Opening and Closing Songs for Lower Elementary General Music

One of the most effective musicianship and classroom management strategies I know of is to bring students into the classroom musically. When we begin the warm up routine with an active musical entrance procedure, students are immediately immersed in the tone of the lesson.

Active musicing as an entrance procedure can take many different forms. Students might enter the room listening to music, they might enter speaking, they could enter with body percussion, they might copy the teacher’s movements, or they might sing. Today we’ll focus in on songs for entering the classroom, specifically geared toward lower elementary students in Kindergarten, 1st, 2nd, and 3rd grades.

Similarly, we have an opportunity to maximize music and student engagement in the way we bring class to a close. Reading the room for a calming or energizing musical ending is part of our practice of pairing responsiveness and flexibility with musical purpose and pedagogy.

Today we’ll look at the warm up routine as a whole, active musicing options for entering the room, and specific songs and processes to facilitate opening and closing music time.

Let’s jump in.

 
 

Musical Warm Up Routine:

Many educators use a combination of several items inside the warm up space. The order, emphasis, and musical complexity might change depending on the musical goals for the lesson and student age. However, the core pillars often look something like this:

  1. Enter the classroom: Students enter musicing

  2. Movement: Stretching or getting the wiggles out

  3. Vocal greetings & vocal conversations: Melodic focus

  4. Rhythmic conversations: Rhythmic focus

  5. Transition out: Move into the core activities or other communal musical experience

Especially with younger grades, there may be an additional Welcome Song in the mix as well.

Entering Musically

An active musical entrance could take the form of active listening, speaking, body percussion, movement, or singing.

Here are a few examples of what these musical processes look like in a musical entrance.

Active Listening

The teacher might greet students in the hallway and give two questions for them to consider about the piece they’ll hear as they enter. Questions might be convergent or divergent. After students are in the room, they can discuss what they noticed about the piece.

>>>Blog post: Active Listening in Elementary General Music
>>> Blog post: Creative Listening in Elementary General Music

Speaking

The teacher might greet students in the hallway and give an ostinato option or two for students to speak as they enter the room. As students enter, they speak their chosen ostinato pattern while the teacher sings or plays a recording.

>>> Podcast Episode #32: Layered Ostinati
>>> YouTube video:
Steps to Singing Harmony

Body Percussion

The teacher might greet students in the hallway and ask them to come up with a four or eight-beat body percussion steady beat pattern. As students enter the room to recorded music or a known song, they play their beat pattern. Once they’re inside in their spots, they might take turns teaching their pattern to a partner or the rest of the class.

>>> Blog Post: First Day of Music Lesson Plans

Movement

Students might enter to a recording of Seven Jumps, Highway Number One, or another movement piece.

>>> Podcase Episode #5: Using Movement to Teach Musical Concepts

Singing

Singing is my favorite way to bring students into the classroom! Let’s look at some options for choosing an opening song.


Songs to Start the Music Lesson

Virtually any song works for this!

Choose a song students love and sing it as you enter the room.

If you’re looking for ideas, here are a few to consider. Each of these songs emphasizes movement, and the imagery connects to walking in a line.

All ‘Round the Brickyard

Opening Songs for Elementary Music

This is an American play party.

Students sing as they enter the classroom, and suggest words to change in the song.

Musical uses in the warm up:

Vocal Conversations:

  • Kinder / 1st: Echo animal sounds (cockadoodledooooooooooooo)

Transition out:

  • 1st / 2nd: Isolate opening phrase, “all round the brickyard” s-s-s-l-s

  • 3rd: Change the motion to “paint it,” and paint the last phase that uses m-d-l,-s,-d-d-d-d. Notice low la and low sol.

Come on In

Echo song for opening the music class

I wrote this song for The Planning Binder curriculum this year.

If you use this, you may want to bring students into the classroom with the song and do some partwork, then sing another song to set major tonality for the vocal greetings. Again, this is dependent upon the musical goals for the students and the lesson.

