My school has a lovely tradition of "settling in" (a Quaker/Friends School practice) at the start of each day and after transitions. The Lower School has an all-unit settling in every Monday, and we have a tradition of ending it with a song. Every year, I start and end the year with a familiar song that to me embodies our goal as a school: “This Little Light of Mine.”
We then pick other things to “shine,” such as “My teachers and my friends, I’m gonna let them shine,” or, “All around the world, I’m gonna let it shine.” In music class, we might even get a little silly and add things like, “These wiggly fingers of mine,” or “This messy hair of mine!” It’s a great song for getting kids used to clapping and body percussion, dancing, or marching around the room in music class. It’s an easy song to add countermelodies and harmonies in my older classes.
Though it is often listed as an “African-American spiritual," “This Little Light of Mine” was actually written in the 1920s by a white minister in Michigan as a children’s song. However, when it was documented by John Lomax in 1939, then adapted into a civil rights anthem in the 1960s by Zilphia Horton, it became associated with other spirituals and often mistaken for one.
No matter its origins, “This Little Light of Mine” is a wonderful reminder of our Friends belief of the “light” that exists inside everyone. All our other testimonies—peace, respect, service, etc.—can be linked back to this concept.
And it’s really fun to sing!
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