Baltimore City Public School SystemDivision of Curriculum and Instruction
Office of Elementary Curriculum and Instruction
Quarter Two Curriculum Overview
MUSIC
Pre-K-1Content to be Taught/
Timeframe / Resources / Student Products / AssessmentsNov. 11-January 25: once per week
Jan 3- March 24: alternate weeksMSDE OUTCOME I
The student will demonstrate the ability to perceive, perform and respond to music.- Contrast high/low, fast/slow, long/short, loud/soft in various sources of sound
- Begin to sing in proper vocal range (head voice)
- Maintain steady tempo while singing, moving and playing instruments
- Imitate short rhythm patterns maintaining steady tempo(beat)
- Respond to meter through locomotor movement
- Demonstrate ability to move in a circle in singing games
MSDE OUTCOME II
The student will demonstrate an understanding of music as an essential aspect of history and human experience.- Perform songs of a variety of themes and cultures found in other curricula:
K:Make Believe, It’s A Small World ( many cultures), From Hard Hats to Hard Drive, Snow, Sled, and Sneezes; Looking at the Earth and Sky
1st: Citizenship and voting; food/nutrition, making good choices; writing cards & letters
- Discriminate aurally and visually between wind, string and percussion instruments
- Sing songs and listen to music appropriate for seasons and holidays
MSDE OUTCOME III
The student will demonstrate the ability to creatively organize musical ideas and sounds.- Engage in musical conversation and spontaneous singing, e.g. call and response
- Create and perform simple accompaniments to songs, poems and stories using voice, xylophones and other instruments
- Identify and describe a number of places where music can be heard
MSDE OUTCOME IV
The student will demonstrate the ability to make aesthetic judgements.- Express opinions about performances using appropriate musical vocabulary
Grade 1: Sounds –
11/10-14: k, -ck, u, z,
11/17-21: l, e, ea, y
11/24-11/21: w, wh, er, sh
12/1-12/5: th, ch, tch
12/7-12/12: k, a, a_e, dge,ge,gi
12/14-12/19: I, ie, ce, ci, o, oe
1/5-1/9: z,v,u,ue,e,e_e
1/12-1/16: ee, ea, qu, long vowels followed by _r
1/19-1/23:y,ie,ai,ay,_igh /
- Recommended texts and multimedia materials
- Recordings
- Classroom instruments
- Piano/keyboard
- Tape/CD player
- TV/VCR; computer
- Live performances (in school or elsewhere)
- Recommended texts and multimedia materials
- Recordings
- Classroom instruments
- Piano/keyboard
- Tape/CD player
- TV/VCR; computer
- Live performances (in school or elsewhere)
- Recommended texts and multimedia materials
- Recordings
- Classroom instruments
- Piano/keyboard
- Tape/CD player
- TV/VCR; computer
- Live performances (in school or elsewhere)
- Expanded song repertoire
- Drawings of musical instruments
- Representation beat through symbols and body movement
- Expanded song repertoire
- Expanded song repertoire
- Picture chart showing places where music can be heard
- Informal observation and recording
- Graphic representation of musical elements
- Musical instrument identification worksheets
- Informal observation and recording
1
C. Thomas Bowmann, Director Jill Warzer, Music Curriculum Specialist Websites: K-12 Music Resources (type this into search box)
Office - 410-396- 8585 Office- 410-396-8585/8808/8593 menc.org (Music Educators National Conference)
Fax- 410-396-8063 Music Education Madness (type this into search box)
website of The Storm is Passing Over- A History of African-American Musicians in Maryland, Reconstruction to Civil Rights
Baltimore City Public School SystemDivision of Curriculum and Instruction
Office of Elementary Curriculum and Instruction
Quarter Two Curriculum Overview
MUSIC
Grades 2-3Content to be Taught/
Timeframe Grades 2-3 / Resources / Student Products / AssessmentsNov. 11-January 25: once per week
Jan. 3- Mar. 24: alternate weeksMSDE OUTCOME I
The student will demonstrate the ability to perceive, perform and respond to music.- Demonstrate aural perception of basic pentatonic triads
- Sightread rhythms in duple and triple meter
- Identify AB form in three section configuration
- Identify musical terms for dynamics and tempo
MSA Language Arts Assessment
Indicator Statement:Use elements of poetry to facilitate understanding Objective(s):
Use structural features to identify poetry as a literary form
Assessment Limits:
Structure, including line(s) and stanzas
Form, including lines and stanzas
Shape
Refrain, chorus
Identify and explain the meaning of words, lines, and stanzas
Assessment Limits:
Specific meaning of words, lines and/or stanzas
Identify and explain sound elements of poetry
Assessment Limits:
Rhythm
Rhyme, rhyme scheme
Alliteration and other repetition
MSDE OUTCOME II
The student will demonstrate an understanding of music as an essential aspect of history and human experience.- Demonstrate knowledge of music of Native Americans
MSDE OUTCOME III
The student will demonstrate the ability to creatively organize musical ideas and sounds.- Improvise words in rhyme and song, maintaining a steady pulse
- Create and perform rhythm patterns within specific guidelines
MSDE OUTCOME IV
The student will demonstrate the ability to make aesthetic judgements.- Identify and describe differences between several genres of music
- Identify ways music instruction provides preparation for a musical career
- Recommended texts and multimedia materials
- Recordings
- Classroom instruments
- Piano/keyboard
- Tape/CD player
- TV/VCR; computer
- Live performances (in school or elsewhere)
Identify, describe, extend, and create non-numeric patternsObjective(s):
Represent and analyze growing patterns using symbols, shapes, designs, or pictures
Assessment Limits:
Start at the beginning, show at least 3 levels but no more than 5 levels, and ask for the next level
Represent and analyze repeating patterns using symbols, shapes, designs, or pictures
Assessment Limits:
Use no more than 4 objects in the core of the pattern
/
- Worksheets to practice beginning rhythmic notation
- Written sentences using comparative descriptors such as high/ low, fast/slow, loud/soft, and dense/thin in a musical context to describe musical examples played for them.
