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Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Making the "Other" Familiar

I believe one of the most important roles we play as music teachers is bringing the world to our students- giving them a language to connect with more people, and giving them experiences that make the "other" less foreign, more familiar. I think most music teachers agree, but many struggle with how to do so effectively, or feel overwhelmed by the enormity of the task. Here are some of my thoughts on how to make your classroom a place that fosters empathy through opportunities to connect with a broader range of perspectives.


First a little about me, because my background has definitely shaped my perspective on this. I grew up across 3 continents, mostly living outside my passport country until college, spent the better part of the first decade of my teaching career in international schools, and since then have taught as a white teacher in a primarily non-white, low-income population school in the US. I became a music teacher because of my experience moving to schools as a child where I did not speak the language, and finding a place where I could participate in the music room. 

Normalize, not exoticize.

I think the most important thing to keep in mind that will be the difference between sharing unfamiliar music in a way that is harmful vs helpful is to remember the goal is to normalize, not exoticize. Exploring new perspectives and ideas should be exciting, but we should present them as new to us, not new to the world, different from us, not unusual or different from the "standard". I've written an entire post on how to do this concretely here, especially as it relates to cultures around the world, but I think the most important aspect of this practice is to both use songs from a wide range of cultures, languages, and genres in your everyday lessons when the background of the song is not the main point of the lesson, and also spend time doing a deep dive into some specific genres, cultures, and perspectives to give students a deeper understanding of the context.

Watch your language,

Be careful with the word "we/ us". Who is "we"? And this may seem obvious but be very careful with the word "normal/ standard". What is "normal"? This is really at the heart of how students understand what is "other". No matter how positively it is presented, if a genre, culture, or people group are presented as "unusual" or "not us", it is by definition being "othered". Instead of presenting a new idea or perspective in a "we vs them" or "normal vs unusual" way, present it as additional information. Instead of "we use the violin but China uses the erhu", try "we learned about the violin last year, and today we're going to learn about another instrument called the erhu", for example.

Focus on transferable skills.

One of the biggest setbacks for teachers I talk to is feeling like to do it right, they need to make sure to include every culture, every perspective, equally. While broadening our materials by adding more different perspectives is definitely important, it's also important to remember that the skills students gain from interacting with a new perspective will transfer. The same way that teaching students to read and perform one song with quarter notes will allow them to learn more songs with quarter notes, the skills of cultural navigation and empathy will transfer to new perspectives and cultures they encounter outside your classroom. So focus on giving students the opportunity to interact with and understand new perspectives rather than making sure you include every perspective that exists.

Learn from the source.

Hopefully this goes without saying but you can't expect to learn about Japanese music from a Kodaly song collection compiled by a white American who "learned it from their levels instructor" (it makes me angry just typing that because I've heard it so often). Certainly those types of resources can serve as starting points, but before you present it to students it's important to trace it back to a native source. The same goes for anything on my website! I try, when it is not something from my own personal background, to include my native sources in the articles I share. I encourage you to go back to those and learn from those sources, not just directly from me- that is the point! If you see a song that is labeled as "from" a certain country but you can't find any source from that country referencing the song, there's a good chance it's not from there. Here are a few examples of commonly circulated songs that are actually American, not from the cultures many books and presenters claim they are from. Learning directly from a native source will also give you important context that you will most likely miss out on otherwise. I have been learning a lot about hip-hop since moving to the US, but it wasn't until I had the opportunity to speak with hip-hop artists themselves, and share with them the lesson ideas I was working on, that I gained an understanding of important context that I needed to include in my lessons. Even when people are sharing directly from culture bearers themselves, they are sharing the parts that they learned, not the entire picture. You need to always go back to the source.

There is certainly a lot more to be said on this topic but these are the most important points I think to keep in mind to move further down the path of creating an equitable, inclusive classroom that brings the world to our students. If you are looking for a place to learn more about how to do this effectively, and find materials, ideas, and resources from culture bearers to add to your teaching, I've created a page on my website called Music Education Equity Resources where you can search by country, language, genre, and more topics to find resources to use in your classroom. And if you want to see a (regularly updated) full curriculum that seeks to put these ideas into practice, I've published my K-6 general music curriculum here.

