Composer Study In The Elementary Years

There are many ways to add some classical music to your homeschooling day.

You could combine it with your history studies, follow a chronological timeline, or study a specific musical period.

While I like the idea of folding music into history I think it’s better left to the middle-grade years when students can follow a more logical progression and see the flow of musical history within the role of historical events.

For the elementary years, I prefer something far more simple.

Simple Steps For Composer Study

Each year we choose 6 composers that interest us. We spend 6 weeks learning about and listening to one composer.

Then we repeat that sequence for another composer over the following 6 weeks (6 composers, 6 weeks each for a total of 36 weeks).

Our goal at this stage is all about exploration and learning and maybe even finding a new favorite composer or two.

Don’t you just love it when your kid says, “I love Vivaldi!”?

Composer Study In Action

After you’ve chosen your 6 composers, pick one and begin!  

Here’s what we do:

  • Tack a picture of the composer to the bulletin board
  • Get some books and CDs from the library
  • Each week listen to some music (CDs or YouTube) at various times during the week (I like to listen in the morning, while we’re working on map skills, or during tea time)
  • Once or twice a term read a book about the composer (I like to do one read aloud and have my daughter read another book independently)
  • Add the composer to our timeline and/or lap book
  • Fill out one music appreciation or quiet listening page for each composer

These activities are spread out over 6 weeks, making it very manageable to add just a few minutes each week without feeling overwhelmed.

Focus On Truth, Beauty & Goodness

It’s easy to get caught up in the daily work in math, Latin, and grammar (which certainly are good and beautiful in their own way!) and push aside those extra things that bring those higher goals into sharper focus.

So I try not to forget the things that brighten our day and look for effortless ways to include them.

Music appreciation is one of those things I try to include – and finding easy ways to incorporate it into our schedule is a must because it’s very easy to ignore or simply skip somethings that seem so trivial on the surface.

However, I encourage you to find ways to include classical music in your homeschool. You might inspire a love for music in yourself or your children that you didn’t know you could have.

A Small Collection Of Music Appreciation Resources

Here’s a small collection of the resources we’re using for classical music at this point;

Reference Books

  • The Story of the Orchestra – a very fun book that takes you through each section of the orchestra (includes a CD)
  • Classical Music for Dummies – a great resource for parents that walks you through the basics of music history, the orchestra, and music theory (includes a CD)
  • Spiritual Lives of the Great Composers – covering 20 composers, each biography includes a black-and-white portrait, a 5-8 page biographical look at the composer with a focus on their religious life, and a shortlist of works that are recommended for listening

Listening

The following resources are wonderful introductions to Classical music. Some of our favorite CDs include catchy words to remember the author and title of the songs.

We also like CDs that include biographical information (like the Vox Music Masters) and some are just plain fun.

Extras or Alternatives