Click the link to view the full version: WASCZ | Building Strong Musical Foundations in Lower School
We are delighted to announce an exciting new development in our Lower School music curriculum. From Semester 2, every child in Lower School will learn either the recorder or the ukulele as part of their weekly curriculum music lessons–a significant and purposeful step forward in how we nurture musical understanding, creativity, and confidence from an early age. This initiative reflects our belief that music is not an add-on, but a vital part of a child’s holistic education.
Why the Recorder and Ukulele?
The recorder and ukulele are internationally recognised as “gateway instruments.” This means they provide the essential building blocks that allow children to progress confidently to more complex instruments later in their school journey. Through learning one of these instruments, students develop musical literacy, listening skills, coordination, rhythmic awareness, and confidence performing both independently and as part of an ensemble. Crucially, these instruments are age-appropriate, accessible, and highly effective in laying foundations for future study on instruments such as piano, violin, flute, guitar, brass, or voice.
This exciting programme is led by a highly experienced and passionate team of music educators. Under the guidance of Director of Performing Arts Mr Ward-Roden, the initiative is led day-to-day by Ms Zhao, Head of Lower School Music. She is supported by instrumental specialists Ms Peréz and Mr Meriño, who bring specialist expertise, energy, and creativity into the classroom. Together, the team combines strategic vision with outstanding classroom practice, ensuring that every child receives high-quality instrumental instruction and develops strong, transferable musical skills from the very start of their school journey.
More Than Music: Academic Success and Developing the Whole Child
Extensive educational research consistently shows that children who learn music perform better academically. Learning an instrument has been linked to improvements in cognitive development, language acquisition, mathematical understanding, focus, discipline, and perseverance. Music trains the brain to think in structured, creative, and analytical ways—skills that transfer directly into the classroom and beyond.
Beyond academic benefits, instrumental learning plays a powerful role in character development. As students learn recorder or ukulele, they experience a sense of achievement, resilience, teamwork, and confidence through performance and shared music-making. These early musical experiences often spark a lifelong love of music and, for some students, form the first step toward advanced musical study.
A Clear Musical Pathway
This new Lower School initiative is designed as the first step in a carefully structured music pathway. By ensuring every child gains hands-on instrumental experience early on, we create a strong platform for future curriculum success, ensemble participation, optional 1:1 instrumental lessons, and confident transition into Upper School music opportunities.
This is more than a curriculum change—it is an investment in foundational skills, academic success, and the creative future of every child. We are excited to see this programme inspire confidence, curiosity, and musical growth across Lower School.
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