Kids Make Music
This course helps early childhood educators create developmentally appropriate music experiences that invite children to explore sound, rhythm, movement, listening, and creative participation.
Participants learn how to structure music-making in ways that are engaging, accessible, and grounded in child development rather than in performance pressure or random noise masquerading as educational magic.
Course Details
EIP Eligible: Funding may be available for qualifying New York early childhood professionals.
What this course helps educators do
This course gives educators practical ways to facilitate music-making with young children through exploration, participation, movement, and structured play.
Why it matters
Music-making supports coordination, listening, expression, attention, social interaction, and confidence. When children actively participate in music, they are not just being entertained—they are building foundational skills through joyful experience.
What makes it practical
Participants leave with concrete strategies for introducing instruments, movement, rhythmic games, call-and-response, and structured musical exploration in ways that are realistic for actual classrooms.
By the end of this course, participants will:
Training outline
An overview of active participation, exploration, and developmental benefits.
Using body movement, beat, and repetition to support engagement and coordination.
Introducing instruments and sound in ways that are age-appropriate and manageable.
Planning activities that balance creativity, routine, participation, and classroom flow.
Ready to register?
Join educators across New York exploring meaningful, practical ways to help children make music.