The Music for Singing Time 2022 for Come Follow Me Old Testament is available on the church’s website! With no lessons to prepare because of General Conference, I suggest doing a little planning for the upcoming year! You won’t regret it!
Find the most current year’s curriculum HERE.

You can find the direct link to Music For Singing Time 2022 HERE. These are all the Come Follow Me – Primary song suggestions for singing time this year.
How it Works
There are 3 suggested songs for each month of the year. If you want to teach all 3, you can. If you want to focus on 1, you can! You get to decide what works best for you and your primary and go from there.
Here are a few of my personal thoughts in order to try and fit it all in while keeping my sanity!
Plan your 2022 singing time schedule with your primary presidency!
After discussing it with the primary presidency, I’ve chosen one of the suggested songs for the months January – August that will be sung during the primary program (the program is suggested to be at the end of the year. My preference is the last Sunday in September – right before October General Conference!).
I made my song choices for each month based on what our primary knows LEAST, (or that I’ve never taught before) in order to bring in more variety to singing time (my choices are below).
To help aid in that decision, I LOVE LOVE LOVE this resource that Primary Singing created HERE. It charts what songs have been suggested with Come Follow Me over the last few years. Now you know what was suggested and when! This helps so much in choosing this year’s songs!

Because I always try to choose the most unknown songs, I frequently post words in singing time. Make sure to check out how I do that HERE.

With only 1 song to teach each month, I am able to keep up my current rotation:
- 2 weeks working on that month’s program song
- 1 week singing something seasonal or holiday (which a lot of times we need to prepare something to sing in sacrament meeting like on Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, Easter, Christmas, etc.)
- 1 week to review the songs we’ve learned for the year for the program
You can find more information on my monthly scheduling HERE if that helps.
Get 2022 Music for Singing Time home with a Digital Playlist

September/October is typically program review time for most primaries. Time permitting, choose one week during those months to take a break from program review and sing a suggested song (or two).
Then November and December I can teach as many of the suggested songs that I like while rotating in seasonal singing time lesson plans (like Thanksgiving and Christmas).
Stay organized in singing time!
To help you stay organized throughout the year, I have a 2022 Planner also COMING SOON. Each Sunday is blank so you can fill in whatever you need to in order to plan your singing time. Plan one week, month or the entire year at a time!

Want to take planning your singing time one step further? I have a Singing Time Schedule To-Go utilizing my Singing Time Planner! The current month’s planner is all filled in, complete with to-go lesson plans, visuals, words to post and more! Better yet, it’s in one spot to easily download and print. To access it, subscribe to my Singing Time Schedule Membership! Lots more details can be found here if you are interested:

Browse all my lesson plans that relate to 2022 Music for Singing Time Curriculum
I’ve linked all my lesson plans throughout my website below. I’ve bolded the songs that I’m tentatively planning to teach for the 2022 program.
January
February
March
- The Holy Ghost p. 105 – find my lesson plan HERE
- I Know My Father Lives p. 5 – find my lesson plan HERE*
- I Love to See the Temple p. 95 – find my lesson plan HERE**
*This is a repeat of January’s song that will be in the program
**This is a repeat of May’s song
August
September
- Kindness Begins with Me p. 145 – find my lesson plan HERE
- Keep the Commandments p. 146 – find my lesson plan HERE*
- I Will Walk with Jesus – find my lesson plan HERE**
*This is a repeat of April’s Song
**This is a repeat of May’s Song
October
- I Feel My Savior’s Love p. 74 – find my lesson plan HERE*
- I Hope They Call Me on a Mission p. 169 – find my lesson plan HERE
- Families Can Be Together Forever p. 188 – find my lesson plan HERE
*This is a repeat of August’s song
November
- Follow the Prophet p. 110 – find my lesson plan HERE*
- We Thank Thee, O God for a Prophet hymn #19 – find my lesson plan HERE
- I Want to Live the Gospel p. 148
*This is a repeat of February’s song
December
Choose what you want to teach
I LOVE that I get a choice as to what to teach in singing time with the Come Follow Me! I really try to teach anything that I’ve never taught or that I haven’t taught in a while. I’m on a mission to sing most of the Children’s Songbook before it gets changed!! And this helps SO SO much!!
I’ll also be working on lesson plans for ALL the songs listed above this year so if you’ve picked a song that I don’t have a lesson plan yet, don’t worry! I’ll have it by the time you need to teach it :).
But for those 2 songs each month that WON’T be taught for the program, they can still be sung in primary! Enter my 5-minute song! Check out more details HERE if you like!

