Songs about drums and drumming鈥nd the story of The Leopard's Drum
Introduction
鈥 Key vocabulary: Africa, Jambo (鈥榟ello鈥), elephant, monkey, drum, beat, leopard, lion, tortoise,
selfish, Kwaheri! (鈥榖ye!鈥)
鈥 Listen all around: animal sounds - Cat greets the children with the African greeting 鈥楯ambo!鈥
and then invites the listeners to guess the sounds
鈥 Individual sounds: elephants trumpeting, monkeys chattering, drums beating
鈥 Cat then invites the listeners to imagine that they are beating a drum and banging it along to the sounds as they join in with 鈥極h we can play on the African drum鈥
Rhyme: 鈥榃e can play on the African drum鈥
Oh we can play on the African drum
And this is the way we do it
Bang! Bang! Bang! goes the African drum.
And that鈥檚 the way we do it.
Oh we can play on the African drum
And this is the way we do it
Boom! Boom! Boom! goes the African drum.
And that鈥檚 the way we do it.
鈥 When the rhyme is repeated Cat encourages the children to play their own pretend African
drum by tapping their knees with their hands and saying the rhyme, as they tap out the 鈥楤ang Bang Bang and Boom Boom Boom鈥 with both hands
鈥 Help children to keep in time with a steady beat as they beat their imaginary drums
鈥 Cat teaches the children some African Swahili counting words (see below for pronunciation):
Moja - one / Mbili - two / Tatu - three / Nne - four / Tano - five
Story time: The Leopard鈥檚 drum
Once upon an African time鈥
To help the children focus and maintain attention, provide a selection of resources and props (such as a lion, leopard, monkey, tortoise, drum) and use these items (along with pictures) to illustrate the story. These resources can also be used later as prompts to help retell and sequence the story.
鈥 Cat encourages the children to imagine what it is like to walk round like a tortoise with a shell/ house on your back.
Final rhyme: 鈥楳rs Tortoise round and low鈥
Mrs Tortoise round and low
I know why you move so slow
You carry such a heavy load
Moving your house down the road.
鈥 Cat repeats the rhyme and encourages the children to join in with some actions as they listen: put one hand out in front of you and point your fingers down towards the floor; wriggle them very slowly to show the tortoise legs; now, make your other hand into a tight ball; and put that hand on top of the other one, to show the tortoise shell
鈥 鈥楢s I say the rhyme, move your tortoise around, very, very slowly鈥
Final song: 鈥極nce a Leopard had a drum鈥 (tune - 鈥楲ondon Bridge is falling down鈥)
Once a Leopard had a drum,
Had a drum, had a drum
Once a Leopard had a drum
But he wouldn鈥檛 share it.
All his friends said 鈥楲et me play鈥
鈥楲et me play, Let me play鈥
All his friends said 鈥楲et me play鈥
But he wouldn鈥檛 share it.
This made the Sky God very sad,
Very sad, very sad
This made the Sky God very sad
But he wouldn鈥檛 share it.
Then the Tortoise played a trick
Played a trick, played a trick
Then the Tortoise played a trick
So Leopard had to share it.
鈥 Bye! - 鈥楰waheri!鈥
Follow-up ideas
鈥 Discussion: encourage the children to talk about African animals
鈥 Play 鈥榳ord tag鈥 - eg 鈥業n Africa I saw some鈥ions鈥
鈥 Continue and tag the new words on, leopards, monkeys, elephants, etc鈥ncouraging the children to remember the correct order as they participate
Extension activity
鈥 Consolidate counting in Swahili:
I saw one 鈥榤oja鈥 Monkey
I saw two 鈥榤bili鈥 Lions
I saw three 鈥榯atu鈥 Leopards
I saw four 鈥榥ne鈥 Elephants
I saw five 鈥榯ano鈥 Tortoises
鈥 Counting in Swahili: 1 = moja (mo-jah); 2 = mbili (m-bee-lee); 3 = tatu (ta-too); 4 = nne (n-nay); 5 = tano (tah-no); 6 = sita (see-tah); 7 = saba (sab-bah); 8 = nane (nah-nay); 9 = tisa (tee-sah) and 10 = kumi (koo-mee)
Other rhymes
鈥 I hear thunder (tune - 鈥楩rere Jacques鈥)
I hear thunder, I hear thunder
(Bang hands on knees or feet on the floor)
Hark, don鈥檛 you? Hark, don鈥檛 you?
(Hand to ear, pretend to listen)
Pitter patter rain drops
Pitter patter rain drops
(Indicate rain falling with fingers)
I鈥檓 wet through. So are you!
(Point to self, then to others)
鈥 Music, movement and memory - with more able children, try teaching 鈥業 hear thunder鈥 as a
round
Other related rhymes and songs
鈥 鈥楻ain, rain go away鈥
鈥 鈥業 hear thunder鈥
鈥 鈥業t鈥檚 raining, it鈥檚 pouring鈥
鈥 鈥極h I can bang on the big bass drum鈥
More follow-up ideas
鈥 Can you change the volume? Whisper quietly, shout it out loud - supports L&S 鈥榲oice sounds鈥 and 鈥榓djust the volume鈥.
Large class activity - Monkeys and lions鈥 This activity requires some space, ideally in a large hall, or on the playground as it provides great opportunities for lots of action and movement
鈥 Children can initially run, skip or hop around, reinforce good listening and following instructions
鈥 In a large space choose one child to be the lion and stand alone in the middle
鈥 The other children are the monkeys and they are at the side of the room. The teacher asks
鈥楲ion, are you ready?鈥 The Lion responds with roars and gestures
鈥 The teacher asks 鈥楳onkeys, are you ready?鈥 The monkeys respond with 鈥榃e鈥檙e not afraid!鈥 and then dance around and make noises like monkeys
鈥 The teacher and monkeys say 鈥1, 2, 3鈥ion, Lion you can鈥檛 catch me!鈥
鈥 The monkeys dance and move around and try not to get caught by the lion as they try to get to the opposite side of the room
鈥 If the lion touches a monkey, that monkey becomes a lion and the lions hold hands
鈥 Continue playing until all of the monkeys become lions or have reached the other side of the room. As the line of lions gets longer there is less space for the monkeys to get past. It also gets more difficult for the lions to move as quickly.
Phase 1 - Aspect 4 Rhythm and Rhyme
鈥 Drum outdoors. Take it outside and give each child a beater encourage the children to explore the outdoor area and discover how different sounds are made by tapping, banging or stroking, with their beaters on the floor, upturned pots, the wire fence, a wooden door, drainpipes, the brick wall
鈥 Encourage the children to drum along to familiar songs and rhymes, provide upturned buckets, bins and bowls, wooden spoon beaters
鈥 Encourage children to enjoy experimenting with the sounds different objects can make
听
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