Making Music: Literacy Tips for Parents
The Random House Publishing Group
Music promotes language acquisition, listening skills, memory, and motor skills. Songs introduce new words, often ones that rhyme or repeat, which makes them easy to learn. Singing also facilitates bonds between adult and child.
Here are some helpful hints on making music a part of your daily life as well as a list of recommended musical recordings and songbooks for you to try.
The following are suggestions on how to make music a part of your child’s every day life.
This is the way we change your diaper
Change your diaper
Change your diaper
This is the way we change your diaper
And now you’re clean and dry hey!
In this list are songbook collections with simple music for piano and guitar. These books make excellent gifts that encourage years of family singing.
If You’re Happy and You Know It, Clap Your Hands: A Pop-Up Book by David A. Carter Your child will enjoy pulling tabs to make a chicken flap its wings, an owl wink, and other actions in this lively children’s song. The Kingfisher Nursery Rhyme Songbook by Sally Emerson One of the few large collections available, this valuable resource features 40 songs with lyrics and music for piano and guitar. Down by the Station by Will Hillenbrand With music notation for the catchy tune, this charming book about a train with “the puffer bellies all in a row,” has inviting lyrics and pictures. I Heard a Little Baa by Elizabeth MacLeod This small book uses flaps effectively to create a guessing game that can be sung to the tune of “Farmer in the Dell.” My First Songs by Jane Manning This book features folk songs such as “Old MacDonald,” “The Eentsy-Weentsy Spider,” “Row, Row, Row Your Boat,” and more. De Colores and Other Latin-American Folk Songs for Children by Jose-Luis Orozco Here are 27 songs in Spanish and English, with simple piano music and guitar chords, and wonderful pictures. Going to the Zoo by Tom Paxton Belt this out in the car on the way to the zoo or anywhere else. You and your child can add your own verses to the simple, toe-tapping song. Raffi Children’s Favorites by Raffi This large paperback collection is a gold mine of songs with musical notations, including Raffi’s well-known hits and traditional favorites. I Know an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly by Simms Taback This silly, familiar folk song takes on new life with award-winning illustrations that offer humor for adults as well as children. The Wheels on the Bus by Paul O. Zelinsky This pop-up book has tabs, flaps, turning wheels, and whooshing wipers that add another dimension to this popular song.