AB:  musical form consisting of two sections, A and B, which contrast with each other (binary form)
  
   
  
      
          ABA:  musical form consisting of three sections, A, B, and A; two are the same, and the middle one is different (ternary form)
  
   
  
      
          Ability:  natural aptitude in specific skills and processes; what the student is apt to do, without formal instruction
  
   
  
      
          Academic vocabulary:  words that traditionally are used in academic dialogue and text
  
   
  
      
          Analog Tools:  category of musical instruments and tools that are non-digital (i.e., do not transfer sound in or convert sound into binary code), such as acoustic instruments, microphones, monitors, and speakers.
  
   
  
  
      
          Analyze:  examine in detail the structure and context of the music
  
   
  
      
          Arrangement:  setting or adaptation of an existing musical composition
  
   
  
      
          Arranger:  person who creates alternative settings or adaptations of existing music
  
   
  
      
          Articulation:  characteristic way in which musical tones are connected, separated, or accented; types of articulation include legato (smooth, connected tones) and staccato (short, detached tones)
  
   
  
      
          Artistic Literacy:  knowledge and understanding required to participate authentically in the arts
  
   
  
      
          Atonality:  music in which no tonic or key center is apparent
  
   
  
      
          Audiate:  hear and comprehend sounds in ones head (inner hearing), even when no sound is present
  
   
  
      
          Audience Etiquette:  social behavior observed by those attending musical performances and which can vary depending upon the type of music performed
  
   
  
      
          Beat:  underlying steady pulse present in most music
  
   
  
      
          Benchmark:  pre-established definition of an achievement level, designed to help measure student progress toward a goal or standard, expressed either in writing or as an example of scored student work (aka, anchor set)
  
   
  
  
      
          Body Percussion:  use of the human body as an instrument to create percussive/rhythmic sounds such as stomping, patsching (patting thighs), clapping, clicking, snapping
  
   
  
      
          Bordun:  accompaniment created by sounding two tones, five notes apart, continuously throughout a composition; can be performed in varying ways, such as simultaneously or alternating
  
   
  
      
          Chant:  most commonly, the rhythmic recitation of rhymes, or poems without a sung melody; a type of singing, with a simple, unaccompanied melody line and free rhythm
  
   
  
      
          Chart:  jazz or popular music score, often abbreviated, with a melody (including key and time signature) and a set of chord changes
  
   
  
      
          Chord Progression:  series of chords sounding in succession; certain progressions are typical in particular styles/genres of music
  
   
  
      
          Collaboratively:  working together on a common (musical) task or goal
  
   
  
      
          Collaboratively-Developed Criteria:  qualities or traits for assessing achievement level that have been through a process of collective decision-making
  
   
  
      
          Complex Formal Structure:  musical form in which rhythmic, melodic, harmonic, and/or other musical materials undergo significant expansion and development, and may be more distantly related across sections while remaining coherent in some way, such as sonata or other novel design with three or more sections
  
   
  
      
          Composer:  one who creates music compositions
  
   
  
      
          Composition:  original piece of music that can be repeated, typically developed over time, and preserved either in notation or in a sound recording
  
   
  
      
          Compositional Devices:  tools used by a composer or arranger to create or organize a composition or arrangement, such as tonality, sequence, repetition, instrumentation,orchestration, harmonic/melodic structure, style, and form
  
   
  
      
          Compositional Procedures:  techniques that a composer initiates and continues in pieces to develop musical ideas, such as fragmentation, imitation, sequencing, variation, aggregate completion, registral saturation, contour inversion of gestures, augmentation-diminution, sound-silence, motion-stasis, in addition to and rhythmic phrasing
  
   
  
      
          Compositional Techniques:  approaches a composer uses to manipulate and refine the elements to convey meaning and intent in a composition, such as tension-release, compositional devices
  
   
  
      
          Concepts, Music:  understandings or generalized ideas about music that are formed after learners make connections and determine relationships among ideas
  
   
  
      
          Connection:  relationship among artistic ideas, personal meaning, and/or external context
  
   
  
