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Creating Rhythmic Stories

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
17 May 2025

Teaching Instructions

i want this lesson to focus on body percussion and using it to make a beat to someone getting caught after committing a crime. The class will have learned about body percussion yesterday so todays lesson is using it to create music. I need the lesson plan to include language and literacy development opportunites. I also need the lesson to include a lower order question and a higher order question for the introduction, development and conclusion

Creating Rhythmic Stories

Overview

This 30-minute lesson invites first-class students (age 6-7) to creatively explore body percussion by composing and performing rhythmic patterns that narrate the story of someone getting caught after committing a crime. Building on prior learning, children will develop music skills, as well as language and literacy, through storytelling, questioning, and collaborative performance.

This lesson aligns with the IE Curriculum Framework for Music, incorporating key strands of Performing, Composing, and Listening & Responding. It integrates language development by embedding rich vocabulary, narrative sequencing, and questioning strategies to enhance comprehension and communication skills.


Learning Objectives

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

  • Music

    • Compose and perform simple rhythmic patterns using body percussion to represent a narrative event (IE Music Curriculum, Strand 1: Performing, p. 19).
    • Demonstrate understanding of rhythm and beat by coordinating body percussion sounds (Strand 2: Composing, p. 22).
  • Language & Literacy

    • Use descriptive language and sequencing vocabulary to describe and retell the story rhythmically (Language Strand 1: Oral Language, p. 50).
    • Respond to lower and higher order questions to develop comprehension and critical thinking (Language Strand 3: Thinking and Reasoning, p. 58).
  • Personal & Social Skills

    • Collaborate in small groups to create collective body percussion patterns supporting peer interaction (SPHE Strand: Myself and the Wider World, p. 71).

Materials Needed

  • Open classroom space for movement
  • Whiteboard or chart paper with key vocabulary: beat, rhythm, body percussion, caught, chase, steal
  • Simple props for storytelling (optional, e.g., hat, scarf)
  • Visual rhythm cues (clap, stomp, snap sequence) written for reference

Lesson Structure

1. Introduction (5 minutes)

  • Activity:
    Gather students in a circle. Revise body percussion sounds learned yesterday by chanting and clapping a simple rhythm together.
  • Lower Order Question:
    What body percussion sounds do we know?
  • Higher Order Question:
    How can the rhythm we make tell a story without words?
  • Language Focus:
    Introduce and discuss words: beat, rhythm, catch, crime, chase. Use gestures to reinforce understanding.

2. Development (20 minutes)

  • Activity 1: Story Brainstorm and Rhythm Creation (10 mins)

    • Tell a simple, child-appropriate story about someone stealing and getting caught (e.g., a mischievous character taking a cookie and being caught by a friend).
    • As a class, highlight key moments: stealing, chase, caught.
    • Discuss how to represent these moments with body percussion sounds. For example:
      • Stealing = soft finger snaps
      • Chase = quick stomps
      • Caught = loud claps and slaps on knees
    • Split into 3 groups, each composing and rehearsing a rhythm pattern representing one of these moments. Encourage students to use sequencing language: first, then, finally.
  • Lower Order Question:
    Which rhythm did your group choose for the chase part?

  • Higher Order Question:
    Why do you think fast stomping is a good way to show chasing? Could you think of a different sound?

  • Activity 2: Group Performance and Creative Expansion (10 mins)

    • Groups perform their rhythmic part in order, combining the story's beginning, middle, and end.
    • Encourage students to listen carefully and create a smooth flow.
    • Invite volunteers to compose one additional rhythm to represent how the character feels after getting caught using body percussion (e.g., slow hand rubbing to represent regret).
  • Language Focus:
    Pause after performances to use expressive language: fast, slow, quiet, loud, soft, sharp to describe rhythms.


3. Conclusion (5 minutes)

  • Activity:
    Reflect on the rhythmic story. Ask students to retell the story orally using the new vocabulary and sequence words, e.g., first the stealing, then the chase, finally getting caught. Use a "call and response" style to include all pupils.
  • Lower Order Question:
    What happened at the end of our rhythm story?
  • Higher Order Question:
    If you could add more body percussion sounds to the story, what would they be and why?
  • Language Focus:
    Praise use of sequencing words and imaginative language. Reinforce that music can help tell stories without words alone.

Assessment

  • Formative Assessment:
    Observe children's participation during group rhythm creation and performance for rhythmic accuracy and collaborative skills.
  • Oral Language Assessment:
    Listen for use of sequencing vocabulary and descriptive words during retelling and questioning.
  • Self-assessment:
    At the end, ask students to give a thumbs up/down on how well they felt the body percussion matched the story.

Extension Ideas

  • Create a visual storyboard showing each rhythm linked to a story event, integrating Art with Music and Literacy.
  • Use simple digital recording devices to capture performances and allow pupils to listen back and evaluate their rhythms.
  • Encourage students to invent their own rhythmic stories at home using body percussion and familiar vocabulary.

Curriculum Links Summary

IE Curriculum StrandElementReference
Music – PerformingCreate and perform rhythmic worksStrand 1, p. 19
Music – ComposingDevelop rhythmic patternsStrand 2, p. 22
Language – Oral LanguageUse sequencing & descriptive wordsStrand 1, p. 50
Language – Thinking & ReasoningRespond to questions at different cognitive levelsStrand 3, p. 58
SPHE – Myself & the WorldCollaboration and social interactionp. 71

This lesson plan utilises body percussion in an imaginative storytelling context, encouraging first-class pupils to engage creatively with music while developing key language and social skills—in full harmony with the IE Curriculum framework.

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