11th Grade Music Scope & Sequence Guide
A music scope and sequence plans performance, music literacy, listening, composition, and music history across the year — ensuring NAfME standards in creating, performing, responding, and connecting are all addressed.
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Music pacing should balance the four domains from the NAfME framework: Creating (composition, improvisation), Performing (instrumental or choral), Responding (listening, analyzing), and Connecting (culture, history, interdisciplinary). Each unit should develop all four domains rather than isolating them, with performance skills spiraling through progressively more complex repertoire.
Typical Units for 11th Grade Music
Unit 1: Foundations & Ensemble Routines
5–6 weeksEstablishing rehearsal routines, tuning/technique, and diagnostic assessment of prior skills
Key Standards Focus
- ›Performing: technical skills baseline
- ›Responding: listening vocabulary
- ›Music literacy: notation review
Unit 2: Music Literacy & Theory
6–7 weeksNotation reading, rhythm, melody, harmony, and form — connected to repertoire being rehearsed
Key Standards Focus
- ›Music literacy: reading standard notation
- ›Creating: composing or improvising with given parameters
- ›Music vocabulary and theory application
Unit 3: Repertoire & Performance Preparation
7–9 weeksConcert or performance preparation — technique, interpretation, and musical expression
Key Standards Focus
- ›Performing: musical expression and interpretation
- ›Responding: self-assessment and peer feedback
- ›Connecting: cultural context of repertoire
Unit 4: Music History & Listening
4–5 weeksHistorical periods, style comparison, composer study, and active listening analysis
Key Standards Focus
- ›Connecting: music in historical context
- ›Responding: formal analysis and personal response
- ›Music vocabulary in listening application
Assessment Windows
Pacing Considerations
- ›Concert prep consumes 60–70% of instructional time in the 4 weeks before a performance — build this into your pacing, not around it
- ›Music literacy instruction gets squeezed without explicit protected time — schedule it as a fixed part of your weekly routine
- ›Composition and improvisation units need multiple non-performance days — hard to fit if concert season is year-round
- ›All-state auditions, contest festivals, and large ensemble events create pacing disruptions — plan 1-week buffers
- ›Small-group sectionals require scheduling logistics — work with your administration in Q1 to protect that time
Vertical Alignment
From Prior Grade
Students arrive with a repertoire of prior songs, notation exposure, and ensemble experience — use early rehearsals to assess and build from that foundation
Toward Next Grade
Students should leave able to perform grade-level repertoire with attention to expression and style, and to read standard notation independently at grade-level complexity
Planning Tips
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I balance performance preparation with music literacy instruction?
Protect a fixed weekly time slot (even 10 minutes per rehearsal) for music literacy — notation reading, theory, or ear training. Use repertoire as the context for literacy instruction rather than separating them. 'Find the half notes in measure 12' teaches the same notation concept as a decontextualized worksheet, with better transfer.
How many units should a year-long music scope and sequence have?
Most music classes organize by semester or trimester rather than units, because concert preparation dominates the Q2 and Q4 schedule. A useful framework: Q1 (foundations and assessment), Q2 (repertoire and concert prep), Q3 (composition/history/listening), Q4 (spring repertoire and assessment). Adjust to your school's performance schedule.