learn in Grade 1 Arts: Music
  • Singing and playing
  • Making up music
  • Practicing a piece
  • Performing for others
  • Listening with a purpose
  • Music and feelings
Source: California Content Standards for California Public Schools
Year at a glance
How the year usually goes. Every school and district set their own curriculum, so treat this as a guide, not official pacing.
  1. 1

    Listening with curious ears

    Students start the year by paying close attention to music. They notice if a song is fast or slow, loud or soft, and start to describe what they hear in their own words.

  2. 2

    Making up musical ideas

    Students invent short rhythms, sing simple tunes, and play with sounds using their voices, hands, and classroom instruments. Parents may hear new songs and clapping patterns at home.

  3. 3

    Shaping a piece to share

    Students pick the music they want to share and practice it until it sounds the way they want. They learn that practice changes how a song turns out.

  4. 4

    Music from people and places

    Students sing and listen to music from different families, cultures, and times. They start to notice how a song can match a holiday, a feeling, or a story.

  5. 5

    Performing and reflecting

    Students perform for classmates and talk about what worked. They share what they liked in a piece and what they might change next time.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 1.
Connecting
Standard Definition Code

Music connects to your own life

Students connect what they already know and what they've lived through to the music they make or respond to. A song can remind them of a place, a feeling, or a story from their own life.

CA-MU:Cn10.1.1

Music from around the world

Songs and music come from somewhere. Students connect a piece of music to the people, place, or time that made it, and explain what that connection tells them about the music.

CA-MU:Cn11.1.1
Creating
Standard Definition Code

Making up new musical ideas

Students come up with their own musical ideas, like inventing a short melody or rhythm, and begin turning those ideas into something they can share or perform.

CA-MU:Cr1.1.1

Turning musical ideas into a song

Students arrange sounds and musical ideas into a short piece, making choices about what comes first, what comes next, and how to put it all together.

CA-MU:Cr2.1.1

Finishing a song you started

Students listen back to a short song or rhythm they made, then change something to make it sound better before calling it finished.

CA-MU:Cr3.1.1
Performing/Presenting/Producing
Standard Definition Code

Choosing songs to perform

Students pick a song or short piece to perform and explain why they chose it. They think about what the music sounds like and how they want to share it with an audience.

CA-MU:Pr4.1.1

Practicing a song before performing it

Students practice a song or rhythm until they can perform it the way they want it to sound. Getting ready to share music means trying it more than once and fixing what isn't working yet.

CA-MU:Pr5.1.1

Perform music to share an idea

Students perform a song or musical piece and make choices about how to express its mood or story to an audience.

CA-MU:Pr6.1.1
Responding
Standard Definition Code

Listening closely to music

Students listen to a short piece of music and describe what they notice, like whether it's fast or slow, loud or soft, or happy or sad.

CA-MU:Re7.1.1

What music makes you feel

Students listen to a short piece of music and describe what feeling or story they think it tells. There are no wrong answers, just reasons drawn from what they actually heard.

CA-MU:Re8.1.1

Decide what makes music good

Students listen to a piece of music and decide what they like about it, using simple questions like "Is it fast or slow?" or "Does it feel happy or sad?" to explain their thinking.

CA-MU:Re9.1.1
Common Questions
  • What does music class look like at this age?

    Students sing simple songs, clap and tap steady beats, play small instruments like shakers and drums, and make up short musical ideas of their own. They also listen to music and talk about what they hear and how it makes them feel.

  • How can families support music learning at home?

    Sing together in the car, clap along to songs, and let students bang on pots or shake a jar of beans to keep the beat. Ask what a song reminds them of or how it makes them feel. Five minutes of this most days is plenty.

  • Does a student need to read music or play an instrument yet?

    No. At this age, students are learning to hear and feel music, match pitch, keep a beat, and make up short patterns. Formal note reading and lessons on a specific instrument can wait.

  • What does mastery look like by the end of the year?

    By spring, most students can sing a familiar song in tune, keep a steady beat on a simple instrument, make up a short musical idea, and say something specific about a piece of music they heard, such as fast or slow, loud or soft, happy or sad.

  • How should the year be sequenced?

    Start with steady beat, singing voice, and loud or soft and fast or slow. Add high and low, simple rhythm patterns, and short call-and-response songs in the middle of the year. Save small group performances and student-made pieces for the spring once routines are solid.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching?

    Matching pitch and keeping a steady beat while singing trip up the most students. Short daily practice with echo songs, beat-keeping on the lap, and slow tempo work pays off more than longer occasional lessons.

  • How much time should be spent creating versus performing versus listening?

    A rough split is half performing and singing, a quarter creating short patterns or movements, and a quarter listening and responding. Most lessons can touch two or three of these in twenty minutes.

  • How are students assessed in music at this age?

    Assessment is mostly watching and listening during class. Quick checks include singing a short phrase back, clapping a beat for eight counts, making up a four-beat pattern, or pointing to how a piece of music changes.

  • What if a student says they are bad at singing?

    Singing voices are still developing, and matching pitch is a skill that grows with practice. Keep singing together at home in a comfortable range, and avoid labeling anyone as tone-deaf. Most students grow into a steady singing voice with regular, low-pressure practice.

  • How do music lessons connect to culture and history at this age?

    Students sing songs from different places and times, learn where a song comes from, and talk about when people might sing or play it. The goal is curiosity about music in the wider world, not memorizing dates or composers.