      
          Context:  environment that surrounds music, influences understanding, provides meaning, and connects to an event or occurrence
  
   
  
      
          Context, Cultural:  values, beliefs, and traditions of a group of people that influence musical meaning and inform culturally authentic musical practice
  
   
  
      
          Context, Historical:  conditions of the time and place in which music was created or performed that provide meaning and influence the musical experience
  
   
  
      
          Context, Personal:  unique experiences and relationships that surround a single person and are influenced by personal life, family, habits, interest, and preferences
  
   
  
      
          Context, Social:  environment surrounding something or someones creation or intended audience that reflects and influences how people use and interpret the musical experience
  
   
  
      
          Craftsmanship:  degree of skill and ability exhibited by a creator or performer to manipulate the elements of music in a composition or performance
  
   
  
      
          Create:  conceive and develop new artistic ideas, such as an improvisation, composition, or arrangement, into a work
  
   
  
      
          Creative Intent:  shaping of the elements of music to express and convey emotions, thoughts, and ideas
  
   
  
      
          Creator:  one who originates a music composition, arrangement, or improvisation
  
   
  
      
          Criteria:  guidelines used to judge the quality of a students performance (See Rubric)
  
   
  
      
          Cultural Context:  values, beliefs, and traditions of a group of people that influence musical meaning and inform culturally authentic musical practice
  
   
  
      
          Culturally Authentic Performance:  presentation that reflects practices and interpretation representative of the style and traditions of a culture
  
   
  
      
          Culture:  values and beliefs of a particular group of people, from a specific place or time, expressed through characteristics such as tradition, social structure, religion, art, and food
  
   
  
      
          Cyclical Structure:  musical form characterized by the return or cycling around of significantly recognizable themes, motives, and/or patterns across movements
  
   
  
      
          Demonstrate:  show musical understanding through observable behavior such as moving, chanting, singing, or playing instruments
  
   
  
      
          Diatonic:  seven-tone scale consisting of five whole steps and two half steps
  
   
  
      
          Digital Environment:  simulated place made or created through the use of one or more computers, sensors, or equipment
  
   
  
      
          Digital Notation:  a visual image of musical sound created by using computer software applications, intended either as a record of sound heard or imagined, or as a set of visual instructions for performers
  
   
  
      
          Digital Resources:  anything published in a format capable of being read by a computer, a web-enabled device, a digital tablet, or smartphone
  
   
  
      
          Digital Systems:  platforms that allow interaction and the conversion between and through the audio and digital domains
  
   
  
      
          Digital Tools:  category of musical instruments and tools that manipulate sound using binary code, such as electronic keyboards, digital audio interfaces, MIDI, and computer level or range of loudness of a sound or sound software
  
   
  
      
          Dynamics:  level or range of loudness of a sound or sounds
  
   
  
      
          Elements Of Music:  basic characteristics of sound (pitch, rhythm, harmony, dynamics, timbre, texture, form, and style/articulation) that are manipulated to create music
  
   
  
      
          Enduring Understanding:  overarching (aka, big) ideas that are central to the core of the music discipline and may be transferred to new situations
  
   
  
      
          Ensemble:  group of individuals organized to perform artistic work: traditional, large groups such as bands, orchestras, and choirs; chamber, smaller groups, such as duets, trios, and quartets; emerging, such as guitar, iPad,  mariachi, steel drum or pan, and Taiko drumming
  
   
  
      
          Essential Question:  question that is central to the core of a discipline in this case, music  and promotes investigation to uncover corresponding enduring understanding(s)
  
   
  
      
          Established Criteria:   traits or dimensions for making quality judgments in music of a particular style, genre, cultural context, or historical period that have    gained general acceptance and application over time
  
   
  
      
          Expanded Form:  basic form (such as AB, ABA, rondo or theme and variation) expanded by  the addition of an introduction, transition, and/or coda
  
   
  
      
          Explore:  discover, investigate, and create musical ideas through singing, chanting, playing instruments, or moving to music
  
   
  
      
          Expression:  feeling conveyed through music
  
   
  
      
          Expressive Aspects:  characteristics that convey feeling in the presentation of musical ideas
  
