A song whose purpose is to educate.

It need not be strictly educational (for instance, in the context of a work of fiction, it may also serve to further the plot).

Educational songs are expected to crop up a lot in [[ScienceShow science shows]] or [[EdutainmentShow edutainment shows]]. A special case is when the educational song happens to be a ProtestSong: these tend to be crash courses in political theory, economics, philosophy, or other subjects many find heavy going. A HistoricalBiographySong is usually not intended as an educational song in the usual sense and may be heavy on the ArtisticLicenseHistory, but may have educational value.

OlderThanTheyThink, given that there are OlderThanRadio examples of recorded educational songs and many examples written down are much older than that.

Often takes the form of a ListSong. SuperTrope to EarthSong and AlphabetSong, and often CountingSong.
----
!!Examples

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Anime]]
* ''Anime/MomotarosDivineSeaWarriors'' has a long musical number in which the animals sing "The Song of AIUEO", a RealLife traditional song children sing when learning the Japanese alphabet.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Asian Animation]]
* While [[EarlyInstallmentWeirdness earlier episodes]] of ''Animation/PleasantGoatFunClass'' weren't guaranteed to have a song at the end, the producers eventually decided to stick with having a musical piece as the last segment of each episode to reinforce the lesson being given (e.g. songs about the atmosphere and the water cycle in the season ''The Earth Carnival'' and songs about countries like Australia, Japan, and Mexico in the season ''Travel Around the World'').
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Films — Live-Action]]
* The "Galaxy Song" in ''Film/MontyPythonsTheMeaningOfLife'' is surprisingly educational for a BigLippedAlligatorMoment in a Creator/MontyPython film.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
* The various songs at the end of every episode of ''Series/BillNyeTheScienceGuy''.
* In ''Series/HorribleHistories'' (the live-action show), there is plenty of these.
* Naturally songs from [[EdutainmentShow children's education shows]].
* Songs on ''Series/SesameStreet'', ''Series/TheElectricCompany1971'', ''Series/TheElectricCompany2009'', and ''Series/SquareOneTV'', [[EdutainmentShow obviously]].
* The ''Series/SesameStreet'' GreatestHitsAlbum ''Music/SesameStreetPlatinumAllTimeFavorites'', which was added to the UsefulNotes/NationalRecordingRegistry in 2014, has several of these:
** "Bein' Green", "Fuzzy and Blue (and Orange)" and "We Are All Earthlings" are both about accepting yourself and that everybody is different, but we are all people on the same Earth.
** " 'C' Is For Cookie" is about the fact that the letter "c" is used for the word cookie.
** "One Fine Face", sang by Ernie and Elmo, about the different parts of the face.
** "Put Down The Duckie" is about focusing on what you want to do and not being distracted by other things.
* Series/RockNLearn videos are basically videos set to these.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Music]]
* The various children's songs about the alphabet, colours and numbers.
* Music/HankGreen has these with "Protons and Neutrons", "Strange Charm", "Phineas Gage", "The Universe is Weird" and then some.
* The most popular song of 1959 was "The Battle of New Orleans" by Music/JohnnyHorton, which was a song that thought about the same battle in 1815 (with some embellishment for comedic effect). The song was actually most popular with teens and college students, which is impressive because it was a folk-country song about a topic they'd learned about in history years ago and it was during the height of the golden age of rock and roll.
* OlderThanRadio is "Low Bridge" (Fifteen Years/Miles On The Erie Canal) from 1906, an educational song about the Erie Canal. It was adopted almost a century later by ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'' as "Panama Canal" and the latter is much better known now due to ParodyDisplacement (and the song having become obscure over the decades), though there are some who might know the original version from ''WesternAnimation/VeggieTales'', where Pa Grape covered it.
* [[https://icanhasmath.bandcamp.com/ Icanhasmath]] is a musical group that produces songs themed around algebra and calculus, most of which are quite [[SugarWiki/AwesomeMusic awesome]].
* Tom Glazer and Dottie Evans' ''Space Songs'' album had a variety of children's songs about science, with a focus on astronomy. You can read the CD booklet [[http://www.blankpub.com/science/SS-CD_booklet.pdf here]].
* Music/TheyMightBeGiants made a few of these, even before their educational albums ''Here Come the [=ABCs=]'', ''Here Come the [=123s=]'', and ''Here Comes Science''.
** "Meet James Ensor", is a song that provides biographical information about "Belgium's famous painter".
** "James K. Polk" is an autobiographical song about the US president famously nicknamed the "Napoleon of the Stump".
** "Mammal" features lyrics that drop all sorts of trivia about mammals, including an obscure reference to the extinct infraclass Allotheria.
** "Why Does the Sun Shine?" is their famous cover of a 1959 educational song about the Earth's sun. For ''Here Comes Science'', they released an updated, more scientifically-accurate song called "Why Does the Sun Really Shine?"
** "The Bloodmobile" is a song about the circulatory system created for an exhibit at the Franklin Institute Museum in Philadelphia, PA.
* Music/TomLehrer also created some of these including "The Elements", "New Math", and "Silent E"; several of the word-themed songs furnished the material for animated segments on ''Series/TheElectricCompany1971''.
