Peace Songs for Kids


Music is a powerful way for students to explore peace, kindness, and SEL, social-emotional skills. In this post, you’ll find peace songs for kids along with music activities designed for elementary classrooms that support a peace theme through singing, instruments, and movement.

You’ll also find ideas and background about the International Day of Peace to connect your classroom activities to this global celebration.

Originally published September 11, 2021
Latest Update- March 21, 2026

On this page-

Peace Songs

The following songs help students explore peace on many levels, from personal peace and self-awareness, to positive relationships with others, and extending to harmony in the wider world. Each song is designed to engage students while teaching important social-emotional and global themes.

Peace Songs With Orff Arrangements

A SONG OF PEACE Easy 2-Part Song (Grades 3-5)

It’s a challenge to find a concert selection that is long enough but easy enough to learn in the limited time we have with our students. A Song of Peace covers both of these challenges! The verse and chorus of A Song of Peace combine as a melody and countermelody to create a gorgeous 2-part section. 

Find the Peace | Song & Orff Arrangement (Grades K-5)

Find the Peace strikes the perfect balance—easy to learn yet musically rich, with ballad-style verses, a lively chorus, and a sparkling coda. The Orff arrangement slides teach the parts for you, with built-in scaffolding for this no/low prep lesson plan resource. Perfect for SEL peace activitieswinter or Christmas concert music, or classroom learning, this beautiful song works across multi-grade levels.

Peace-Themed Sheet Music

Peace Music Activities

Peace Poems

How do you put together a Peace Day program? A combination of songs, poems, dances, and narration can provide lots of interest to audience and learning for the students.

Calm In Your Heart

Simple motions bring meaning to this very simple poem about the power of peace in the world.

Peace Movement Activity

Check out this movement activity using the word PEACE!

History of International Peace Day

In 1981, the UN (United Nations) General Assembly established the International Day of Peace. Annually, it is observed around the world on September 21. Each year a new theme is chosen.

Themes through the years include climate action, human rights, education for all, human dignity, peace and democracy, and many more.

Peace Program Options

Participating in International Day of Peace can be as simple as a lesson in your classroom the week of the event. It could be a school-wide program with songs, dancing, speeches, poetry, etc. It could be community-wide with a peace walk in the neighborhood.

In the Classroom

The lesson could be a presentation from you about the history of Peace Day and the theme for the year. You could sing a song about peace or watch videos of musicians who have used their artistry as a platform to promote peace or raise awareness.

Sing “I’ve Got Peace Like a River” as a class and then get into groups and create a new verse. The song relates peace, joy, and love to a river, ocean, and fountain. How is peace related to joy and love? Continue with the water theme or make the theme nature. What in nature makes you feel peaceful, joyful, and loving? Share with the class. Older students could learn the chords and play on the ukulele or recorder.

School-wide

My school programs involved each grade level performing one song, poem, speech piece and older classrooms would be in charge of the speeches and narration. One year every grade level performed a peace poem because the emphasis was on living together harmoniously.

Another year, every grade level performed a song from another part of the world because the emphasis was on global awareness and diversity. My older students introduced each grade level and had speeches, narrations, and poems to read. Some of the poems were student-created and some were ones that I found. We had a moment of silence and we spoke a pledge.

Community-wide

Peace Walk Logistics

Making the day of peace community-wide involved a peace walk. Our PE teacher had worked with the police department for other events so contacted them so that they would provide safe crossings when we crossed busy streets. I was always able to find a nearby park that was our destination and we would have our programs at those locations. We would invite families and the community and they would walk with us.

Homeroom Participation & Attire

I asked grade levels to consider homeroom contributions to the day with special peace themes. Some participated and some didn’t but some of their ideas were: Grade K-1 made tie-dye shirts to wear that day, make and carry origami peace cranes, make peace signs to carry on the walk, make peace necklaces to wear, create chalk drawings on the sidewalk route, and many more. Our school has a dress code and students were allowed to wear peace-themed shirts that day.

Peace Walk Alternatives

If you don’t have a park nearby, just creating a peace walk around the school area will work. Because of COVID, having a program outside would be ideal. But if that won’t work, perhaps a peace walk and then back to the classrooms to watch a presentation put together with each class having been recorded doing something special. Family and the community could be invited to this Zoom or Teams meeting.

Peace Music Activities, Lessons, and Resources

Objectives

  • The original UN objective was for nations to observe 24 hours of non-violence and ceasefire, both within and among all nations.
  • A school objective would be to raise awareness about peace and the need for peace in your classroom, school, community, state, country, and world.
  • Related to the 2021 theme of RECOVERING: “Celebrate peace by standing up against acts of hate online and offline, and by spreading compassion, kindness, and hope in the face of the pandemic, and as we recover.” (2021 Theme: Recovering better for an equitable and sustainable world, 2021.) Retrieved from https://www.un.org/en/observances/international-day-peace.

Activities

  • Peace Walk around your school
  • Peace Program with speakers, music, and other activities. (dance, art, poetry reading, etc.)
  • Peace visual art activities
  • Peace poetry Initiative
  • Engage in acts of kindness

Concurrent Learning in the Classroom

  • Musicians who use songs to send a peace message or inform about injustice
  • Civil Rights leaders’ peace walks, peaceful protests
  • Hate speech related to Covid

Subscribe to know the minute the next Oodles of Music arrives! Veterans Day, Halloween, December goodies, and more!

Peace Like a River Lesson Plans

Easy 4-Chord Ukulele Songs with C, F, G7, and Am

Inspiration

Feng E

Amina Khafizova

Born in (appox) 2010, Amina plays many different instruments. Here she is on the ukulele.