   
  
      
          Expressive Intent:  the emotions, thoughts, and ideas that a performer or composer seeks to convey by manipulating the elements of music
  
   
  
      
          Expressive Qualities:  qualities such as dynamics, tempo, articulation which -- when combined with other elements of music -- give a composition its musical identity
  
   
  
      
          Form:  element of music describing the overall organization of a piece of music, such as AB, ABA, rondo, theme and variations, and strophic form
  
   
  
      
          Formal Design:  large-scale framework for a piece of music in which the constituent parts cohere into a meaningful whole; encompasses both structural and tonal aspects of thei piece
  
   
  
      
          Fret:  thin strip of material placed across the fingerboard of some stringed Instruments, such as guitar, banjo, and mandolin; the fingers press the strings against the frets to determine pitch
  
   
  
      
          Function:  use for which music is created, performed, or experienced, such as dance, social, recreation, music therapy, video games, and advertising
  
   
  
      
          Fundamentals Of Music Theory:  basic elements of music, their subsets, and how they interact: rhythm and meter; pitch and clefs; intervals; scales, keys and key signatures; triads and seventh chords
  
   
  
      
          Fusion:  type of music created by combining contrasting styles into a new style
  
   
  
      
          Genre:  category of music characterized by a distinctive style, form, and/or content, such as jazz, march, and country
  
   
  
      
          Guidance:  assistance provided temporarily to enable a student to perform a musical task that would be difficult to perform unaided, best implemented in a manner that helps develop that students capacity to eventually perform the task independently
  
   
  
      
          Harmonic Sequences:  series of two or more chords commonly used to support melody(ies)
  
   
  
      
          Harmonization:  process of applying stylistically appropriate harmony, such as chords, countermelodies, and ostinato, to melodic material
  
   
  
      
          Harmonizing Instruments:  musical instruments, such as guitars, ukuleles, and keyboards, capable of producing harmonies as well as melodies, often used to provide chordal accompaniments for melodies and songs
  
   
  
      
          Harmony:  chordal structure of a music composition in which the simultaneous sounding of pitches produces chords and their successive use produces chord progressions
  
   
  
      
          Heterophonic:  musical texture in which slightly different versions of the same melody sound simultaneously
  
   
  
      
          Historical Context:  conditions of the time and place in which music was created or performed and that provide meaning and influence the musical experience
  
   
  
      
          Historical Periods:  period of years during which music that was created and/or performed shared common characteristics;  historians of Western art music typically refer to the following:  Medieval (ca. 500-ca. 1420), Renaissance (ca. 1420-ca. 1600), Baroque (ca. 1600-ca. 1750), Classic (ca. 1750-ca. 1820), Romantic (ca. 1820-ca. 1900), and Contemporary (ca. 1900-)
  
   
  
      
          Homophonic:  musical texture in which all parts move in the same rhythm but use different pitches, as in hymns; also, a melody supported by chords
  
   
  
      
          Iconic Notation:  representation of sound and its treatment using lines, drawings, pictures
  
   
  
      
          Imagination:  ability to generate in the mind ideas, concepts, sounds, and images that are not physically present and may not have been previously experienced (see Audiate)
  
   
  
      
          Imagine:  generate musical ideas for various purposes and contexts
  
   
  
      
          Improvisation:  music created and performed spontaneously or in-the-moment, often within a framework determined by the musical style
  
   
  
      
          Improviser:  one who creates music spontaneously or in-the-moment
  
   
  
      
          Independently:  working with virtually no assistance, initiating appropriate requests for consultation, performing in a self-directed ensemble offering ideas/solutions that make such consulting collaborative rather than teacher-directed
  
   
  
      
          Intent:  meaning or feeling of the music planned and conveyed by a creator or performer
  
   
  
      
          Interpret:  determine and demonstrate musics expressive intent and meaning when responding and performing
  
   
  
      
          Interpretation:  intent and meaning that a performer realizes in studying and performing a piece of music
  
   
  
      
          Intervals:  distance between two tones, named by counting all pitch names involved;   harmonic interval occurs when two pitches are sounded simultaneously, and melodic interval when two pitches are sounded successively
  
