Free Resources for the Classroom
Please browse the map to find world music curricular experiences from Smithsonian Folkways’ Network of Music Educators. All lessons can be downloaded in PDF format.
Africa
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Country: Egypt
Grades: 6-8
Egypt: The Bedouin Culture
Students will experience the music of the Bedouin culture of Egypt. In the listening example, they will hear two ancient traditional instruments, the rababa, a fretless stringed instrument, and the darabuka, a conical percussion instrument, play music and learn a ancient Egyptian art form, Shadow Puppet Theatre.
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Country: Ethiopia
Grades: 6-8, 9-12
Performing Ethiopia
Students will be introduced to the music of Ethiopia through several activities including listening, analyzing, and performing. They will perform arrangements on various instruments, playing intact and together, and will use this material to improvise and compose their own music.
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Country: Ghana
Grades: 6-8
They’re Ghana Love It!
This lesson is intended to develop knowledge regarding Ghanaian music. Students will experience the musical cultures of Ghana through listening, movement, game play, and percussion performance.
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Country: Ghana
Grades: 3-5, 6-8
West African Song &, Chants
With these segments, teachers are offered opportunities to use children's music from Ghana, West Africa, to gain experience with basic polyrhythmic ensembles. Singing, chanting, dancing and playing instruments are included throughout the unit.
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Country: Nigeria
Grades: 3-5, 6-8,
One Flute, Two Flute, Red Flute, Blue Flute: Nigerian-Style Flute Music
These lessons will provide intermediate-level children the opportunity to hear improvised flute performance for solo, duet and octet ensembles. Students will learn to identify diverse musical elements, including steady beats, rhythm, melody, harmony and expressive qualities in an improvised setting.
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Country: Zimbabwe
Grades: 3-5, 6-8, 9-12
Mbiras, Marimbas, and You
Learn to play and compose music with the mbira. Explore the use of the instrument in Zimbabwe to understand the relation of music to history and culture and its ability to incite social change. Lesson includes notations, historical background, and recordings and images from Smithsonian Folkways.
Asia
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Country: Mongolia
Grades: 9-12
An Introduction to the Music of Mongolia
Students will be introduced to the music of Mongolia through several activities looking into different aspects of Mongolian music. Students will be introduced to the sound of the Morin Khur (horse-head fiddle), the techniques of Khöömei (throat singing), and given an opportunity to play a traditional Mongolian song with western instruments.
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Country: Thailand
Grades: 6-8, 9-12
Thailand: Songs for Life
The piece "Man and Buffalo (Kon Gap Kwai)" by Caravan was instrumental in effecting governmental and social change in Thailand. Musical study of the song lends itself to discussions of form, performances of ostinati and accompaniment, and improvisation of a pentatonic song/solo.
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Europe
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Countries: Austria, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Norway, Poland, Russia, Sweden, Ukraine
Grades: K-2, 3-5, 6-8
Let's Polka! The Polka, its function place in different cultures
The following is designed for elementary and middle general/classroom music students and can be easily adapted for other types of music classes.
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North America
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Country: Guatemala
Grades: 5-6, 7-8
Music of Chorti Indians of Guatemala
This unit contains a total of three lesson plans, which focus on marimba music of indigenous people of Guatemala. Activities include attentive, engaged listening experiences, which lay the groundwork for actually performing an arrangement of the listening example. A video segment provides a springboard into a discussion of marimba music in the context of Guatemalan cultures.
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Country: Puerto Rico
Grades: 3-5, 6-8
Bomba
Puerto Rican culture is a representation of the diverse heritages of three main cultural groups: Taíno Indians, Africans, and Spaniards. This lesson focuses on the African influences found in Puerto Rico’s musical culture by studying bomba music.
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Country: Puerto Rico
Grades: 3-5, 6-8
Jíbaro
Puerto Rican culture is a representation of the diverse heritages of three main cultural groups: Taíno Indians, Africans, and Spaniards. This lesson focuses on the African influences found in Puerto Rico’s musical culture by studying bomba music.
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Country: Puerto Rico
Grades: 3-5
El Coquí
Puerto Rican culture is a representation of the diverse heritages of three main cultural groups: Taíno Indians, Africans, and Spaniards. This lesson focuses on the African influences found in Puerto Rico’s musical culture by studying bomba music.
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Country: United States
Grades: k-2
I've Got a Friend in Chicago
This lesson is intended to identify and explore children's culture in the United States. In sharing this music in the classroom, students will begin to recognize the importance of their music making and the process of preserving sound. Students will listen to, analyze, and perform music created by children in the United States and for children by American folk artists.