Blooket Game

Blooket game on identifying the chords C, F, G7, C7, and Am from diagrams and images of fingers. My kids LOVE this game. Here’s an entire blog post about the game!

(No login needed for students, just click “join a game” and it will take you to the game pin screen. Teachers need to create a free account.)

NEW! Blog page with ukulele storage ideas for HANGING, CART, and SHELVING. Also, common hardware and resource needs to get the job done!

Tuner provided by GuitarAPP.

Riptide

Stand By Me

Brown-Eyed Girl

Have You Ever Seen the Rain

Hawaiian Rollercoaster Ride

Next Ukulele Page for You: Ultimate Ukulele Chords That Take You Beyond the Basics


WITH—–How to Play G video
Songs: Low Rider (G), Dreams, (F, G) Ho Hey (C, F, Am, G) Long Drives by BoyWithUke (C, F, G, Am) Columbia, Mi Encanto (C, F, G), Earth Day (C, F, Am, G), Walking On Sunshine (C, F, G), Let It Be (C, F, G, Am), Bring U Down (G, F, Am, Dm), Another Brick In the Wall (C, Dm, F, G) Counting Stars (C, F, G, Am, Dm), Someone You Loved (C, G, Am, F, Dm), If I Didn’t Love You (F, G, Am, C), You Belong With Me (G, D, Am, C) MORE COMING SOON-THIS PAGE IS A WORK IN PROGRESS.

Easy Ukulele Songs for Beginners

An easy-to-use sequential ukulele curriculum that uses songs kids love from today’s hits to classics.

Here’s a sequential curriculum featuring popular, easy ukulele songs for beginners. The curriculum starts with easy-to-play single-chord play alongs, then on to two-chord songs and more.

Chords on this page: C, C6, C7, Dm, F, Am

Ukulele Inspiration


Ukulele History, Parts, Tuning

Ukulele Tuner

Tuner provided by GuitarAPP.

Ukulele Orff Song Pack

Integrate your ukulele method with Orff activities to provide a refresh and re-engagement to direct instruction! Check it out on TPT.

Ukulele and Orff integration for enrichment and engagement.

Fun Ukulele Games

Hot & Cold Ukulele Game

Objective: Find the hidden object by listening to the ukulele!

How to Play:

  1. One player hides an object while another steps out of the room.
  2. The seeker returns and searches for the hidden object.
  3. Ukulele players guide them using strumming: Use just one chord, maybe a new one.
    • Soft & Slow = Cold (far from the object)
    • Louder & Faster = Hot (closer to the object)
    • Very Loud & Fast = On Fire! (right next to it)
  4. The game ends when the object is found.
  5. Switch roles and play again!

Variations:

  • Try using different chords (e.g. F, Am) for hot vs. cold.
  • Try use a two chord pattern that repeats (F, C7)
  • Use dynamics only (no tempo change).

1-Chord Easy Ukulele Songs Using C6, C7, C, Am, and F

C6 A Super Easy Ukulele Chord

O My Ukulele

This charming song by Mr. DelGaudio uses the fabulous, open string C6 chord.

C7 Chord Ukulele Songs

Image of ukulele fingering for the C7 chord

A C7 Backing Track for Ukulele

Lime In the Coconut for Ukulele

Play along to the island breeze!

Island Breezes
Image to accompany Lime in the Coconut

C Chord Ukulele Songs

Image of the fingering for the C chord on ukulele

Ukulele Backing Track on C chord

Ten in a Bed-C Chord

Am Chord Ukulele Songs

Chord Order Idea: teach the F chord next (below) so that all students need to do for Am is lift their index finger.

Image of the fingering for the Am chord on the ukulele

An a minor Backing Track


Just for Me

Just had to throw this 2-chord song in the 1-chord section since we know C and Am!!!


F Chord Ukulele Songs

Image of the fingering for the F chord on the ukulele

The Beat Goes On on F chord

Backing Track on F chord

Make New Friends on F chord

2-Chord Ukulele Songs

Tutorial-Easy change from F to C7

F chord “rocks” DOWN to C7.

C7 chord “rocks” UP to F.

The Duck Song

This I, IV, V7 in F subs a uke tap for the Bb because…WHY NOT? 😎. And now, the cult classic-DUCK SONG!

Buckle My Shoe

Dream Baby

Deep In the Heart of Texas (Coming Back Soon)

Iko Iko with F and C chords

Angel by Pink Pantheress (from Barbie movie)

Here’s a 2-chord F and C7 resource presentation unit with Orff arrangement based on One Bottle of Pop round! Fun!

Best Day of My Life

3-Chord Ukulele Songs

Thunder-C, F, Am

Join the Oodles Weekly Newsletter for my best tips and tricks to SAVE YOU TIME!

You’ll be glad you joined!

Grab FREEBIES in the Teacher Resource Library, plus a once-a-week email full of the best, time-saving lesson plan ideas!

Good to Be Alive-C, F, Am

Sunflower-C, F, Am

Senorita-C, F, Am

Unstoppable by The Score

There’s a Dm in here but YOU CAN DO IT! Dm is just F with one more finger!!!

Ukulele songs make GREAT concert selections. This Concert How-To Checklist has lots of tips to help.

Unstoppable-F, Dm, Am

Your next ukulele page: Ukulele-G7

You’ll find a G7 how-to and songs with C/G7

  • C/G7 songs: La Cucaracha, Deep in the Heart of Texas, Hush Little Baby, Iko Iko