Musical Uses in the Warm Up:

Movement:

  • The teacher leads a movement (jumping, twisting, heel & toe, etc.) as they sing the call. Students copy the motion when they echo sing.

Partwork:

  • Sing as an echo song with half the class singing the call and half the class singing the echo.

  • Students “talk to themselves,” singing both the call and the echo. When students are ready, sing the song in four-beat round.

Engine Engine

Engine Engine Number Nine

This rhyme is already a staple in many lower elementary classrooms, and is likely one students can speak along right away. It also lends itself nicely to imagery of keeping everyone in a line and following the leader.

Musical Uses in the Warm Up:

Vocal Exploration:

  • Echo train whistles

  • Ask students to be the conductor and show their train whistle

Vocal Greetings:

  • The teacher sings a question to students, and students sing their answer back.

    • Teacher sings: “Would you like anything from the dining cart?”

      • Student sings: “Yes please, I’d like a grilled cheese sandwich”

      • Student sings: “Yes please I’d like ice cream and gummy bears and a watermelon popsicle”

Gamle Sine

This song is sourced from Nordic Sounds. I cannot recommend this website highly enough! It was put together by a thoughtful Orff team in the Nordic countries. The editing team for the project was made up of Elfa Lilja Gísladóttir, Soili Perkiö, Kristín Valsdóttir, Nanna Hlíf Ingvadóttir and Elisa Seppänen.

Musical Uses in the Warm Up

Movement:

  • Students take turns leading the steady beat dance motions

Go Round the Mountain

McIntosh (1957) collected this play party from Leata Ross in Illinois.

The original dance repeats the melody with several verses. Motions to the verses include movements like swinging, moving “through the windows,” and switching partners.

In a classroom context, students can suggest other motions to do instead of going round the mountain, such as “jump up and down,” “tap your toe,” etc.

Musical Uses in the Warm Up

Partwork:

  • The song references going around the mountain, so this is a great time to practice singing in a round. After students walk into the classroom in a line, they can continue walking in a line around the circle. The teacher sings the second part of the round while walking the opposite direction in the circle.

Rhythm Conversations:

  • Students sing the first and third measure (“go ‘round the mountain”) and create body percussion rhythm improvisations during measures two and four.

Hey Betty Martin

According to the sources for the song, this tune was popular during the war of 1812. The words continued to evolve as the years went on and the song was eventually turned into a play party. Reportedly, it was also a favorite of Abraham Lincoln - young students certainly have this in common with the former president.

Musical Uses in the Warm Up

Movement:

  • How else could Betty Martin move?

  • Consider non-locomotor and locomotor options, depending on what students need at the time.

Vocal Greetings:

The teacher sings a question to students on an improvised melody, and students sing their improvised answer back.

  • Teacher sings: “Betty Martin, where are you walking to?”

    • Student sings: “I’m walking to Disneyland.”

    • Student sings: “I’m walking to my nanna’s house”

Transition Out:

  • Sing “Hey Betty Martin, walking to your spots

One Two Three (Walk Around and Follow Me)

This is another song new in The Planning Binder this year, and there are many possibilities for an opening routine!

Students suggest movement words to replace “walk” such as “hop around,” “slide around,” “twist around,” etc.

At the end of the song, the teacher claps a pattern and students echo

Musical Uses in the Warm Up

Rhythm:

  • At the end of the song, students echo the teacher’s pattern on body percussion instead of clapping

  • Eventually, students turn to a partner and have their own rhythm conversations

Vocal Greetings:

  • The teacher

Transition out:

  • At the end of the song, the teacher claps the opening four beats of the next song. Students aurally identify the rhythm from a list of known songs on the board.


Closing Songs: Reading the room

Part of flexible teaching is sensing when the class would benefit from a calming song, or an energizing song.

