Music
Intent:
Be the best we can be now and in our futures: to develop confidence in every child as a skilled listener, performer and creator
Ambition for all: ensuring that no child’s circumstances define their outcomes: we believe that every child can develop and thrive as a musician with the right support
Nurture a healthy mind, body and soul: for all pupils to be curious, confident, and emotionally aware, carrying a lifelong love of musical expression and a sense of the power of music to bring people together
Develop a crew mentality for our school, the Rock Ferry community and our world: recognising that richness in music comes from a range of cultures and traditions
Implement:
To put our intent into action, we plan at three levels: long-term, medium-term, short-term. We use the Charanga scheme in Y1 – Y6 to support the subject knowledge of our subject leader and class teachers at each stage of planning:
Long-Term: Our subject leader maps out what children should learn in each unit throughout school. This is mapped out by our subject leader because they see the bigger picture of Music across the school, ensuring your child is taught everything required of the Early Years Framework and National Curriculum. In Early Years, early foundations for Music are taught within the Expressive Arts area of Development Matters.
Our subject leader carefully considers the order content is taught across school so that what your child learns makes sense year on year. We deliberately plan opportunities to return to key ideas throughout your child’s time at Rock Ferry so your child can build lasting memory and deepen their understanding each time they return to a key concept.
Medium-Term: Teachers use the long-term plan to know what they need to teach. At the medium-term planning phase, they carefully consider the sequence of learning within a unit of work so that knowledge builds logically and gives children opportunity to return to ideas, apply them and refine their understanding.
Short-Term: Your child’s teacher plans each lesson for the learning sequence, considering how best to teach the content set out in the long-term and medium-term plans so that it sticks. When planning lessons, your child’s class teacher will consider the needs of your child and the class they are in. This may mean returning to ideas they have struggled to grasp in earlier lessons or putting adaptations in place to ensure everyone can access the lesson such as word banks, writing slopes and scaffolded responses.
Impact:
To ensure children have learned what we have intended them to, teachers regularly plan small tasks within lessons that lets them see what your child has understood. This allows them to respond to your child’s need if they haven’t understood a key idea. This may be offering support or re-teaching within the lesson or adapting the following lesson plans to address bigger misconceptions.
Subject leaders and senior leaders regularly speak to children to see what they have remembered and visit lessons. We use this information to review the quality of our curriculum and identify any areas where we could make it even better.