Getting started with music in home education
A friendly, practical guide to bringing music into your home-ed routine — no musical background required.
Starting music at home can feel daunting, especially if you don't think of yourself as "musical." The good news: you don't need to be. Children learn music the same way they learn language — through regular, low-pressure exposure. Here's how to begin.
1. Make it part of the day, not a "lesson"
Five to ten minutes a day beats an hour once a week. Tie it to something you already do:
- After breakfast — a quick note-naming game on an app.
- In the car — listen actively to one piece and talk about it.
- Before bed — five minutes of scales or a favourite tune.
2. Start with reading, then add an instrument
Being able to read notation unlocks everything else. Use flashcard-style games (like Note Flash) until the notes feel familiar, then introduce an instrument. The instrument becomes a reward, not a frustration.
3. Pick an instrument that fits
The clarinet is a wonderful first instrument for home educators:
- Affordable student models are widely available second-hand
- One reed at a time keeps running costs low
- A clear path through ABRSM grades gives structure and milestones
- It plays nicely in bands and orchestras later on
4. Use grade exams as a map, not a race
ABRSM theory and practical grades are a brilliant curriculum even if you never sit the exam. They tell you what to cover next and give a sense of progression. Our theory apps are tagged by grade to help you find the right level.
5. Keep it playful
If practice becomes a battle, scale it back. The goal at this stage is a child who chooses to pick up their instrument. Apps, duets, and playing along to favourite songs all keep the spark alive.
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Ready to begin? Head to the Music hub and open any free app — no signup needed.
Ready to put it into practice?
Open a friendly music app and try what you've just read.
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