* Music/LouisArmstrong's "Now You Has Jazz" is a song that describes how {{Jazz}} is constructed.
* ''Music/PeterAndTheWolf'' by Sergei Prokofiev, which is a classical composition accompanied by a storyteller telling a fairy tale. The educational part is in the introduction, where the narrator explains which instrument portrays which character. Generations of children have learned to identify the different instruments in the orchestra thanks to this musical tale.
* Renald Francoeur produces rare catchy pop/hip-hop examples of this trope that are released by Marbles the Brain Store. Notable mentions include [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_E2CNZIlVIg "Tour the States"]] and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZFF8EuaGjM "Tour the World."]]
* ''The Young Person's Guide To The Orchestra'' by Benjamin Britten is another classical composition where a narrator explains how a classical orchestra is constructed by introducing all the instruments as characters.
* "Word Crimes" by Music/WeirdAlYankovic manages to turn a "Blurred Lines" parody into a lesson on proper grammar.
* Some ''[[Music/HelloProject [=MiniMoni=]]]'' songs teach educational concepts due to the group being aimed at a younger demographic of kids than ''Morning Musume''. For instance, "Rock n' Roll Kenchoushozaichi" teaches the names of all 48 prefectures of Japan, and "[=MiniMoni=] Kazoeuta" teaches how to count to twenty, with the "Ofuro version" having an entire verse where they count to twenty in English.
* Many of Music/{{Dalriada}}'s songs are about events in Hungary's history, and at times the band have outright posted information about the events that inspired individual songs with a link to a video of the song.
* The BBC's ''Time and Tune'' Series teaches music theory along with various educational bits related to the theme of each series as a whole. For example, in the Viking themed series ''Sea Thunder'', "Holiday in Asgard" lists the Viking Gods who the days of the week are named after- [[MyFriendsAndZoidberg and Loki]], and a little bit of mythology related to each one.
* Music/{{Numberock}}: The vast majority of their music library is intended to teach children about mathematical topics and tricks, though there are sometimes other subjects presented.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Theatre]]
* Parodied by ''Theatre/AvenueQ'' and the infamous "The Internet Is For Porn".
* ''Theatre/MaratSade'': The song "Fifteen Glorious Years" is intended to bring Jean-Paul Marat "up to date" on the history of France in the ensuing years between his murder in 1793 and the year in which [[PrisonerPerformance the Charenton inmates are performing their own play]] about his death, 1808.
* "Little Known Facts" from ''Theatre/YoureAGoodManCharlieBrown'' has Lucy teaching Linus some... questionable "facts" to say the least.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Radio]]
* ''Radio/NewDynamicEnglish'' has Jazz Chants, that consists of jazz music with dialogues (except for one).
* ''[[Radio/IntergalacticalMagicalRadio The Wacky Musical Adventures of Ronald McDonald: Intergalactical Magical Radio]]'': "Be Cheerful, Be Perky" consists of Birdie giving advice on how to be polite and well-behaved.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Video]]
* ''WebVideo/EpicRapBattlesOfHistory'': Though it's first and foremost meant as entertainment all the battles provide references to the [[HistoricalDomainCharacter historical characters]] and/or fictional characters featured in the song. To understand all the references you often have to consult an encyclopaedia or look up more about them.
* ''WebAnimation/{{Storybots}}'' is a collection of songs about various educational subjects, such as the alphabet and body parts, animated to feature the titular robots.
* ''[[WebVideo/{{Underknown}} What If?]]'' has the episode "What If Presents: The Solar System Song".
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'' had lots of these, including songs for [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vvy0wRLD5s8 all the U.S. presidents]] up to UsefulNotes/BillClinton, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sNUDDaEOvuY the 50 states and their capitals,]] and of course, the famous [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IDtdQ8bTvRc Nations of the World]] song.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Arthur}}'' had a song called "In My Africa" in the episode of the same name that teaches the names of all the countries in Africa.
* ''WesternAnimation/DanielTigersNeighborhood'' has at least one of these per episode.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Histeria}}'' presented educational songs about all kinds of topic: the plays of Creator/WilliamShakespeare, American presidents, the Russian Revolution, the spice routes, the Tudor monarchy...
* "Langtree's Lament" from ''WesternAnimation/OverTheGardenWall'' teaches her students to count and the alphabet.
* ''WesternAnimation/PinkyAndTheBrain'' featured songs about the U.S. states, and about areas of the human brain.
* The songs in ''WesternAnimation/SchoolhouseRock'' are all intended to educate children about certain topics.
** Parodied in ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' episode "The Day The Violence Died" where the cast watches an episode of "Schoolhouse Rock" which parodies "I'm Just A Bill" from the show, but with more twisted lyrics about how an amendment is added to the US Constitution.
** ''WesternAnimation/AmericanDad'' also spoofed the style of this show with a satirical educational song about Oliver North.
* Some of Rockapella's full-length songs on ''Series/WhereInTheWorldIsCarmenSandiego'' used when the show ran short. There was one about the [[TopTenList five largest]] islands in the world.[[/folder]]
----