   
  
      
          Intonation:  singing or playing the correct pitch in tune
  
   
  
      
          Key Signature:  set of sharps or flats at the beginning of the staff, following the clef sign, that indicates the primary pitch set or scale used in the music and provide clues to the resting tone and mode
  
   
  
      
          Lead-Sheet Notation:  system symbol used to identify chords in jazz, popular, and folk music;  uppercase letters are written above the staff, specifying which chords should be used and when they should be played
  
   
  
  
      
          Major Scale:  scale in which the ascending pattern of whole and half steps is whole, whole, half, whole, whole, whole, half
  
   
  
      
          Melodic Contour:  shape of a melody created by the way its pitches repeat and move up and down in steps and skips
  
   
  
      
          Melodic Passage:  Short section or series of notes within a larger work that constitutes a single coherent melodic idea
  
   
  
      
          Melodic Pattern:  grouping, generally brief, of tones or pitches
  
   
  
      
          Melody:  linear succession of sounds (pitches) and silences moving through time; the horizontal structure of music
  
   
  
      
          Meter:  grouping of beats and divisions of beats in music, often in sets of twos (duple meter) or threes (triple meter)
  
   
  
      
          Minor Scale:  scale in which one characteristic feature is a half step between the second and third tones; the three forms of the minor scale are natural, harmonic, and melodic
  
   
  
      
          Modal:  music based on a mode other than major or minor
  
   
  
      
          Model Cornerstone Assessment:  suggested assessment process, embedded within a unit of study, that includes a series of focused tasks to measure student achievement within multiple process components
  
   
  
      
          Moderately Complex Formal Structure:  musical form with three or more sections (such as rounded binary, rondo, or other novel design), in which section closure is somewhat nuanced or ambiguous, and the rhythmic, melodic, harmonic, and/or other musical materials across sections may be more distantly related while remaining coherent in some way,
  
   
  
      
          Modes:  seven-tone scales that include five whole steps and two half steps;  the seven possible modes Ionian, Dorian, Phrygian, Lydian, Mixolydian, Aeolian, and Locrian were used in the Medieval and Renaissance periods and served as the basis from which major (Ionian) and minor (Aeolian) scales emerged
  
   
  
      
          Monophonic:  musical texture consisting of a single, unaccompanied melodic line
  
   
  
      
          Mood:  over-all feeling that a section or piece of music conveys
  
   
  
      
          Motif/Motive:  brief rhythmic/melodic figure or pattern that recurs throughout a composition as a unifying element
  
   
  
      
          Movement:  act of moving in nonlocomotor (such as clapping and finger snapping) and locomotor (such as walking and running) patterns to represent and interpret musical sounds
  
   
  
      
          Music Literacy:  knowledge and understanding required to participate authentically in the discipline of music by independently carrying out the artistic processes of creating, performing, and responding
  
   
  
      
          Music Theory:  study of how music is composed and performed; analysis of the elements of music and the framework for understanding musical works
  
   
  
      
          Music Vocabulary:  domain-specific words traditionally used in performing, studying, or describing music (see Academic vocabulary)
  
   
  
      
          Musical Criteria:  traits relevant to assessing music attributes of a work or performance
  
   
  
      
          Musical Idea:  idea expressed in music, which can range in length from the smallest meaningful level (motive or short pattern) through a phrase, a section, or an entire piece
  
   
  
      
          Musical Range:  span between the highest and lowest pitches of a melody, instrument, or voice
  
   
  
      
          Musical Work:  piece of music preserved as a notated copy or sound recording or passed through oral tradition
  
   
  
      
          Non-Pitched Instruments:  instruments, such as woodblocks, whistles, electronic sounds, that do not have definite pitches or tones
  
   
  
      
          Notation:  visual representation of musical sounds
  
   
  
      
          One-Part Formal Structure:  continuous form, with or without an interruption, in which a singular instance of formal closure is achieved only at or near the end of the piece; also known as through-composed
  
   
  
