How to Create Meaningful Music Bulletin Boards with Simple Student Work
Hallway bulletin boards can be especially challenging for music teachers. So much of what we do in class is active and sound-based — singing, playing, moving, and creating — that it’s not always obvious how to turn that learning into student work you can display. I, for one, hated to take time to get out pencils and paper!
But with a few intentional choices, elementary music bulletin boards can become meaningful snapshots of learning, helping hallway bulletin boards show what students are really doing in music class.
(If you’re thinking more about instructional displays inside the room, I shared ideas for that in a previous post on making classroom walls work for you. This post focuses specifically on hallway boards.)
When students see their work displayed in the hallway, it sends a powerful message: what we do in music matters. It builds pride and ownership, while also quietly advocating for your program.
Parents, administrators, and other students may never sit in on a lesson, but they do walk past your hallway board. A display that features real student work helps them see that music learning is creative, intentional, and standards-based.
In practice, this might look like a rhythm composition display mounted on leaves or flowers, surrounded by photos of students creating. Or a concert reflection board with short student quotes paired with rehearsal pictures. Even a “Caught Making Music” photo collage counts as student work when it documents the learning process.
One of the biggest hurdles with hallway displays is defining student work in a subject where learning happens in sound.
When planning hallway boards, think documentation, not decoration. A strong music bulletin board often includes a mix of:
You don’t need all of these every time. Even three or four elements can turn a hallway board into a clear snapshot of learning.
Including an objective, standard, and rubric doesn’t have to be complicated. A single half-sheet posted beside the display is enough.
Objective
Students will create and notate a 4-beat rhythm pattern using quarter notes and paired eighth notes.
Standard
MU:Cr1.1.2a – Generate musical ideas within a given structure.
Simple Rubric
This small addition does a lot of heavy lifting — it shows what students learned, how their work was assessed, and how creative projects align with standards.
One important note: I never display student work in the hallway with grades written on it. I use the rubric to guide assessment and then choose examples that meet the criteria, but the papers themselves stay ungraded. Ungraded hallway displays promote a growth mindset by emphasizing progress and learning over performance labels.
Some hallway-friendly ideas that work especially well in music include:
Each one helps answer the hallway question: What do students actually do in music class?
(If you’re looking for inspiration across the entire school year, I’ve also put together a full post with year-long music bulletin board ideas made with student work, organized month by month.)
Hallway boards shouldn’t steal your planning time.
A few tips that help:
Thoughtfully rotating grade levels and displays turns your hallway board into an ongoing story of growth, creativity, and progress.
Music learning is often invisible — unless we help others see it. Hallway bulletin boards give us a simple way to advocate for our programs, celebrate students, and document learning without saying a word.
When student work, photos, objectives, and rubrics live together on the wall, your board becomes more than decoration. It becomes evidence.
If you’re looking for an easy place to start, my Falling Rhythms (fall leaves) and Blooming Rhythms (flower theme) rhythm composition sets are designed with hallway displays in mind — with assessment and standards already built in, so you can spend less time at the bulletin board and more time making music.
(If you’re thinking more about instructional displays inside the room, I shared ideas for that in a previous post on making classroom walls work for you. This post focuses specifically on hallway boards.)
Why Student Work Belongs on Music Hallway Bulletin Boards
When students see their work displayed in the hallway, it sends a powerful message: what we do in music matters. It builds pride and ownership, while also quietly advocating for your program.
Parents, administrators, and other students may never sit in on a lesson, but they do walk past your hallway board. A display that features real student work helps them see that music learning is creative, intentional, and standards-based.
In practice, this might look like a rhythm composition display mounted on leaves or flowers, surrounded by photos of students creating. Or a concert reflection board with short student quotes paired with rehearsal pictures. Even a “Caught Making Music” photo collage counts as student work when it documents the learning process.
What Counts as Student Work in the Music Classroom
One of the biggest hurdles with hallway displays is defining student work in a subject where learning happens in sound.
Student work can include:
- Rhythm or melody compositions
- Short written reflections or sentence starters
- Drawings connected to music stories
- Group-created work
- Photos of students singing, playing instruments, moving, or composing
What to Include on a Meaningful Music Bulletin Board
When planning hallway boards, think documentation, not decoration. A strong music bulletin board often includes a mix of:
- Student work (compositions, reflections, drawings, group pieces)
- Photos of students making music
- A clear lesson objective
- Music standard(s)
- A short rubric or success criteria
- Student voice (quotes or reflection prompts)
You don’t need all of these every time. Even three or four elements can turn a hallway board into a clear snapshot of learning.
Sample Rhythm Composition Bulletin Board (Objective, Standard, and Rubric)
Including an objective, standard, and rubric doesn’t have to be complicated. A single half-sheet posted beside the display is enough.
Objective
Students will create and notate a 4-beat rhythm pattern using quarter notes and paired eighth notes.
Standard
MU:Cr1.1.2a – Generate musical ideas within a given structure.
Simple Rubric
4 – Exceeds: Accurate rhythm, clear notation, neat presentation3 – Meets: Accurate rhythm with minor notation errors2 – Developing: Some note value errors1 – Beginning: Incomplete or unclear rhythm
This small addition does a lot of heavy lifting — it shows what students learned, how their work was assessed, and how creative projects align with standards.
Music Bulletin Board Ideas That Show Real Learning
Some hallway-friendly ideas that work especially well in music include:
- Rhythm composition galleries (leaves, flowers, shells, notes)
- “Caught Making Music” photo boards
- Concert or field trip reflection displays
- Music story connections (like sound stories or children's literature)
- “Behind the Music” boards that highlight one focus skill
Each one helps answer the hallway question: What do students actually do in music class?
(If you’re looking for inspiration across the entire school year, I’ve also put together a full post with year-long music bulletin board ideas made with student work, organized month by month.)
How to Keep Music Hallway Bulletin Boards Manageable
Hallway boards shouldn’t steal your planning time.
A few tips that help:
- Reuse the same background and swap out student work
- Rotate displays by unit, not by month
- Feature different grade levels throughout the year, so every class gets a turn in the spotlight
- Use group work when possible
Thoughtfully rotating grade levels and displays turns your hallway board into an ongoing story of growth, creativity, and progress.
Let the Music Be Seen
Music learning is often invisible — unless we help others see it. Hallway bulletin boards give us a simple way to advocate for our programs, celebrate students, and document learning without saying a word.
When student work, photos, objectives, and rubrics live together on the wall, your board becomes more than decoration. It becomes evidence.
If you’re looking for an easy place to start, my Falling Rhythms (fall leaves) and Blooming Rhythms (flower theme) rhythm composition sets are designed with hallway displays in mind — with assessment and standards already built in, so you can spend less time at the bulletin board and more time making music.
Musically yours,









