🍉Lesson 2 — Music from the orchard
Grades 3-5. Students clip alligator wires to fruit to compose a melody. 45-minute lesson, NCAS-aligned, ready to teach with Playtron.
Grade Band: 3-5 · Duration: 45 min · Device: Playtron · Standards: NCAS MU:Cr2.1.4a, UK MMC KS2, NGSS 4-PS3-2
Enduring Understanding
A melody is a deliberate sequence of pitches in time. With Playtron, any conductive object can play a pitch — so a basket of fruit becomes a tunable instrument.
Essential Question
How does the same idea of "melody" survive when the instrument is a banana?
Learning Objectives
Students will be able to:
- Compose a short melody of 4-8 notes using fruits as keys.
- Explain why grounding (holding the gold ground pin) is required for Playtron to sense touch.
- Iterate the composition based on at least one peer comment.
Student-facing "I Can" statements:
- I can write a short tune by choosing which fruit to touch in which order.
- I can teach a classmate to play my tune.
Vocabulary
- Melody — a sequence of single notes that sounds like a tune.
- Pitch — how high or low a sound is.
- Ground — the part of a circuit that gives electricity a path back to where it started.
- Compose — to make up a piece of music.
Materials & Setup
- One Playtron per group of 4 students (plan for 7-8 groups in a 30-student class — see Class Pack 30 bundle).
- 6-10 fruits per group: bananas, apples, lemons, oranges, pears, kiwis.
- Alligator clips (Playtron ships with 8; for full pin coverage use the 10 extra alligator clips accessory).
- Browser piano open in Brave or Chrome on each group's laptop or tablet.
- One whiteboard per group to sketch the composition.
- Teacher prep (10 min): clip a fruit to each pin on one demo Playtron. Confirm grounding works before students enter. Wipe table dry.
Lesson Procedure
1. Engage — the silent fruit (5 min)
Teacher places a banana on the table. "Make this banana play." Volunteers try touching it. Nothing happens. "Why not?" Discuss: there's no circuit yet. Teacher clips one alligator to the banana, touches the ground pin, then the banana — sound. "What changed?"
2. Explore — grounding revealed (10 min)
Whole class: Teacher demos that touching fruit without holding the ground pin produces no sound; touching with ground produces sound. Vocabulary card up: ground. Pair-share for 90 seconds: "Why do you think your body needs to be part of the loop?"
3. Create — fruit melodies (20 min)
Groups of 4. Each group clips 4-6 fruits, then composes a 4-8 note melody. They sketch it on their whiteboard ("banana, apple, apple, lemon, banana") and assign each group member a role:
- Composer — decides the order.
- Player — touches the fruit.
- Grounder — holds the ground pin throughout.
- Critic — gives one piece of feedback after the first play.
After the first play, groups iterate once based on the critic's note.
4. Share — perform the orchard (10 min)
Each group performs their melody for the class. After every performance, two students from other groups say what they liked. Class votes on a single "lesson favourite" with thumbs.
Assessment
- Formative: Each group submits its whiteboard sketch with the composer's name + iteration note ("we changed banana to apple because…").
- Summative: Composer is assessed on MU:Cr2.1.4a (organising and developing musical ideas). Rubric: melody has clear shape (1pt) + iteration shows intentional choice (1pt) + group performed cleanly (1pt) = 3pt scale.
Differentiation & UDL
- Support: Pre-clip the fruit for emerging groups. Provide melodic "starter cards" (e.g., "banana → apple → apple → banana") that they can extend.
- Stretch: Advanced groups assign each fruit to a specific scale degree and compose with a tonal centre in mind (introduce do, re, mi).
- Access: Students with motor challenges can be the Composer/Grounder. A student with hearing differences can be the Critic and focus on the whiteboard pattern.
Extension & cross-curricular links
- Science (NGSS 4-PS3-2): Energy can be transferred between objects — extend with: which fruit conducts best when it's a week old vs fresh?
- Math: Translate the melody into a number sequence (1=banana, 2=apple, 3=lemon, 4=orange). Look for repeating patterns.
- ELA: Pair this lesson with a poem about a market or harvest. Each student writes one line, the class composes a melody underneath.
Teacher Notes
- Citrus dries out quickly — wipe the pins after class. Sticky residue blocks future signals.
- Battery-powered Bluetooth speakers help if you have an open-plan room. Group conflict over sound rises fast.
- Common mistake: students hold the ground pin too lightly. Push for firm contact.