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Tuesday, January 20, 2026

"Shine" Theme Elementary Choral Program

Sometime in the last few years I became a person who chooses my elementary choir concert pieces to fit a unifying theme. For our spring concert this year we are going to be doing a theme of "shine"! I always include a mixture of traditional choral pieces (usually with at least one non-English song) and modern/ pop songs, and this concert includes all of those! I'll also share some of the other songs I considered that I didn't end up using but would also fit the theme well and would work well with elementary chorus.


I found the pop song for this program a couple of years ago when I was looking for something else and I've been trying to find a way to fit it into a chorus concert ever since! I ended up finding a complete program around the theme of shining light, which seems fittingly hopeful for current times.

Brighter Days by Emeli Sandé I am going to have the 2nd verse be solos, and add a lower parallel harmony on the chorus.

Let the Sun Shine Down by Peter Johns This is a nice, easy two part arrangement that includes singing the melody in unison, then in canon, then as a partner song. There are a few lyrics I changed to avoid religious connotations since I have some students who wouldn't be able to sing it otherwise, but it was simple changes (like changing "God speed" to "peace be"). 

Shining Moon (Ngam Sang Duan) traditional Thai arr. Audrey Snyder I wanted to have a song about the moon shining as well, and when I came across this 2-part arrangement of a Thai song (which I was able to verify is in fact commonly sung in Thailand) I knew this was the one! There are lyrics in English included but I am planning to have my students sing only in Thai. It is mostly in unison or in canon but also includes a few parallel harmony spots so it should be another accessible song for my group.

Besides these, I found several other choral pieces I considered doing that are a similar level of difficulty and fit the theme very nicely:

Kokoleoko traditional Liberian arr. Victor Johnson I wasn't sure if I could get my current group to really buy into this one but I'm definitely keeping it for future consideration!

Hola, Media Luna by Laura and Eddie Cavazos If I hadn't just done a song in Spanish this year I probably would have done this one!

I Want to Rise by Mark Weston I did this one a few years ago and I decided it was too soon to do again but it would also fit this theme!

Any of the songs I used for my "Stars" theme concert from a few years ago would fit well here too, and there are actually quite a few pop songs I've already done in other previous concerts that would also fit:


I confess I actually considered doing an entire concert of just "Brighter Day(s)" songs, with Emeli Sandé song I'm doing this year, The Michael Franti song listed above, and Brighter Days by Blessing Offor... I decided it was too confusing but if someone decides to go for it let me know! :)

I'm really excited about this program and I think the students and the audience will enjoy it as well! You can see all of the themed elementary choral programs I've put together in this post if you're looking for more great songs:


And if you want to see all of my posts related to teaching elementary choir, from rehearsal techniques to my favorite songs, arranging pieces for elementary choir to my favorite warmups, you can see them all here.

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Music In Our Schools Month® 2026: "United Through Music" Song Bracket

This year the theme for Music In Our Schools Month® (MIOSM®) is "United through Music". I have been doing a "musical March madness"-style song bracket, where students listen to different songs each day and vote on their favorites, for several years now, and for the last several years I've tried to tie the songs into the annual theme NAfME chooses. To connect with this year's theme, I've decided to choose songs that include 2 or more languages, to show how music can connect people across cultures and languages.


The theme of "United through Music" is not new- NAfME is using the same theme as last school year. If you didn't use my song bracket last year, I did an entire playlist of songs that combine two or more musical genres (many of them also from different cultures), which you can see here. I also did an entire playlist of songs focusing on unity/ togetherness in 2023 for their theme that year, "Music Is All of Us", which was a similar theme! If you didn't use my song bracket that year and you'd rather focus on lyrics with themes of unity to connect with this year's theme, you can find that list of songs here.  

As I have done the last few years, I'm going to be setting up google slides files with the songs for each day embedded in the slides so that classes can vote in their homerooms. If you want to see how I organize the logistics so classes can vote every day regardless of whether they have music that day or not, check out my 2021 MIOSM post (and definitely let me know if you have any questions, I'm happy to help). Doing it in slides was such an easy way to have all the songs organized and make it easy for the homeroom teachers to report their class' vote rather than having to email me every day! I don't have the rights to share the song files, but you can make a copy of my slide templates and add the audio files yourself by clicking on the image below (it will automatically ask you if you want to make a copy)- here is a tutorial on setting it up in slides using the templates:


In my song lists each year I try to include songs from different genres and time periods, representing artists of different backgrounds and including different languages, and this year is obviously no different. You'll find a blank slide template in the slides file linked above: I use that to show the lyrics in their original language and in the English translation for parts that are not in English. 

