MUSIC
ARTICLES
©2022 The Music School, Inc.
Music
Teacher
Expertise
is
a
Critical
Factor
in
Student
Learning.
Research
indicates
that
teachers
of
all
subjects
--
including
music
--
who
are
more
experienced
and
educated
are
more
effective
in
the
classroom.
Consequently,
students
learn
more
from
them.(Source:
Paying
for
Public
Education:
New
Evidence
on
How and Why Money Matters, by Ronald Ferguson, 1991)
Music
Students
Are
Scoring.
Music
students
are
outperforming
non-music
students
on
the
Scholastic
Aptitude
Test
(SAT).
College-
bound
seniors
with
coursework
or
experience
in
music
performance
scored
52
points
higher
on
the
verbal
portion
and
37
points
higher
on
the
math
portion
of
the
SAT
than
students
with
no
coursework
or
experience
in
the
arts.(Source:
The
College
Board,
September
1997)
Music
Is
Beating
Computers
at
Enhancing
Early
Childhood
Development.
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.
Learning
music
at
an
early
age
causes
long-term
enhancement
of
spatial-
temporal
reasoning.(Source:
Frances
Rauscher,
Ph.D.,
Gordon
Shaw,
Ph.D.,
University
of
California,
Irvine, 1997)
Music
Enhances
Linguistic
Skills
.Music
--
specifically
song
--
is
one
of
the
best
training
grounds
for
babies
learning
to
recognize
the
tones
that
add
up
to
spoken
language.(Source:
Sandra
Trehub,
University of Toronto, 1997)
America
Is
A
Country
Full
Of
Music-Makers.
113
million,
or
53%,
of
Americans
over
the
age
of
12
are
current
or
former
music
makers.(Source:
1997
"American
Attitudes
Towards
Music"
poll
conducted by the Gallup Organization)
Americans
Say
Schools
Should
Offer
Instrumental
Music
Instruction
as
part
of
the
regular
curriculum.
88%
of
respondents
indicated
this
in
a
1997
"American
Attitudes
Towards
Music"
Gallup
poll.(Source: Music Trades, September 1997)
Scientists,
Therapists
Agree:
Music
Heals
More
Than
Just
The
Spirit.
Music
benefits
older
adults.
Active
music-making
positively
affects
the
biology
and
behavior
of
Alzheimer's
patients.(Source:
Music
Making
and
Wellness
Project,
a
study
conducted
at
the
University of Miami)
The
Window
Of
Opportunity
For
Studying
Music
is
between
the
ages
of
three
and
ten.
This
is
the
time
when
we
are
the
most
receptive
to
and
able
to
process
music.(Source:
Newsweek,
February 19, 1996)
Studying
Music
Strengthens
Students'
Academic
Performance.
Rhode
Island
studies
have
indicated
that
sequential,
skill-building
instruction
in
art
and
music
integrated
with
the
rest
of
the
curriculum
can
greatly
improve
children's
performance
in
reading
and
math.(Source:
"Learning
Improved
by
Arts
Training"
by
Martin
Gardiner,
Alan
Fox,
Faith
Knowles,
and
Donna
Jeffrey,
Nature, May 23, 1996)
Music
and
Spatial
Task
Performance:
A
Causal
Relationship.
Music
lessons,
and
even
simply
listening
to
music,
can
enhance
spatial
reasoning
performance,
a
critical
higher-brain
function
necessary
to
perform
complex
tasks
including
mathematics.(Source:
Frances
Fauscher,
Ph.D.,
Gordon
Shaw,
Ph.D., University of California, Irvine, 1994)
Music
Is
One
of
Our
Greatest
Economic
Exports.
"The
arts
are
an
economic
plus
--
second
only
to
aerospace
as
our
most
lucrative
national
export."(Source:
Michael
Greene
of
The
National
Academy
of Recording Arts and Sciences)
Classical
Music's
Traditional
Audience
Is
Graying.
By
the
year
2030,
approximately
half
of
our
nation's
population
will
be
over
65
years
of
age.
Music
educators
have
the
power
to
make
Classical
music
matter
again
to
young
people.(Source:
Chamber
Music,
February 1998; a publication of Chamber Music America)
The
Mozart
Effect
Doesn't
Increase
General
Intelligence!
