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Combining Tempo and Beat

Music • 30 • 14 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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Music
30
14 students
26 February 2026

Teaching Instructions

This is lesson 3 of 3 in the unit "Exploring Tempo and Beat". Lesson Title: Combining Tempo and Beat Lesson Description: In the final lesson, students will combine their knowledge of tempo and beat. The teacher will play a lively piece on the fiddle, and students will practice clapping to the beat while also varying their tempo. They will participate in a group activity where they create their own simple rhythms, applying what they have learned about tempo and beat.


Overview

This 30-minute session is the final lesson in a 3-lesson unit exploring "Tempo and Beat" designed for Junior Infants (ages 4-5). Students will integrate their understanding of tempo and beat by responding actively to live music and collaborating to create simple rhythms. This lesson aligns with the Music Strand: Listening and Responding and Strand Unit: Performing outlined in the Curriculum Framework for Early Childhood Education (Ireland), supporting holistic musical development.


Learning Outcomes (Curriculum Links)

By the end of this lesson, students will be able to:

  • Express and respond to beat and tempo in music through clapping and movement (Music, Strand 1: Listening and Responding, Early Learning Outcome 1).
  • Create simple rhythmic patterns applying knowledge of different tempi (Music, Strand 2: Performing, Early Learning Outcome 2).
  • Work collaboratively in a group, demonstrating social skills through musical play (Wellbeing and Identity, Strand 2: Myself and Others).

Equipment and Resources

  • Fiddle (or recorded fiddle music if live performance unavailable)
  • Percussion instruments (e.g., hand drums, shakers, triangles) or simple rhythm cards
  • Music space arranged for group activities
  • Visual timer or tempo chart (optional, to visually demonstrate tempo changes)

Lesson Structure

1. Welcome and Warm-up (5 minutes)

Objective: Engage students and activate prior learning about beat and tempo.

  • Gather students in a circle.
  • Brief recap: "What do we know about beat? What do we know about tempo?"
  • Sing or clap a simple familiar song with a steady beat at different tempi (slow, medium, fast). Encourage students to copy your clapping.
  • Emphasise feel of beat (steady pulse) and how tempo means speed.

2. Live Music Listening and Response (10 minutes)

Objective: Experience and respond physically to a live fiddle performance, focusing on beat and tempo interplay.

  • Teacher performs or plays a lively fiddle tune incorporating clear, steady beats but with tempo changes (e.g., sections of slow then fast).
  • Instruct students to listen carefully and clap along to the beat.
  • Encourage students to vary their clapping tempo matching the fiddle (speed up, slow down).
  • Pause briefly during the music and ask:
    • "Can you hear the faster part? Can you clap faster?"
    • "What happens when the music goes slower? Can your clapping slow down?"
  • Use enthusiastic praise to reinforce their timing and tempo awareness.

3. Group Rhythm Creation Activity (12 minutes)

Objective: Collaborate to create and perform simple rhythmic patterns using knowledge of beat and tempo.

  • Divide class into 3 small groups (4-5 children each).
  • Provide each group with percussion instruments or rhythm pattern cards.
  • Explain task: "Together, you will create your own simple rhythm. You will decide the beat and choose if it should be slow, medium, or fast."
  • Teacher circulates, assisting groups in experimenting with different clapping or instrument rhythms.
  • After 5 minutes, groups perform their rhythms for the class.
  • After each, prompt class to identify if the tempo was fast, slow, or medium and if the beat was steady.
  • Highlight how their rhythms show what they have learned about combining tempo and beat.

4. Reflection and Cool Down (3 minutes)

Objective: Consolidate learning and foster self-expression.

  • Sit in a circle and talk briefly about:
    • What was fun about clapping to different speeds?
    • How did you feel when making your own rhythm?
  • End with a calm breathing or gentle tapping slow beat activity to settle.

Assessment

  • Formative Assessment:
    Observation during clapping and group rhythm creation
    Notes on each child’s ability to clap steady beats and adjust tempo accordingly. Celebrating effort and group cooperation.

  • Anecdotal feedback:
    Teacher notes student engagement and responses during live music and group activities.


Differentiation and Inclusion

  • Some students may find tempo changes challenging; offer visual tempo cues (e.g., slow and fast smiley face cards).
  • Allow alternative ways to express beat: tapping body parts, stomping feet for those less confident with clapping.
  • Encourage turn-taking and peer support during group activities.
  • Provide positive reinforcement to build confidence.

Extension Ideas

  • Home activity: Ask families to explore different tempi in songs or clapping games at home.
  • Use this as a launching pad into exploring tempo in dances or storytelling with musical accompaniment.

Teacher Reflection Prompts

  • Were students able to feel and follow the changing tempi during the fiddle music?
  • Did the group rhythm activity encourage meaningful collaboration while reinforcing tempo and beat concepts?
  • What will I adjust or build on in future music lessons to deepen tempo and beat understanding?

This lesson brings alive Ireland’s rich musical tradition through fiddle music in a way that develops young children's rhythmic awareness, co-ordination, and social skills—key aspects encouraged in the Early Childhood Curriculum Framework.

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