There are times a class ends and we need to get the wiggles out! More often than not, students are asked to sit still and quiet when they need a chance to move. We often see this need in the form of things like fidgeting, talking, or distracted behavior. In these cases, an energizing closing song is likely the most appropriate.

Sometimes, however, we want to use a calming song. Perhaps students have engaged in many high-energy musical tasks and we want to end the class on a relaxed note. For some students, this may be one of the few calm moments they have in their day.

In a school setting, students need space to be energized, and space to be calm. We do ourselves and our students a service when we can adapt lesson plans to the energy we read in the classroom. 

Let’s look at a few examples of energizing and calming songs. Similar to the entrance song options, virtually any well-loved song works for this! Choose

Energizing Closing Songs:

An energizing closing song will be a selection students love, and one that invites students to use large muscle groups through jumping, stamping, patting, twisting, etc.

Counting-Out Rhymes

Consider using a rhyme or song like All Around the Buttercup, Bee Bee Bumblebee, Zapatitos Blancos, or another of your favorites. The person who is “out” chooses two or three other friends to line up. As always with counting out rhymes, the class keeps a steady beat through movement even if they are not the one pointing around the circle.

  • Note: This is a nice time to establish criteria for what it looks like to be ready to line up. If your expectation is that students are ready when they are seated in their spots with a silent thumbs up, the student choosing friends will need to pick students who show they are ready.

>>> Blog Post: Scaffolding Passing Games

Everything is Awesome

This song from The LEGO Movie is one of my personal favorites.

Transition to Lining Up:

  • Play the song and keep beat motions a variety of ways (jumping, stamping, patting, etc.)

  • Eventually students choose to keep a steady beat patting their shoes, knees, shoulder, elbow, or head. The teacher calls on beat body parts to line up.

    • “If you’re keeping your beat on your knees, please walk to line up.”

Johnny Works with One Hammer 

In this action song, Johnny works with one hammer, two hammers, three hammers, four hammers, and eventually five hammers.

With each new repetition of the song, add a different hammer:

  • One hammer - one fist on the ground

  • Two hammers - two fists on the ground

  • Three hammers - two fists and one foot

  • Four hammers - two fists and two feet

  • Five hammers - two fists, two feet, and nod head

Transition to Lining Up

  • After singing the song one time through, pause between each verse and call on the appropriate number of students to line up. 

    • Johnny works with one hammer, one hammer, one hammer. Johnny works with one hammer, then he works with two. 

  • Call on two people to go sit in line. In their line at the door, students sit and continue to sing and and do the motions to the song 

    • Johnny works with four hammers, four hammers, four hammers. Johnny works with four hammers, then he works with five 

  • Call on five people to line up 

Depending on the size of your class, this will take about two times through the song to get everyone lined up. 

Just from the Kitchen

This African-American ring game is sourced from many places, but is often associated with Bessie Jones.

Students stand in a circle. The leader sings the call, and changes what comes from the kitchen (a handful of chicken, a handful of cotton candy, etc.). Call students to “fly way over yonder” and switch places in the circle.

Transition to lining up

  • Sing student names two at a time to line up: “Isabella and Emmett, shoo li loo, fly way over yonder, shoo li loo”

  • Alternatively, call students by groupings: “Everybody wearing yellow, shoo li loo,” “Everybody with two feet on their spot, shoo li loo,” “Everybody wearing tennis shoes, shoo li loo”

  • Eventually call the rest of the class to line up: “Everybody in 1st grade, shoo li loo, fly way over yonder, shoo li loo”


Calming Closing Songs:

Sometimes the energy has been high all class long, and we sense that students would benefit from a calming song instead of an energizing song.

Consider turning the lights down for the final few moments to end the class on a calming, breathable note.

Colita de Rana

Many students may already know this popular Hispanic rhyme! It’s spoken when a child has injured some part of their body.

Transition to lining up:

  • Speak the rhyme. Students gently rub their elbow, knee, head, ear, or shoulder.

