Elem
Elem
Elem
Standards:
MU:Pr4.3.3a: Demonstrate and describe how intent is conveyed through expressive
qualities (such as dynamics and tempo).
MU Pr6.1.3a: Perform music with expression and technical accuracy.
Objectives:
● Students in 3rd grade will understand how lullabies are a musical cultural connection
● Students in 3rd grade will engage with the song Chippewa Lullaby through expressive
movement and/or singing.
Materials:
Video link: https://folkways.si.edu/gene-bluestein/chippewa-lullaby/american-folk/music/track/
smithsonian
Words to know in Spanish:
- Lullaby - la canción de cuna
- Flute - la flauta
- Peaceful - tranquilo
Introduction:
1. T: “Does everyone remember the song we learned a few class periods ago called
Chippewa Lullaby? Who remembers what I told you about it?” Let Ss discuss and share,
and then clarify what they couldn’t remember.
2. T: “Chippewa Lullaby from a group of Native Americans called the Chippewa. That is
what they were called a long time ago, but today their group is called something different
- the Ojibwe or Ojibway. They are from the Great Lakes region near Minnesota.”
3. T: “Who can tell me what a lullaby is?” Let Ss discuss and call on them to share their
ideas. “That’s right! Lullabies are songs that parents usually sing to their young children
to help them go to sleep!”
Self-evaluate:
- Some of the strengths of this lesson are that I allow the students to engage with the
music in the ways that they are naturally drawn to, then use this to guide their
understanding and focus towards the key concepts. It will be a good lesson for young
students because they can get up and move around. Students who may be language
learners don’t have to know much about English to see that they can just dance around
and move when the music plays. It is also easy for them to sing along because the
whole song only uses one word. This is also a great lesson for students to connect to
music no matter what culture they grew up in because they will have likely heard a
lullaby before and have a personal connection with that type of song.
- Some things that might go wrong are that students might have an initial reaction towards
the song that is not respectful of the culture because they don’t understand it yet. I will
have to introduce the song in such a way that they keep an open mind to things that
sound different or use different words than they are used to. Some students may not be
capable of moving due to a physical disability or something like that. In this case, I might
offer them a silk scarf to wave around to the music to show expression still if they have
limited movement. If they cannot move at all, they can still sing along in a peaceful way.