      
          Open-Ended Assessment:  assessment that allows students to demonstrate the learning of a particular outcome in a variety of ways, such as demonstrating understanding of rhythmic notation by moving, singing, or chanting
  
   
  
      
          Pentatonic Scale:  five-tone scale often identified with the pattern of the black keys of a keyboard, although other five-tone arrangements are possible
  
   
  
      
          Perform:  process of realizing artistic ideas and work through interpretation and presentation
  
   
  
      
          Performance Decorum:  aspects of contextually appropriate propriety and proper behavior, conduct, and appearance for a musical performance, such as stage presence, etiquette, and appropriate attire
  
   
  
      
          Performance Practice:  performance and presentation of a work that reflect established norms for the style and social, cultural, and historical contexts of that work
  
   
  
      
          Performance Technique:  personal technical skills developed and used by a performer
  
   
  
      
          Performing, Performance:  experience of engaging in the act of presenting music in a classroom or private or public venue (see also Artistic Process of Performing)
  
   
  
      
          Personal Context:  unique experiences and relationships that surround a single person and are influenced by personal life, family, habits, interest, and preferences
  
   
  
      
          Personally-Developed Criteria:  qualities or traits for assessing achievement level developed by students individualy
  
   
  
      
          Phrase:  musical segment with a clear beginning and ending, comparable to a simple sentence or clause in written text
  
   
  
      
          Phrasing:  performance of a musical phrase that uses expressive qualities such as dynamics, tempo, articulation, and timbre to convey a thought, mood, or feeling
  
   
  
      
          Piece:  general, non-technical term referring to a composition or musical work
  
   
  
      
          Pitch:  identification of a tone or note with respect to highness or lowness (i.e., frequency)
  
   
  
      
          Plan:  select and develop musical ideas for creating a musical work
  
   
  
      
          Polyphonic:  musical texture in which two or more melodies sound simultaneously
  
   
  
      
          Polytonal:  music in which two or more tonalities (keys) sound simultaneously
  
   
  
      
          Present:  share artistic work (e.g., a composition) with others
  
   
  
      
          Program:  presentation of a sequence of musical works that can be performed by individual musicians or groups in a concert, recital, or other setting
  
   
  
      
          Purpose:  reason for which music is created, such as, ceremonial, recreational/social, commercial, or generalized artistic expression
  
   
  
      
          Refine:  make changes in musical works or performances to more effectively realize intent through technical quality or expression
  
   
  
      
          Repertoire:  body or set of musical works that can be performed
  
   
  
      
          Respond:  understand and evaluate how the arts convey meaning
  
   
  
      
          Rhythm:  duration or length of sounds and silences that occur in music; organization of sounds and silences in time
  
   
  
      
          Rhythmic Passage:  Short section or series of notes within a larger work that constitutes a single coherent rhythmic idea
  
   
  
      
          Rhythmic Pattern:  grouping, generally brief, of long and short sounds and silences
  
   
  
      
          Rondo:  musical form consisting of three or more contrasting sections in which one section recurs, such as ABACA
  
   
  
      
          Rubric:  established, ordered set of criteria for judging student performance; includes descriptors of student work at various levels of achievement 
  
   
  
      
          Scale:  pattern of pitches arranged in ascending or descending order and identified by their specific arrangement of whole and half steps
  
   
  
      
          Score:  written notation of an entire music composition
  
   
  
      
          Section:  one of a number of distinct segments that together comprise a composition; a section consists of several phrases
  
   
  
      
          Select:  choose music for performing, rehearsing, or responding based on interest, knowledge, ability, and context
  
   
  
      
          Sensitivity:  skill of a creator, performer, or listener in responding to and conveying the nuances of sound or expression
  
   
  
      
          Set:  sequence of songs or pieces performed together by a singer, band, or disc jockey and constituting or forming part of a live show or recording
  
   
  
      
          Setting:  specified or implied instrumentation, voicing, or orchestration of a musical work
  
   
  
      
          Setting Of The Text:  musical treatment of text as presented in the music
  
   
  
      
          Share:  present artistic work (e.g., a composition) to others
  
   
  
      
          Sight-Reading:  first attempt to perform a notated musical work
  
   
  