Best
Way
to
Achieve
Long-Term
Benefits
is
by
Music
Study
and
Music-
Making.
The
“Mozart
Effect”,
reported
as
an
increase
of
intelligence
after
briefly
listening
to
Mozart,
is
by
far
the
most
well-known
and
sensational
finding
in
music
research
in
the
public
mind.
At
the
same
time,
it
is
the
most
misunderstood.
Trumpeted
in
the
mass
media
as
a
way
to
increase
general
intelligence,
it
does
no
such
thing.
Francis
Rauscher
and
Gordon
Shaw
first
reported
in
1993
that
10
minutes
of
listening
to
a
Mozart
sonata
for
two
pianos
increased
the
ability
of
college
students
to
solve
spatial-temporal
problems.
For
example,
subjects
had
to
imagine
that
a
single
sheet
of
paper
had
been
folded
several
times
in
certain
ways
and
then
various
cuts
made
with
a
scissors.
They
had
to
then
predict
what
the
pattern
of
cut-outs
would
look
like
when
the
paper
was
unfolded.
This
test
requires
mentally
keeping
track
of
the
sequence
of
events
in
space.
Rauscher
and
Shaw
specifically
pointed
out
that
the
effect
lasted
only
10-15
minutes
and
worked
only
for
spatial-temporal
problems,
not for other aspects of intelligence.
The
public's
belief
of
long
term
effects
in
general
intelligence
was
fed
by
simplistic
reports
in
the
media
combined
with
its
tendency
to
believe
in
“cognitive
bargains”,
i.e.,
getting
a
big
boost
in
mental
processes
without
expending
much
effort.
The
Mozart
Effect
is
more
important
for
researchers
than
for
any
practical
applications.
Long
term
benefits
from
music
are
best
achieved
by
intensive
study
and music-making.
Music
Linked
to
Reduced
Criminality
Martin
Gardiner
of
Brown
University
recently
reported,
at
a
national
arts
education
meeting
in
Oklahoma
City
,
the
results
of
analyzing
a
large
scale
data
base.
The
data
base
included
information
gathered
over
a
period
of
many
years
for
more
than
a
thousand
residents
of
Rhode
Island
.
Tracking
people
from
birth
through
the
age
of
thirty,
Gardiner
checked
the
relationship
between
arrest
records
of
teen-agers
and
their degree of involvement in music.
Gardiner
found
that
the
greater
the
involvement
in
music,
the
lower
the
arrest
record.
Teens
who
had
music
education
were
less
likely
to
get
into
trouble
than
students
who
didn't.
However,
those
who
also
were
involved
in
playing
a
musical
instrument
had
even
fewer
brushes
with
the
law.
Those
who
had
the
most
experience,
including
good
sight-reading
ability,
had
a
negligible
arrest
record.
This
research,
still
in
progress,
was
funded
by
the
International
Foundation for Music Research (IFMR).
Musical
Brain
-
Special
Brain
Area
DIscovered
for
Reading
Music
Scores
Music
is
wrongly
considered
to
be
mere
entertainment
and
often
regarded
as
an
educational
frill.
However,
research
has
shown
that
humans
are
born
with
musical
capabilities,
so
music
is
part
of
human
nature.
This
is
particularly
evident
in
research
that
has
shown
how
the
human
brain
processes
music.
Recently,
neuroscientists
have
discovered
an
area
in
the
brain
that
is devoted to reading music scores.
T.
Nakada
and
his
co-workers
at
the
University
of
California
and
the
Niigata
Brain
Research
Institute
in
Japan
applied
brain-imaging
techniques
to
people
who
could
read
a
musical
score.
They
compared
brain
activity
during
score
reading
and
also
during
reading
language.
Reporting
in
the
journal
NeuroReport
(1998),
Nakada
and
colleagues
found
regions
of
the
brain
that
were
involved
in
both
types
of
reading.
However,
most
importantly,
they
also
discovered
a
brain
area
that
was
activated
only
during
reading
musical
scores.
This
is
near
the
visual
part
of
the
brain
in
the
right
hemisphere.
The
findings
reveal
that
the
human
brain
is
specialized
for music and therefore the human brain is a “musical brain”.