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Country: United States
Grades: 3-8
Shape Note Singing Lesson
Students learn the four shapes used in Sacred Harp singing and “sing the shapes” of “Yankee Doodle.” In a key appropriate to their voices, they sing the melody part of “Chester,” a Revolutionary-era tune by William Billings. If they are old enough and able to do so, they try a two-part version, melody and harmony.
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Country: United States
Grades: 3-5
Oh, John the Rabbit: From Story to Song
Students will learn to appreciate the process of telling a story through song, while learning basic musical skill like rhythm, singing on pitch, and call-and-response format. The featured song is “Oh, John the Rabbit,” a traditional story-song about a Rabbit that steals all the vegetables from the garden. The song and video is performed by Elizabeth Mitchell, her family, and friends and is from her 2010 album Sunny Day.
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Country: United States
Grades: K-2, 3-5, 6-8, 9-12,
Songs, Sounds and Stories from the Georgia Sea Islands
In this set of lessons, students will learn about the Gullah culture in the United States. Through lessons utilizing polyrhythms and call-and-response, critical listening and language skills, musical play, vocal improvisation, and the 12-bar-blues, students will discover the rich traditions of the Gullah culture that have helped to shape our American musical culture today.
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Country: United States
Grades: 12+
Having Our Say: The Music of the Mardi Gras Indians
This unit is intended to introduce students to the culture and music of Mardi Gras Indians, an important African American phenomenon that takes place in New Orleans. Students will examine the tradition and its culture-bearers, listen to and analyze Mardi Gras Indian music, and examine the multiple cultural influences that have contributed to the tradition.
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Country: United States
Grades: Pre-K, K-2
Animals in Song - Elizabeth Mitchell: Animal Songs for Children
Students will learn the process of telling a story through song, while learning basic musical skills like rhythm, beat, movement, dance, singing on pitch, and call-and-response format. The featured songs are “Froggie Went a Courtin,” “Arm and Arm,” and “The Little Bird,” from Elizabeth Mitchell’s album Blue Clouds.
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Countries: USA, Mexico, and all of Latin America
Grades: 3-5, 6-8
¡Come Bien! Eat Right!
Promoting Healthy Nutrition and Dual Language Development through Daily Singing in English and Spanish. ¡Come Bien! Eat Right! is a charming, educational bilingual collection of 36 songs (19 each in Spanish and English) and activities promoting healthy nutrition for children and adults by award-winning author, educator, and singer José-Luis Orozco.
South America
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Country: Paraguay
Grades: 3-5
Colorful Genres in Harp music from Paraguay
The Paraguayan harp is a cultural emblem that represents not only the nation of Paraguay and its traditional music, but also the ideals that contribute to a collective notion of paraguayidad (i.e. "Paraguayness"). The Paraguayan diatonic harp serves as a melodic, harmonic, and rhythmic instrument. Its primary function is to provide harmonic and rhythmic foundation to conjunto music—music of a variety of instruments.
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Countries: Trinidad, Tobago
Grades: 6-8, 9-12
Celebrating Trinidadian Steelband Music!
Through photos, recordings, videos, and playing instruments, students will explore the steelband tradition of Trinidad and Tobago. In the first two segments, they will learn and demonstrate understanding of the basic aspects of steel band music, culture, and history. In the third segment, students will play in this style on their own string instruments.
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Countries: Trinidad and Tobago
Grades: 9-12
Catch the Calypso beat and put it on your feet!
In this lesson students will travel to the island of Trinidad to explore the feel of Calypso music and participate in a Trinidadian popular dance, the Limbo. Students will be able to perform a Calypso rhythmic pattern on classroom instruments and will accompany their own Limbo dance on Orff instruments while exploring the social and cultural context of Calypso music.
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Other
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Country: United States
Grades: K-2, 3-5
The Look of the Listen
In this lesson are opportunities for teaching and learning about some ways in which music is aligned with visual art. A sampling of songs from Smithsonian Folkways Recordings is presented, alongside the cover art relevant to the songs. Several well-known pieces are featured from the wide array of recordings first envisioned by Folkways Record' founder Moses Asch in the 1940s.
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Grades: k-12
The Music in Poetry
The lessons in this issue introduce students to the rhythms of poetry. The focus is on two poetic forms that originated as forms of song: the BALLAD stanza, found throughout British and American literature, and the BLUES stanzas of Harlem Renaissance poet Langston Hughes. The exercises take poetry off the page and put it into terms of movement, physical space, and, fi nally, music.