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WHY
STUDY MUSIC?
- The College Board identifies the
arts as one of the six basic academic subject area students
should study in order to succeed in college.
- Secondary students who
participated in band or orchestra reported the lowest lifetime
and current use of all substances (alcohol, tobacco, illicit
drugs).
- Students who report consistent
high levels of involvement in instrumental music over the
middle and high school years show “significantly higher
levels of mathematics proficiency by grade 12.”
- Physician and biologist Lewis
Thomas studied the undergraduate majors of medical school
applicants. He found that 66% of music majors who applied to
music school were admitted, the highest percentage of any
group. 44% of biochemistry majors were admitted.
- A research team exploring the
link between music and intelligence reported that music
training is far superior to computer instruction in
dramatically enhancing children’s abstract reasoning skills,
the skills necessary for learning math and science.
- A University of California
(Irvine) study showed that after eight months of keyboard
lessons, preschoolers showed a 46% boost in their spatial
reasoning IQ.
- A McGill University study found
that pattern recognition and mental representation scores
improved significantly for students given piano instruction
over a three-year period. They also found that self-esteem and
musical skills measures improved for the student given piano
instruction.
Sources:
1.
Academic
Preparation for College: What Students Need to Know and Be Able to
Do, [still in use], The College Board, New York
2.
Texas
Commission on Drugs and Alcohol Abuse Report. Reported in the
Houston Chronicle, January 1998.
3.
Catterall,
James S., Richard Chapleau, and John Iwanaga. “Involvement in
the Arts and Human Development: General
Involvement and Intensive Involvement in Music and Theater
Arts” Los Angeles, CA: The Imagination Project at UCLA Graduate
School of Education and Information Studies, 1999.
4.
As
reported in “The Case for Music in the Schools,” Phi Delta
Kappan, Febuary 1994.
5.
Shaw,
Rauscher, Levine, Wright, Dennis and Newcomb, “Music training
causes long-term enhancement of preschool children’s
spatial-temporal reasoning,” Neurological Research, Vol. 19,
February 1997.
6.
Rauscher,
Shaw, Levine, Ky and Wright, “Music and Spatial Task
Performance: A Causal Relationship,” University of California,
Irvine, 1994
Costa-Giomi, E. (1998,April). The McGill Piano Project: Effects of
three years of piano instruction on children’s cognitive
abilities, academic achievement and self-esteem. Paper presented
at the meeting of the Music Educators National Conference,
Phoenix, AZ. |