Ministry of Education songs, children's songs, and nursery rhymes. The heart of Japan passed down in song.
Here are classic and popular songs from Ministry of Education shoka, children’s songs, and nursery rhymes recommended by our studio staff.
It’s a nostalgic Japanese playlist that will be sung for generations.
- Nostalgic Children’s Songs, Folk Songs, and Nursery Rhymes: The Heart of Japan Passed Down Through Song
- [Japanese Folk and Regional Songs] A Collection of Beloved Masterpieces from Across Japan, Brimming with Local Pride
- [Warabe-uta] Beloved Classic Songs Passed Down Through Generations
- [Minna no Uta] Beloved Across Generations: Nostalgic Classics and Popular Songs
- Nursery Rhyme Popular Song Rankings [2025]
- Popular Ranking of Ministry of Education Shoka Songs [2025]
- Japanese shoka (school songs). Nostalgic tunes, songs of the heart.
- Nursery rhymes you’ll want to sing at karaoke: classic and popular songs everyone can enjoy together.
- [Preschool] Recommended choral pieces for 3-year-olds
- [Children's Songs] Cute songs recommended for childcare. List of popular nursery rhymes.
- Songs for every season: classic and popular tunes of spring, summer, autumn, and winter.
- [Childcare] Fun Songs for 2-Year-Olds to Sing! Recommended Song Collection
- Beautiful Folk Songs Passed Down in Miyagi Prefecture: A Collection of Masterpieces that Play the Heart of the Hometown
Monbushō Shōka, Children’s Songs, and Nursery Rhymes: The Heart of Japan Passed Down in Song (21–30)
Seven-year-old child

This is a song that brings back the scene that used to play from schools and the like around the time evening fell, when children were still absorbed in play and it was about time to head home.
In the lyrics, the “seven” has long been debated—whether it refers to seven crows or to age seven—and even today there are various theories about this traditional children’s song.
We Look Up to You with Respect

A song often sung at graduation ceremonies and the like.
When I listen to this piece, I’m filled with a mix of feelings—nostalgia and a touch of loneliness—and it brings back memories of those days.
It doesn’t seem to be sung much at recent graduation ceremonies for younger people, so I’d love for them to go back to the basics and sing it.
SMAP also sang it back in the day.
Ministry of Education Songs, Children's Songs, and Nursery Rhymes: The Heart of Japan Passed Down in Song (31–40)
I found a hint of autumn

The lyrics of “Chiisai Aki” are profoundly sad.
Phrases like the north-facing windowpane, the fogginess, and dissolving milk with vacant eyes layer images of loneliness.
Little by little, the cold sets in, and the song seems to verbalize the coming of autumn as it is felt.
Koinobori higher than the roof

This is a song filled with the wish that boys and fathers live in good health on May 5th, Children’s Day, during the Boys’ Festival (Tango no Sekku).
At that time, the father was the main pillar of the household, and the mother, as a woman, does not appear in the song.
It reflects the social background of that era.
Urashima Taro

It’s a song about a mysterious tale in which a fisherman who worked earnestly in his village every day saves a turtle, and as thanks is taken to the Dragon Palace under the sea.
It teaches the lessons that joyful times pass in the blink of an eye, and that failing to keep a promise can lead to disastrous consequences.
Red Shoes

During the wartime era, foreigners were considered enemies and, even for adults, beings whose language they could not understand.
In the time when people called foreigners ‘ijinsan,’ this song vividly conveys how children—who had never actually seen a foreigner—felt that they were frightening.
red dragonfly

A red dragonfly is flying in the evening at the end of summer.
Little by little, night is falling earlier, and the time to go home is drawing near.
This song captures a nostalgic feeling—seeing a red dragonfly and recalling the times we went home with the orange sunset at our backs.





