Musical Notation
KS2MU-KS2-D004
Using and understanding staff notation and other musical notations to read, write and communicate musical ideas.
National Curriculum context
KS2 introduces formal staff notation as a tool for reading and recording musical ideas. Pupils learn to use both staff notation and other relevant notations, understanding that notation is a means of communicating musical ideas rather than an end in itself. The ability to read notation supports performance by allowing pupils to learn new pieces independently and to rehearse from written scores. Understanding notation also supports composition by giving pupils a way to record and share their musical ideas. Staff notation connects music education to a long written tradition and to the practice of professional musicians and composers.
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Concepts
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Clusters
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Prerequisites
1
With difficulty levels
Lesson Clusters
Use and understand staff notation to read and communicate musical ideas
practice CuratedSingle concept domain. Staff Notation is a discrete and substantial knowledge and skill area requiring systematic teaching of note names, rhythmic values, time signatures and score reading — always connected to real musical sound.
Teaching Suggestions (1)
Study units and activities that deliver concepts in this domain.
Glockenspiel Stage 1
Music PerformancePedagogical rationale
Dedicated instrumental technique lessons are essential alongside song-based units. Glockenspiel Stage 1 teaches the relationship between written notation and physical playing: note name to bar position to sound. Starting with C, D, E (three adjacent notes) builds confidence before expanding range. The focus on accuracy and fluency rather than speed develops good practice habits.
Prerequisites
Concepts from other domains that pupils should know before this domain.
Concepts (1)
Staff Notation
knowledge AI DirectMU-KS2-C004
Staff notation is the standardised system of writing music using a five-line stave, clefs, note heads and rhythmic values. It allows music to be written down accurately and communicated to performers who have not heard the piece. At KS2, pupils learn to read and write staff notation, beginning with treble clef notes and simple rhythmic values, connecting this to their instrumental learning and composition work.
Teaching guidance
Introduce staff notation in the context of instrumental learning, connecting written symbols to sounds pupils already know. Use mnemonics for note names (Every Good Boy Deserves Football for EGBDF). Practice reading short melodic fragments by ear first, then by sight. Teach rhythmic values (crotchet, minim, quaver) alongside their sound and feel. Use pupils' own compositions as a context for notation practice. Emphasise that notation represents sound; always connect written symbols to the sounds they represent.
Common misconceptions
Pupils sometimes learn note names as abstract symbols without connecting them to specific sounds on their instrument. Always reinforcing the sound alongside the symbol prevents disconnected learning. The time signature is often misunderstood as a fraction rather than as information about pulse grouping; consistent practical activities reinforce its musical meaning.
Difficulty levels
Recognising that music can be written down and reading simple graphic or rhythm notation.
Example task
These symbols show short sounds (filled circles) and long sounds (open circles). Clap the pattern.
Model response: I clapped: short short long short short long. The filled circles are quick claps and the open circles are held for longer.
Reading and writing simple staff notation: note names on the treble clef, crotchets, minims, quavers and rests.
Example task
Read these notes on the stave and play them on the glockenspiel: C, D, E, rest, E, D, C.
Model response: I identified C on the ledger line below the stave, D in the first space, and E on the first line. I played them in order and left a silence for the rest. The melody goes up then back down.
Reading and performing from staff notation with fluency, writing their own compositions in standard notation, and understanding time signatures.
Example task
Write out your composition in staff notation so someone else can play it. Include note names, rhythms and dynamics.
Model response: I wrote my melody in 4/4 time on the treble clef. The first bar has four crotchets: C, D, E, F. The second bar has a minim (E) and two crotchets (D, C). I added 'p' at the start for quiet and 'f' in bar 3 for loud. I checked that each bar has four beats.
Delivery rationale
Music theory/knowledge concept — notation, theory, and music history deliverable with audio tools and visual representations.