Description
🎵 January Composers – Daily Reading & Listening Activities (KS2–3 Music & Literacy)
Make literacy and music history part of your classroom every day in January!
This ready-to-use January pack introduces pupils to a new composer each day, with short, accessible biographies, high-quality comprehension questions, suggested answers, and QR codes linking directly to listening clips. Perfect for cultural capital, daily literacy routines, music appreciation, and cross-curricular learning.
✨ What’s Included
✔️ 31 Composer Profiles (1st–31st January)
Clear, 150-word biographies written for ages 8–14.
✔️ 5 Daily Comprehension Questions
Covering retrieval, vocabulary, inference, explanation, and summary.
✔️ Suggested Answers
Ideal for whole-class discussion, peer marking, or quick independent feedback.
✔️ QR Codes for Instant Listening
Direct links to musical examples hosted via MusicOfTheDay.co.uk.
✔️ A Diverse Range of Musical Styles
From Baroque counterpoint to contemporary classical, jazz, film music, and cross-cultural traditions.
🎯 Benefits for Teachers and Pupils
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Cross-curricular learning across English, Music, and Humanities
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Zero prep required — ready for starters, tutor time, assemblies, or cover
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Builds curiosity by connecting reading with real listening experiences
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Differentiated challenge through varied question types
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Flexible use across independent tasks, homework, group work, or full lessons
🎼 Featured January Composers
January’s line-up blends well-known names with lesser-known composers from a wide range of cultures, genres, and historical periods, including:
Johann Christian Bach, Barbara Pentland, Maurice Jaubert, Giovanni Battista Pergolesi, Elizabeth Cotten, Alexander Scriabin, Francis Poulenc, Andrej Očenáš, Vic Mizzy, David Bowie, John Lodge Ellerton, Väinö Aatos Hannikainen, Ami Maayani, Michael Arne, Ivor Novello, Tage Nielsen, Tomaso Albinoni, César Cui, Maria Teresa Agnesi Pinottini, Ennio Porrino, John Dowland, Irwin Levine, John Field, Friedrich von Flotow, Etta James, Phillip Houghton, Johannes Mozart, Acker Bilk, Daniel Auber, Thomas Tallis, and Franz Schubert.
This broad selection supports cultural capital, widens pupils’ musical horizons, and encourages thoughtful discussion about music, history, and society.
📚 Curriculum Links
🇬🇧 United Kingdom – National Curriculum
English (KS2 Reading)
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Retrieve and record information
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Understand vocabulary in context
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Make inferences
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Summarise main ideas
Music (KS2/KS3)
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Listen with attention to detail
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Appreciate a wide range of composers
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Understand musical history and context
Cultural Capital
Exposure to significant cultural figures across genres, cultures, and centuries.
👩🏫 Ideas for Classroom Use
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Use as a daily starter throughout January
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Build a composer timeline display that grows each day
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Set as independent comprehension or homework
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Combine with creative writing tasks (diaries, reviews, programme notes)
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Link listening tasks to broader music appreciation or PSHE themes
🛒 Why Teachers Love This Resource
Teachers save time. Pupils grow in confidence as readers, listeners, and critical thinkers. And every day brings a new opportunity to explore music that stretches far beyond the classroom.
🎶 Perfect for:
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KS2 & KS3 classroom teachers
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English & Music departments
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Supply teachers
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Homeschool families
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Cross-curricular enrichment projects





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