- Student-created short pieces in poetic form which demonstrate effective use of language and vocabulary in relation to musical elements such as rhythm and melody
- Student-created musical accompaniments for rhymes, poetry and short stories, using a variety of sound sources
- Informal observation and recording
- First quarter music assessment
- Identification of basic pentatonic triads and intervals and rhythms in duple & triple meter aurally & music notation
- Multiple choice questions
- Expository writing, e.g. journal
Grades 4-5
Content to be Taught/
Timeframe / Resources / Student Products / AssessmentsNov. 10-January 25: once per week
Jan 3- March 24: alternate weeksMSDE OUTCOME I
The student will demonstrate the ability to perceive, perform and respond to music.- Demonstrate aural perception of basic pentatonic intervals
- Sightread and write rhythms in duple and triple meter
- Identify AB form in three section configuration
- Identify musical terms for dynamics, tempo & articulation
MSDE OUTCOME II
The student will demonstrate an understanding of music as an essential aspect of history and human experience.- Demonstrate knowledge of African-American and Latin – American created musical genres
- Describe a variety of keyboard instruments
MSDE OUTCOME III
The student will demonstrate the ability to creatively organize musical ideas and sounds.- Demonstrate understanding of the use of technology in music; improvise rhyming words in poetic form
- Compose music using simple notation for classroom instruments
MSDE OUTCOME IV
The student will demonstrate the ability to make aesthetic judgements.- Summarize ways in which people of various cultures perform, create, and enjoy music
- Describe characteristics of a good performance using musical vocabulary
Identify and describe the author's use of language Objective(s):
Identify and explain how the use of dialogue contributes to a story
Assessment Limits:
Character and plot development advanced through dialogue
Identify and explain specific words and phrases that contribute to the meaning of a text
Assessment Limits:
Significant words and phrases with a specific effect on meaning
Connotations of grade-appropriate words and phrases in context
Denotations of above grade-level words used in context
Identify and explain words and phrases that create tone
Assessment Limits:
Tone in the text or a portion of the text
Specific words and phrases that create tone
Identify and explain figurative language that contributes to meaning
Assessment Limits:
Metaphors
Onomatopoeia
Similes
Personification
Connections between figurative language and meaning
Identify and explain language that appeals to the senses and feelings
Assessment Limits:
Specific words and phrases that appeal to the senses
Identify and explain how repetition and exaggeration contribute to meaning
Assessment Limits:
Connections between repetition and/or exaggeration and meaning
/
- Recommended texts and multimedia materials
- Recordings Classroom instruments
- Piano/keyboard
- Tape/CD player
- TV/VCR; computer
- Live performances (in school or elsewhere)
MSA Mathematics Assessment Indicator Statement:
Knowledge of Number Relationships or Computation:
Students will describe, represent, or apply numbers or their relationships or will estimate or compute using mental strategies, paper/pencil or technology.
Knowledge of Number and Place Value Indicator Statement:
Apply knowledge of fractions, decimals, and place valueObjective(s):
Read, write, or represent fractions or mixed numbers using symbols, models, and words /
- Compositions of one or two written paragraphs, using comparative descriptors such as high/ low, fast/slow, loud/soft in a musical context to describe musical examples
- Student-created short compositions and arrangements using poetic form to demonstrate effective use of language and vocabulary in relation to musical elements such as rhythm, melody, harmony, dynamics, and timbre
- Informal observation and recording
- First quarter music assessment
- Identification of basic pentatonic triads and intervals and rhythms in duple & triple meter aurally & using music notation
- Multiple choice questions
- Expository writing, e.g. journal
1
C. Thomas Bowmann, Director Jill Warzer, Music Curriculum Specialist Websites: K-12 Music Resources (type this into search box)
Office - 410-396- 8585 Office- 410-396-8585/8808/8593 menc.org (Music Educators National Conference)
Fax- 410-396-8063 Music Education Madness (type this into search box)
website of The Storm is Passing Over- A History of African-American Musicians in Maryland, Reconstruction to Civil Rights