Audit questions that keep assessment useful
Music assessment should help teachers decide what to do next and help leaders explain impact without extra paperwork. Inspectors often explore intent, implementation and impact, so your evidence needs to show a planned sequence and improvement over time. Use the statutory baseline and keep your checks repeatable.
Start with the national curriculum requirements. National curriculum in England music programmes of study For inspection expectations, keep a copy of the current framework used from November 2025. Education inspection framework for use from November 2025
- Can a teacher name the musical idea pupils are building this half term and what it builds on?
- Do pupils use consistent vocabulary for pulse, rhythm, pitch, tempo and dynamics across the school?
- Can staff explain what they do when pupils rush, lose pulse, or sing out of tune?
- Can you show what has been taught this term without collecting paper plans?
- Can you point to two moments that show improvement for a class?
Quick wins that lower workload and sharpen evidence
Choose one evidence type for each strand
Agree three strands and one evidence type for each.
- Singing: a 20 second audio clip in week 2 and week 6 of the same unison section.
- Performing: a short video of pupils keeping pulse while layering a rhythm pattern.
- Listening: a photographed whiteboard sort, plus one teacher note capturing two pupil explanations.
If you use Kidstrument, start with coverage and outcomes, then add the occasional clip for impact. Tracking and Reporting gives a quick view of which sessions were completed and where a class missed learning.
Use the same two minute end check in every lesson
- Pulse check: pupils step the pulse while the teacher claps a rhythm, then pupils swap roles.
- Pitch check: pupils show higher or lower with hands, then sing a two note echo.
Classroom example 1, Year 1, 25 minutes: after a warm up and a short pulse game, the teacher says, ‘Keep the pulse in your feet. I will clap the rhythm on top. Do not speed up.’ Three pupils repeat the task at the front with the teacher modelling calm tempo. A 15 second clip captures the second attempt.
Classroom example 2, Year 5, 40 minutes: pupils practise a desk drumming groove for eight bars. The teacher says, ‘Count four in your head, start together on my nod, then grow louder across four bars.’ Two groups perform while the rest listen for timing. The teacher writes one note, ‘Rushed quavers in bar 3, slow count then clap first.’
Record next steps without building a marking system
One note per class per lesson is enough if it names a misconception and the next teaching move. Kidstrument supports this through Assessment and Notes, where teachers can write optional notes that are emailed back to them for follow up and handover.
Medium term plan for evidence you can trust
Over a half term, reliability matters more than volume. Ofsted subject research on music emphasises making more music and thinking musically, so prioritise repeated practice and careful listening. Research review series music
Standardise what must be the same
- Vocabulary: one agreed list per phase, used in teacher talk and retrieval.
- Success descriptions: short, observable statements such as keeps a steady pulse for eight beats.
- Misconceptions and responses: a short list of common issues and the next activity to use.
For non specialists, consistent guidance reduces drift. The support on Teacher Notes helps teachers respond in the moment, for example when pupils confuse pulse with rhythm or sing too loudly and lose pitch.
Mini case study, one form entry with staff changes
A small rural primary needed evidence that did not depend on the music lead being in the room. Leaders agreed one recording point per half term for singing and one for rhythm, using the same prompt across Years 3 to 6. Teachers used the same end check each lesson and wrote one class note for follow up. After six weeks, behaviour incidents during music reduced because routines were predictable, and leaders could show progress by comparing paired clips alongside a coverage snapshot from the reporting dashboard.
Lean evidence pack for governors and inspection
- Curriculum overview showing the term sequence and key vocabulary. If you build your own route, keep it visible in Curriculum Designer.
- Coverage snapshot for the current term, showing what was completed and what will be caught up.
- Paired impact clips: three pairs per phase, each with a one sentence note describing the improvement.
- Two lesson stories showing how listening, singing and creating connect within a sequence.
- Resource list for transparency. If a unit comes from another scheme, keep your evidence language consistent so leaders do not translate, for example Charanga Musical School.
FAQ
How much evidence is enough?
Keep it small and repeatable. Paired clips that show improvement, a coverage view, and brief teacher notes usually communicate impact more clearly than folders of worksheets.
Do we need written assessments for every pupil?
Written tasks can pull music away from singing and performing. Focus on what pupils can do and say, and use short notes only for next steps and targeted support.
What if teachers feel unsure about judging progress?
Use tight success descriptions and one short moderation conversation per term. Agree what you are listening for, then keep the prompt and language consistent.
What should a subject lead do in the week before inspection?
Check coverage gaps, pick three paired clips that show improvement, and prepare a clear narrative of what pupils are learning now and how it builds. Make sure vocabulary displays and routines match that narrative.