      
          Simple Formal Structure:  musical form with a small number of distinct or clearly delineated sections, (such as simple binary, ternary, or other novel design), using closely related rhythmic, melodic, and harmonic materials across the sections
  
   
  
      
          Social Context:  environment surrounding something or someones creation or intended audience that reflects and influences how people use and interpret the musical experience
  
   
  
      
          Sonic Events:  individual sounds (or sound masses) and silences whose succession forms patterns and contrasting units that are perceived as musical
  
   
  
      
          Sonic Experience:  perception and understanding of the sounds and silences of a musical work and their inter-relationship
  
   
  
      
          Stage Presence:  performers ability to convey music content to a live audience through traits such as personal knowledge of the repertoire, exhibited confidence, decorum, eye contact and facial expression
  
   
  
      
          Staging:  environmental considerations, such as lighting, sound, seating arrangement, and visual enhancements, that contribute to the impact of a musical performance
  
   
  
      
          Standard Notation:  system for visually representing musical sound that is in widespread use; such systems include traditional music staff notation, tablature notation (primarily for fretted stringed instruments), and lead-sheet notation
  
   
  
      
          Storyline:  extra-musical narrative that inspires or explains the structure of a piece of music
  
   
  
      
          Strophic Form:  vocal music in which the music repeats with a new set of text each time
  
   
  
      
          Structural:  (see Structure)
  
   
  
      
          Structure:  totality of a musical work
  
   
  
      
          Style:  label for a type of music possessing distinguishing characteristics and often performance practices associated with its historical period, cultural context, and/or genre
  
   
  
      
          Stylistic Expression:  interpretation of expressive qualities in a manner that is authentic and appropriate to the genre, historical period, and cultural context of origin
  
   
  
      
          Tablature:  system of graphic standard notation, commonly used for fretted stringed instruments, in which a diagram visually represents both the fret board and finger placement on the fret board
  
   
  
      
          Teacher-Provided Criteria:  qualities or traits for assessing achievement level that are provided to students by the teacher
  
   
  
      
          Technical Accuracy, Technical Skill:  ability to perform with appropriate timbre, intonation, and diction as well as to play or sing the correct pitches and rhythms at a tempo appropriate to the musical work
  
   
  
      
          Technical Aspects:  characteristics enabling the accurate representation/presentation of musical ideas
  
   
  
      
          Technical Challenges:  requirements of a particular piece of music that stretch or exceed a performers current level of proficiency in technical areas such as timbre, intonation, diction, range, or speed of execution
  
   
  
      
          Tempo:  rate or speed of the beat in a musical work or performance
  
   
  
      
          Tension/Release:  musical device (musical stress, instability, or intensity, followed by musical relaxation, stability, or resolution) used to create a flow of feeling
  
   
  
  
      
          Texture:  manner in which the harmonic (vertical) and melodic (horizontal) elements are combined to create layers of sound
  
   
  
      
          Theme And Variations:  musical form in which a melody is presented and then followed by two or more sections presenting variations of that melody
  
   
  
      
          Theoretical:  (see Fundamentals of Music Theory)
  
   
  
      
          Timbre:  tone color or tone quality that distinguishes one sound source, instrument, or voice from another
  
   
  
      
          Tonal Pattern:  grouping, generally brief, of tones or pitches
  
   
  
      
          Tonality:  tonic or key tone around which a piece of music is centered
  
   
  
      
          Transfer:  use music knowledge and skills appropriately in a new context
  
   
  
      
          Unity:  presence of structural coherence within a work, generally achieved through the repetition of various elements of music (see Variety) 
  
   
  
      
          Variety:  presence of structural contrast within a work for the purpose of creating and sustaining interest, generally achieved through utilizing variations in the treatment of the elements of music (see Unity) 
  
   
  
      
          Venue:  physical setting in which a musical event takes place
  
   
  
      
          Vocables:  audible sounds and/or nonsense syllables used by vocalists to convey musical ideas or intent
  
   
  
      
          Vocalizations:  vocal exercises that include no text and are sung to one or more vowels