THE
FOLLOWING ARTICLE HAS BEEN TAKEN FROM THE MUSIC COUNCIL
OF AUSTRALIA WEBSITE
MUSIC
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
This is a summary
of research into the positive effects on academic,
mental functioning and social skills resulting from
a music education. The summary was assembled by the
Australian Music Association
Music is a wonderful
skill for any child, but new research shows how learning
music can help your child in so many more ways:
1.Improved reasoning
capacity and problem solving skills
2.Improve maths and language performance
3.Better memory
4.Greater social and team skills
Why should my
child learn music?
For many years,
we have believed that children should learn music
‘for music’s sake’, because music was an excellent
accomplishment and part of a well rounded, balanced
education. And so it is.
But these days
children are expected to learn so many more skills
and parents have begun to ask which subjects their
child could ignore or drop. The answer is: not music!
As every parent
knows, their child is a mixture of nature and nurture.
A newborn baby already has all his or her brain cells
and as the child develops he or she naturally builds
pathways between these cells or neurons. These pathways
(referred to as neural pathways) are there for life.
Learning music
from an early age enables those neural pathways to
grow in ways that can help your child maximise the
potential they were born with. Research shows that
playing music can make significant differences to
children’s abilities related to learning, memory and
social interactions.
Music is still
an excellent accomplishment, but it can also make
the difference for a child
So when should
a child start to learn music?
Any time is a
good time, but the earlier the better. Ages given
here are indicative, because children develop at different
paces. Your music teacher will be able to advise more
specifically for your child.
The important
thing is to match your child’s musical experiences
with their developmental stage and to establish playing
music as an ongoing part of their life.
From six months
to around three years:
musical experiences are important during these years.
Many teachers run group classes where children develop
rhythm, pitch, concepts such as high and low or fast
and slow, use their voices and internalise sounds.
This helps the child internalise the precepts of music
and prepares them for learning to play an instrument.
From around three
years to six years: children’s
brains and motor skills have now usually developed
sufficiently to begin to consider learning to play
instruments such as the violin, keyboard or piano.
The child’s ear is more fully developed, and they
are learning to master language and abstract concepts.
From six years
onwards: by now your
child’s fine motor skills have begun to develop and
they can master a more wider range of instruments,
such as a flute, percussion, guitar or trumpet. Now
an important consideration is also to find an instrument
that suits your child - for example, drums and percussion
require a strong sense of rhythm, brass and wind instruments
need well developed fine motor skills, and a string
instrument requires the ability to hear the note when
they tune and play. Music teachers can advise and
recommend the most appropriate instrument.
Everyone has musical
ability
It’s true. Every
child is born with musical ability, but if it’s not
tapped into early enough then it can fail to develop.
Being ‘unmusical’ is more likely to be an outcome
of poor training or lack of opportunity than it is
from lack of ability, and everyone has the capacity
to improve their musical skills.
Research published
in early 2001 indicates that all babies are born with
perfect pitch - it’s how they are able to recognise
their mother’s voice and to learn language. But if
they don’t learn to use their perfect pitch, they
then lose it. Early music lessons help a child to
retain that fundamental musical skill, which is also
so critical in learning a mother tongue as well as
foreign languages.
Playing music
increases memory and reasoning capacity, time management
skills and eloquence
A series of research
experiments in Hungary in the 1950s explored why children
studying at special music kindergarten and primary
schools had higher academic scores than those at the
mainstream schools. The studies concluded that learning
and playing music improved not just academic performance,
but also memory, reasoning, working as part of a group,
time management and the ability to think in the abstract.
Playing music
improves concentration, memory and self expression
A massive two-year
study in Switzerland run with 1200 children in more
than 50 classes scientifically showed how playing
music improved children’s reading and verbal skills
through improving concentration, memory and self expression.
Younger children who had three more music classes
per week and three fewer main curriculum classes made
rapid developments in speech and learned to read with
greater ease.
Other effects
revealed by the study showed that children learned
to like each other more, enjoyed school more (as did
their teachers) and were less stressed during the
various tests, indicating they were better able to
handle performance pressure.
Playing music
improves the ability to think
Ongoing research
at the University of California-Irvine and the University
of Wisconsin-Oshkosh demonstrate that learning and
playing music builds or modifies neural pathways related
to spatial reasoning tasks, which are crucial for
higher brain functions like complex maths, chess and
science. The first studies showed that listening to
a Mozart sonata temporarily improved a child’s spatial
abilities. Further studies compared children who had
computer lessons, children who had singing lessons,
children who learned music using a keyboard and children
who did nothing additional. The children who had had
the music classes scored significantly higher - up
to 35% higher - than the children who had computer
classes or did nothing additional.
Music training
improves verbal memory
A preliminary
study at The Chinese University of Hong Kong has shown
that adults who had had music training before the
age of 12 years had an improved ability to recall
spoken words - ie. verbal memory. The study tested
60 adults of which 30 who had had six years or more
of training with a Western musical instrument, and
the balance had some training through to none.
Learning music
helps under-performing students to improve
Researchers at
Brown University in the US discovered that children
aged 5-7 years who had been lagging behind in their
school performance had caught up with their peers
in reading and were ahead of them in maths after seven
months of music lessons. The children’s classroom
attitudes and behaviour ratings had also significantly
improved, and after a year of music classes were rated
as better than the children who had had no additional
classes.
Music students
are less likely to be delinquent
High school students
who participate in the performing arts, including
the school band program, are far less likely to be
involved with drugs, crime or have behavioural problems,
according to a longitudinal study being pursued in
the US. Called Champions of Change, the study is being
undertaken by a number of researchers including those
at Harvard, Stanford and Columbia. This finding is
supported by the Texas Commission on Drug and Alcohol
Abuse which reported in 1998 that ‘secondary students
who participated in band or orchestra reported the
lowest lifetime and current use of all substances’
(alcohol, drugs, tobacco).
For more information
about any of this research please contact the Australian
Music Association or see the website www.australianmusic.asn.au
How can I find
a music class for my child?
There are many
easy ways to find a music teacher for your child.
Try these:
Ask at your child’s
school to see if they have a music program or can
recommend a local music teacher or private music school
or studio.
Contact your local
musical instrument retailer who will know who the
local music teachers, studios and schools are.
Each State has
a music teachers association, which can provide lists
of teachers near you.
Look in the newspapers
and Yellow Pages for music studios and schools offering
private and group classes for children of all ages.