About this course
Perfect for parents or teachers guiding young beginner music theory players.
This course makes learning theory fun! Introduces the essentials of music reading, along with puzzles and games. Also demonstrates the sounds of various instruments, with entertaining illustrations that accompany all songs and musical examples. This dynamic course features step-by-step guidance with real music examples, and comes complete with audio and video resources to make learning easy and enjoyable. Explore exciting topics like The Half Rest, The Whole Rest, that reinforce each new technique with real musical context.
Introduces music theory fundamentals through engaging activities and assessments, covering note values, clefs, grand staff, and time signatures.
This course in a printable PDF format
Time and rhythm skills are honed through the use of a metronome to enhance instrumental performance.
Introduces the seven-note musical alphabet and its role in music notation fundamentals.
The basics of music notation cover the five-lined staff and note placement on lines and spaces.
Covers fundamental principles of musical notation, focusing on treble and bass clefs and their uses.
Identifies and reads notes on the treble staff, referencing lines (E-G-B-D-F) and spaces (FACE).
The bass clef symbol is introduced, its role in music notation explained, and techniques for drawing it are practiced.
Quarter notes are covered, focusing on their components and stem orientations.
Divides music into bars and measures, explaining bar lines and quarter notes.
Time signatures are introduced, with a focus on the four-four time signature and its impact on music counting.
Introduces half and whole note durations and application in music counting exercises.
Covers the fundamentals of music notation, featuring clefs, bar lines, and note stems.
Introduces the fundamentals of rhythmic notation, including three-four, two-four, and dotted half notes.
Recognizes and applies rest notation, covering quarter, half, and whole rests.
Time signatures, rest symbols, and their roles in music notation are explained.
