Every year, there are concepts and skills that I know students haven't quite grasped before I have to move on. In the past I've always just made a mental note to try to work on it more later, or come back to it again "if I have time". But let's be honest, mental notes are rarely effective, and most of the time the school year comes to a close without me ever revisiting that topic. This year I've started a "review and revisit" list for each grade and it has made it so much easier to make sure I'm being intentional with what skills and concepts each grade needs more practice with as we approach the end of the school year!
I'm always assessing student understanding- most of the time informally- as I teach, and I often move on to a new topic or concept before all of the students have mastered what they're learning. Sometimes it's intentional, because I know I will be coming back to it again later in my curriculum and they just need more time and practice. But sometimes it's because something happens to disrupt the calendar and I need to make sure I get to other things, or I know I'm just beating a dead horse and continuing to try to work on it right then won't help. I found myself dealing with a lot of that this year because we had a lot more snow days than we have had the last several years that really threw off my class schedule and put several classes too far behind the rest of the grade level, or we lost momentum on what we were working on before we got stuck at home.
I realized I was juggling several topics for different grades in my mind that I wanted to try to find time to come back to at the end of the year. I already have review time built into my curriculum the last month of school anyway, and we obviously have a lot of makeup days added on for the snow days we missed, so I know I have time at the end of the year to revisit things that students didn't quite get yet. But I also know how busy the end of the school year can get, and there is no way I will have the time or mental energy to go back and remember what I wanted to review with each grade!
Enter my list. It's just a simple sheet from a paper pad I picked up years ago that I added to my teacher planner. I keep it in the upcoming week's planner pages so it's handy without being in the way of my day-to-day planning. If things come up again between now and May, I can add it to the list, and when the time comes it's there ready for me! I labeled each section with the grade levels I teach and just started jotting down things as they came up:
It's nothing earth-shattering but it really has helped me feel more confident heading into the last part of the school year, knowing that I have a record of where I need to focus my teaching in the last month of school to best set my students up for success coming into the next grade level, and I don't know why I didn't do this sooner in my teaching career!
Whether you keep a sticky note somewhere or even track the list digitally on your phone or computer somewhere, I highly recommend keeping a review and revisit list somewhere, and leave time in your yearly plans to come back to those at the end of the school year! For me, having everything on paper and all in one place in my planner has been the only way for me to stay on top of everything. You can see the planner printables I use here if you are looking for a paper planner that's tailored to music teachers!