Here are the songs I'll be using in this year's bracket, with the languages included in each song included (in no particular order):

1. El Ritmo by J. Esho (French, Arabic, Spanish)

2. Djapana by Yothu Yindi (English, Yolnu Matha - northern Australia)

3. Con un vezzo all'italiana by Mozart (Italian, French, English)

4. Ojos Asi by Shakira (Spanish, Arabic)

5. Spider by GIMS and DYSTINCT (French, Arabic)

6. Uewo Muite Arukou by Mimy Succar, Nora Suzuki, Tony Succar (Japanese, Spanish)

7. Wanna Be Yours by Violette Wautier (Thai, English)

8. Four Women by Sara Tavares, Chiwoniso, Deborah, and Joy Denalane (Brazilian Portuguese, Shona, French, German)

9. Aaj Ibaadat by Javed Bashir and Shreyas Puranik (Sanskrit, Hindi)

10. Jerusalema Remix by Master KG feat. Burna Boy and Nomcebo (Nigerian pidgin, Zulu, Yoruba, Hausa)

11. Golden by HUNTRIX (Korean, English)

12. Period by YonYon, Taichi Mukai (Korean, Japanese)

13. Nus Nus by Noam Tsuriely (Hebrew, Arabic, English)

14. Girl On Fire + Ala Tabiaty by Alaa Wardi and Nesma Mahgoub (English, Arabic)

15. Aicha by Moe Phoenix (German, French, Arabic)

16. So Far by Habanot Nechama (Hebrew, English)

17. Nah by Marie Bothmer and Lord Esperanza (German, French)

18. Zemër by Dhurata Dora and Soolking (French, Albanian)

19. El Baile del Kkoyaruna by Pascuala Ilbaca y Fauna (Spanish, Quechua)

20. CHANGE by E.SO (Mandarin, English)

21. Mungu Halali by Blinky Bill and Wambura Mitaru (Swahili, English)

22. Libre by Alvaro Soler and Monika Lewczuk (Spanish, Polish)

23. Hitzeman by ZETAK and Oques Grasses (Catalan, Basque)

24. Lathi by Weird Genius and Sara Fajira (Javanese, English)

I'm excited to see how the students respond to this year's playlist, and I'm curious to see which song wins out in the end! What are your plans for Music In Our Schools Month® this year? What are other songs that fit this theme? I'd love to hear more suggestions in the comments below- I'm sure there are plenty more great ones out there. If you're looking for more ideas to use for MIOSM, here are all my posts on the topic.

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Top 10 Posts from 2025

I am so grateful for the opportunity to connect with other music teachers around the globe through my little corner of the internet, and it is such a good feeling when readers connect with something I've written. Each time a new calendar year rolls around, it's so fun to look back and see which of the posts I wrote the past year have been read the most! So we're looking back on 2025 today to see which posts made the top 10 list- have you seen them all?

I'll admit I've bent my own rules a little this year. The last few years I've been feeling sorry for the posts I write at the end of each calendar year because they often don't get the credit they deserve in these rankings since they just came out! So I decided to include any posts written after American Thanksgiving 2024 in the running for the 2025 list, just to give them a fair chance :)

10. Algonquin Water Song

9. Music In Our Schools Month Activities 2025


8. Favorite Songs for Teaching Syncopa


7. "Colors" Theme Elementary Choral Program


6. Team Rhythm Challenge


5. Football Themed Elementary Music Lesson Activities

4. Teaching Rondo Form

3. What To Do With Those Xylophones

2. 3 Ways to Teach Fast and Slow

1. Recorder Videos to Share with Students

Thank you all for reading, interacting with, and supporting this page. Having the opportunity to interact with other music teachers, and the platform to share my thoughts and ideas, has been such an amazing creative outlet and source of encouragement for me! I can't wait to see what 2026 brings us. Happy New Year!