  • The teacher calls on students to line up by body part

    • If you’re touching your elbow, please walk to line up.

Over in the Meadow

Songtales at the end of class are often associated with the Feierabend approach and many teachers enjoy using them to end the class in a calm way.

Katherine Floyd Dana wrote under the pen name, Olive A. Wadsworth. She wrote the text of this rhyme in 1870.

School libraries often carry a picture book of the song, or you can consider using a version from Epic Books.

Transition to lining up:

  • On the last verse of the story, students stand from their spots in the circle and follow the teacher around in a line (“all around the meadow”) as the teacher continues singing.

  • Lead the class to the door.

Sulla Rulla

This is a lullaby from Norway, and is also sourced from Nordic Sounds.

Transition to Lining Up:

Sometimes simple is best!

  • Students sing the song while swaying back and forth.

  • The teacher walks around and taps students on the shoulder to line up.

Twinkle Twinkle Little Star 

This is another familiar song for many students, and they’ll often have motions they do at home to accompany the song.

Transition to Lining Up:

  • After singing the song one time through, the teacher sings student names to the melody of the first eight beats

    • Isabella, Emmett, Aiden, Jacqulyn, Tucker, Asher, please line up

  • Sing the full song again with students doing the motions. Continue singing names until everyone is in line


Today we’ve looked at the warm up routine as a whole, and several musical options for entering the room musically. We’ve discussed specific songs and processes to facilitate the transition into the room. We’ve also considered the need for a flexible closing routine that takes student energy into account.

When we utilize musical transitions, we not only maximize instructional time, but we increase student engagement. We provide many opportunities for creative, communal, and intentional musical interactions that set the scene learning.

Scaffolding Passing Games in Elementary General Music

I wonder if you’ve ever had this experience. Let’s imagine you’ve planned to play a passing game in your class. You anticipate playing it a few rounds as part of the lesson segment and then you’ll move on to another activity with the same song. But once you introduce the game and get going, you realize students are all over the place in terms of their beat passing skills. You have students moving it way to fast because they think it’s hot potato, students passing way too slow because they’re trying to follow directions and be careful, and you have some students who don’t know what to do when they get the ball. 

You’re not alone with this. Passing games can be deceptively difficult - even for our older students, especially when we get into passing games where we have to coordinate when to pick up and when to drop an object in front of a partner. 

Today we’ll talk about some ways to scaffold passing games so students are setup for success, regardless of their passing skills. We’ll break this into lower and upper elementary, with specific steps and considerations for each.

Let’s jump in.

 
 

Lower Elementary

 
 

One of the best things we can do is not to start with the passing game itself, but actually to start as a whole-class, kinesthetic activity. There are a few options for this, depending on what students need. Let’s start with the most basic one and move from there.

The key to all these scaffolds is that every single student in the room is keeping the beat in some way, even when they’re not passing the object. 

Pat the Steady Beat

The first thing to check in on is that students are actually aware of the steady beat, and they have some level of accuracy in their beat performance. Let’s use Bee Bee Bumblebee as an example.

Instead of passing an object around the circle and someone being “out,” lead students in patting a steady beat all together. At the end of the rhyme, the teacher calls on a student to decide where the class will keep the beat next (elbow, shoulder, shoe, neighbor’s shoe, etc.). After the next round, the student who was just chosen calls on the next student to decide where to keep the beat.

This adaptation of the game keeps things interesting because the beat changes with each iteration of the game. We’re also asking students to choose each other instead of keeping the ownership of the game exclusively with us.

Backing up and looking at beat competency is a critical first step. If students don’t keep the steady beat in their own personal kinesthetic space, they’re going to have a hard time tracking beat when it’s spread outside the circle.

Read More: Guide to Teaching Steady Beat
Listen to the Podcast: The First Weeks of Teaching Kindergarten Music

Track the Beat by Pointing

The next extension is for students to help you point the steady beat around the circle. As students speak the rhyme or sing the song, everyone points in a steady beat, as if they’re tracking an imaginary ball.