If you have become familiar with Come Follow Me-Primary Old Testament, you’ll notice that there are song suggestions with most of the weekly primary lesson plans. I haven’t quite figured out a way to implement these extra songs in singing time. If you have suggestions on how you implement these extra songs in singing time, I’d love to hear!
Okay, on to more suggestions found in the Instructions for Singing Time…there are activities suggested to help you teach doctrine as well as the music. I’ve gone through my blog and found a few activities where I’ve demonstrated those suggestions (or similar ones). For a complete list of my entire blog, check out my Song Index tab HERE and Review Activities tab HERE.
Using Music to Teach Doctrine
Read related scriptures: For many of the songs in the Children’s Songbook and the hymnbook, references to related scriptures are listed. Help the children read some of these passages, and talk about how the scriptures are related to the song. You could also list a few scripture references on the board and invite the children to match each reference to a song or a verse from a song.
Fill in the blank: Write a verse of the song on the board with several key words missing. Then ask the children to sing the song, listening for the words that fill in the blanks. As they fill in each blank, discuss what gospel principles you learn from the missing words.
Quotations from Church leaders: Invite the children to listen to a quotation from a Church leader that teaches the same gospel principle as the Primary song. Ask them to raise their hand when they hear something that helps them understand the truth they are singing about. Ask them to share what they heard.
Testify: Bear brief testimony to the children of gospel truths found in the Primary song. Help the children understand that singing is one way they can bear testimony and feel the Spirit.
[I try to conclude every singing time with a BRIEF testimony of what I’ve been teaching]
Stand as a witness: Invite children to take turns standing and sharing what they learn from the song they are singing or how they feel about the truths taught in the song. Ask them how they feel as they sing the song, and help them identify the influence of the Holy Ghost.
Use pictures: Ask the children to help you find or create pictures that go with important words or phrases in the song. Invite them to share how the pictures relate to the song and what the song teaches. For example, if you are teaching the song “I Will Follow God’s Plan” (Children’s Songbook, 164–65), you could put pictures throughout the room depicting important words from the song (such as gift, heaven, home, earth, and birth). Ask the children to gather the pictures and hold them up in the correct order as you sing the song together.
Share an object lesson: You could use an object to inspire discussion about a song. For example, the song “Faith” (Children’s Songbook, 96–97) mentions a little seed. You could show the children a seed and talk about how we show faith when we plant a seed; this could lead to a discussion about ways we show faith in Jesus Christ, as described in the song.
Invite sharing of personal experiences: Help the children connect the principles taught in the song with experiences they have had with those principles. For example, before singing “I Love to See the Temple” (Children’s Songbook, 95), you could ask the children to raise their hands if they have seen a temple. Invite them to think as they sing about how they feel when they see a temple.
Ask questions: Ask the children to listen for answers to questions in song lyrics. This can lead to a discussion about the truths taught in the song. There are many questions you can ask as you sing songs. For example, you can ask the children what they learn from each verse in the song. You can also ask them to think of questions that the song answers.
Listen for answers: Ask the children to listen for answers to questions such as “who?” “what?” “where?” “when?” or “why?” For example, in the song “Baptism” (Children’s Songbook, 100–101), they could listen for who baptized Jesus and where, when, how, and why He was baptized. You could also ask the children to listen for key words or to count on their fingers how many times they sing a certain word.
Helping Children Learn and Remember Primary Songs
Children learn a song by hearing and singing it over and over again. Always sing the words of a new song to the children—don’t just read or recite them. This helps the children connect the melody to the words. After a song is taught, review it in a variety of fun ways throughout the year. Below are some ideas to help children learn and review songs:
Create posters: Display posters with the words from each verse or pictures that represent the words. As the children sing, cover up some of the words or pictures until they can sing the entire verse without the poster. You can also invite the children to help you create the posters.
Demonstrate the pitch: To help children learn the melody of a song, hold your hand in a horizontal position, and as you sing the words, move your hand up to indicate higher pitches and down to indicate lower pitches.
Echo: Invite the children to be your echo by repeating what you sing. Sing to the children a short phrase or a line, and then have them sing it back to you.
Use variation: Sing songs in a variety of ways, such as whispering, humming, clapping the beat, varying the tempo, or singing while sitting or standing. You could also make a cube out of paper and, on each side of the cube, write a different way to sing. Invite a child to roll the cube to decide how the children will sing the song.
Using Handbells in Primary (my FAVORITE!!)
Sing in groups: Give each class or individual one phrase to sing while standing, and then have them exchange phrases until each class or individual has had a turn singing each phrase.
Use hand actions: Invite the children to think of simple hand actions to help them remember the words and messages of a song. For example, when you sing the second verse of “My Heavenly Father Loves Me” (Children’s Songbook, 228–29), you could invite the children to point to their eyes, act like butterflies, and cup their hands behind their ears. Ask them to place their hands on their hearts as they sing “Yes, I know Heavenly Father loves me.”
Girls sing, boys sing: Draw a picture of a boy and a picture of a girl, and glue or tape the pictures onto separate sticks. While reviewing a song, hold up one of the pictures to indicate who should sing that part of the song.
Basket toss: Place numbered baskets or other containers at the front of the room—as many containers as there are verses of a particular song. Invite one of the children to toss a beanbag or crumpled piece of paper into or near a numbered container. Have the children sing the verse with the same number as the container.
Match a picture to a phrase: Write each line of a song on a different piece of paper, and find a picture that represents each line. Place the pictures on one side of the room and the papers on the other side. Sing the song, and ask the children to match the pictures to the words.
2 thoughts on “Music for Singing Time 2022”
Your link for primary singing doesn’t work.
Hi Cristal!
I checked the link and it appears to be working for me. I’m sorry for the hassle! Here’s the direct link if it helps:
https://www.primarysinging.com/cfm-primary-song-rotation/
~Camille