Reasons
to
Study Music Music lessons have been shown to improve a child's
performance
in school. After eight months of keyboard lessons, preschoolers tested
showed a
46% boost in their spatial IQ, which is crucial for higher brain
functions
such as complex mathematics.
-Frances
Rauscher, Ph.D., Gordon Shaw, Ph.D. University of California, Irvine
Students with coursework/experience in music performance scored 51 points higher on the verbal portion of the SAT and 39 points higher on the math portion of the
SAT
than
students
with no coursework or experience in the arts.
- Profiles
of SAT and Achievement Test Takers, The College Board, complied by the
Music Educators National Conference, 1995
Mozart's
Piano
Sonata K448 was found to significantly increase spatial scores of
college
students on IQ tests when the Sonata was listened to for 10 minutes,
dubbed the
"Mozart Effect."
-From
"Nature,"
copyright 1993, University of California Press
Disadvantaged
preschoolers display dramatic improvements in spatial reasoning ability
after music training.
-Drs.
Rauscher
and Shaw, University of California, Irvine.
There
is
a
direct coorelation between improved SAT scores and the length of time
spent
studying the arts. Those who studied the arts four or more years scored
59
points
higher
on verbal and 44 points higher on math portions of the SAT than
students
with no coursework or experience in the arts.
-Profiles
of SAT and Achievement Test Takers, The College Board, complied by the
Music Educators National Conference, 1995
A Gallup Survey on American's attitudes towards music revealed the following:
93% of Gallup Survey respondents agree music is part of a well-rounded
education.
86% feel all schools should offer instrumental music as part of regular
curriculum.
88% believe music helps a child's overall intellectual development.
70% believe school music program participation corresponds to better
grades
and test scores.
85% believe communities should provide financial resources to support
these
programs.
-1994 Gallup Survey
Seventy-one
percent of respondents in a Gallup Survey think music education should
be mandated by states.
-1994
Gallup
Survey
The
U.S.
Department
of Labor issued a report in 1991 urging schools to teach for the future
workplace. The skills they recommend (working in teams,
communication,
self-esteem, creative thinking, imagination, and invention) are exactly
those learned in school music and arts education programs.
March
1996
marked the second anniversary of the release of the "National Standards
for Arts Education," as well as the recognition of the arts, among other
academic
disciplines, as a core subject.
Parents
are
crucial in helping implement the "National Standards for Arts
Education"
by assessing the school's arts education program and teacher
qualification;
evaluating
the community's cultural assets; and forming an arts education
coalition.
- "What
Parents
Can Do," published by Music Educators National Conference and the
National
PTA
Today's
music
students are more self-motivated, interested in technology, and are
better
musicians than students two decades ago.
-1995
survey
conducted by the Music Teachers National Association.
The
College
Board identifies the arts as one of the six basic academic subject
areas
students should study in order to succeed in college.
-The
College
Board, New York, 1983
The
very
best
engineers and technical designers in the Silicon Valley industry are,
nearly
without exception, practicing musicians.
- The
Center
for the Arts in the Basic Curriculum, New York, 1989
Physician
and biologist Lewis Thomas collected information about the
undergraduate
majors of medical school applicants. He found that sixty-six percent of
music
majors who
appied to medical school were admitted, the highest percentage of any
group.
Forty-four percent of biochemistry majors were admitted.
- Phi Delta
Kappan, February 1994
New Gallup Survey Highlights Strong Support for Music Education
An
overwhelming
number of Americans believe music is an important part of a
well-rounded
education, according the 1997 "American Attitudes Towards Music"
poll
conducted
by the Gallup Organization. Not only does this survey come on the heels
of the latest scientific study showing the intellectual benefits of
music
training
on
children,
but its findings suggest that American attitudes have been affected by
this mounting research. A study published earlier this year in the
scientific
journal
Neurological
Research found that children with music training showed significantly
greater
improvement in their spatial temporal reasoning skills, skills needed
for
learning
math and science, than their peers who were given like amounts of
computer
training.
Music Involvement in Education
Given
that
Americans recognize the importance of offering music education in
schools,
almost 9 in 10 definitely agree that music helps a child's overall
intellectual
development.
The poll found that 70% of respondents believe music education should
be
mandated by the states to ensure that children receive music exposure.
In
addition,
since 1992 20% more Americans believe music should be a part of a
school
program.
An
overwhelming
9 in 10 agree that music is a part of a well-rounded education, and
88%,
up 4% from 1992, agree that schools should offer instrumental music
instruction
as part of the regular curriculum. Further supporting the schools
influence
in exposing children to music, the poll reveals that most current and
former
players
first
learned to play a musical instrument at school. Today 59% of children
aged
12-17 first learned to play an instrument at school, compared with 26%
fifty
years ago.
New SAT Data Released
Once
again
data released from the College Board 1997 Profile of College-Bound
Seniors
shows students who participate in arts education courses score higher on
the SAT's
than those who do not. The improvement continues to be more pronounced
with increased years of participation.
Irvine,
CA
(February 28, 1997) A research team exploring the link between music
and
intelligence reports that music training -- specifically piano
instruction
-- is far
superior
to computer instruction in dramatically enhancing children's abstract
reasoning
skills necessary for learning math and science.
The new
findings,
published in the February 1997 issue of Neurological Research, are the
result of a two-year experiment with preschoolers, led by psychologist
Dr.
Frances
Rauscher of the University of Wisconsin at Oshkosh and physicist Dr.
Gordon
Shaw of the University of California at Irvine. As a follow-up to their
groundbreaking
studies indicating how music can enhance spatial-reasoning ability, the
researchers set out to compare the effects of musical and non-musical
training
on
intellectual
development.