This is a convenient way to play the game. First, we’ve introduced the core element of the game itself: passing and elimination. Second, we have a built-in self-assessment with beat passing because everyone in the room should land on the same person at the end of the rhyme. If students don’t land on the same person as the rest of the class, they have a clear indicator that their beat was off from the steady beat of the rhyme. From there, they can adjust and try again in the next round without being singled out. For this version of the elimination game, the person who is out can pat a steady beat in the middle of the circle, or pat a steady beat on a hand drum.

Pointing the steady beat instead of passing an object is also an established way to play many early childhood games, such as Zapatitos Blancos. If this is the scaffold students need, we can adjust many more passing and elimination games to use pointing instead of passing an object. Students will still have a successful, musical, and pedagogically sound experience with this option.

Walk Behind the Object

For this scaffold, we’ll add the passing object and play the game almost as normal. The difference is that the teacher is walking behind the circle as students pass the ball, and pointing to the student who should have the object. In essence, we’re tracking the beat around the room as students play the game. This scaffold gives students the opportunity to play the traditional passing game, but also gives them a visual support.

The most important part of this scaffold, like the others, is that everyone in the circle keeps the steady beat in some capacity when they don’t have the object. Students can either point with you as you move around the circle (like the second scaffold) or pat the steady beat somewhere on their bodies (like the first scaffold).

Passing Too Slowly or Too Quickly 

The purpose of the passing game is to practice steady beat. The purpose of steady beat is that it keeps us together as an ensemble. When students pass too slowly or too quickly, they’re adjusting the tempo of the steady beat.

If students are playing the traditional passing game, or using the third scaffold, consider adjusting the tempo of the rhyme to fit students’ passing speed. If a student passes too slowly, the rhyme would sound like: “bee bee bummmbbbbllleeeee bee, stung an man upon his knee,” as if the third beat had a fermata over it.

Assessment Questions:

This type of steady beat behavior would lead to some questions in our assessment process.

If we notice a student who consistently passes the object too slowly, we’ll think back to how the student engaged with the steady beat in the previous scaffolds. Do they perform the steady beat accurately with patting or pointing when they don’t have the object? Do they speak the rhyme out loud with the rest of the class? If so, they probably just need more practice with the game. In that case, we’ll continue playing the game as normal and let the student develop steady beat in this context on their own timeline. Remember that steady beat is a developing skill that students will achieve at different times.

If we observe multiple students in the group who struggle to pass the object accurately, we can consider backing up to one of the previous scaffolds.

These strategies work well for lower elementary when we’re working with object passing games. Let’s talk about upper elementary scaffolds we might use with more challenging passing games.

Upper Elementary

 
 

An Appropriate Difficulty Level

With older students - especially those we consider to be older beginners - one trap that we can fall into is giving them activities that are physically too advanced in relation to their musical coordination. I believe we do this because we don’t want them to be bored. We don’t want them to check out because the activity we’ve provided is too easy. But in fact, the opposite can happen. If students don’t feel successful, they’ll check out and look for ways to make the activity more interesting. This tends to be through behavior that as the teacher, we’d prefer that they avoid. This means it’s often better to back up and take things slowly, rather than rushing straight into a challenging passing game.

One of the things that tends to separate passing games that are more advanced from games that are more simple is the number of objects in the circle. 

Simple passing games will very often have one object that the whole class passes around. More complex passing games will often use an object for each student. This is tricky because the entire class has to coordinate when to pick up the object and when to drop it off - as well as which direction to drop it.

Upper Elementary Passing Game Scaffolds

Establish What Hand To Use

This may seem obvious, but take the time to establish where your right hand is and where your left hand is. Next, establish what it feels like to pass to the neighbor on the right. Students are likely following you in a circle as you lead the passing game. Because of this, might notice a few students on the other side of the circle who use the correct hand to pass the object, but follow you for the passing direction, which means they’re crossing their arm over their body and passing to the left - even when they think they’re passing to the right. Another on the other side of the circle will have an easier time if they don’t look at you. They can follow their immediate neighbors instead, that way everyone looks like they’re moving the same direction. 

Add A Verbal Cue

Students will have an easier time with the passing motion if they have a verbal cue that explicitly says what to do on what beats of the song. Some options for a verbal scaffold are “pick up, pass” or even simpler, “me, you, me, you” or “mine, yours, mine, yours.” Students can also suggest their own cues! Whatever you choose, add the verbal cue as an ostinato to the main song as you perform the passing motions. Eventually transition to students whispering the ostinato, then thinking it in their heads. When you notice that students are ready, they’ll sing the song as they perform the passing game.

Add Objects Gradually

When first introducing the game, students will sing the song or speak the verbal cue ostinato without any object being passed. We’re just practicing the motion. When you see that students are successful, start to add in objects one by one. To do this you’ll have a pile of passing objects (erasers, cups, beanbags, etc.) next to you. As you sense students are ready, you can scaffold up by adding one object at a time into the circle. The reverse is true if you see that students aren’t ready to pass all together - you can collect the objects as they come around the circle and put them back in the pile next to you. This gives you a quick and easy way to control the difficulty of the passing game, based on what you see students need.

Try a New Formation

Not all passing games need to happen in a circle! If you anticipate that the game will be too advanced for students at first, try the passing game in a straight line before you move to a circle. When students pass in a line, there’s no confusion about which direction to pick up and and which direction to pass. You can also try having students sit in the circle, but turn to the right (as if they’re lined up in a train). From this “train” formation, students pass the object on the outside of the circle using their right hand. With this adaptation, students are only worried about picking up the object and dropping it forward. This eliminates the left and right passing confusion all together. 

Establish A Plan for Mistakes

The whole game part of a passing game is that things can go wrong, and we all need to work together! So make a plan for what to do when we mess up, instead of making one student panic that they have 15 erasers in front of them and everyone is yelling at them to hurry up. My recommendation is that no matter what, keep up the passing motion in a steady beat. Even if the class messes up and there isn’t an object in front of each student, the motion continues. Similarly, if one student ends up with a pile of objects in front of them, they’ll continue with the beat motion and move them one at a time to their neighbor on the right. In other words, regardless of what’s in front of you, we’re all working together like a big clock.

Make Your Own Version in Small Groups

Sometimes passing games are difficult because there are just too many people in the circle, which makes it harder to reset. To counter this, consider having students come up with their own versions of the passing game in small groups. Depending on the grade-level you’re working with, students might be in groups of four, five, or six. An additional perk of this option is that there’s more buy-in when students have a personal stake in the creation process. Students also have the opportunity to create the routine as simple of as complex as they want with fake passes, tosses, etc.

Ask Your Students

The very last strategy is to hand the responsibility of learning back over to the students. All of our students, and especially upper elementary musicians, are more than capable of problem-solving on their own. If the process of teaching the passing game feels tricky and things aren’t going as you planned, hand the problem back over to the class. This moves the learning process away from us feeling frustrated and confused, and it puts students in the driver’s seat. Questions like, “Are we all passing to the same steady beat?” and “Why do you think that is?” are a great starting point. Give students a few moments to talk to the people around them and then work together to make a list of strategies on the board. Students are the ones who know what’s confusing them or making things difficult. We just have to ask them. From there, they can articulate their own strategies that we probably wouldn’t have come up with or clarified with the wording they need in order to understand. 

Moving Forward

Passing games can be a lot of fun but they can also be frustrating if students are new to them! The important thing to keep in mind is that we can play passing games in some capacity regardless of what scaffold we’re using. There are ways to back up and move forward so students have the appropriate level of support and challenge.