|
WHY MUSIC MATTERS:
MUSIC BENEFITS EVERY ASPECT OF DEVELOPMENT
Music helps us to make sense of
the world. Through sound we can give an expressive shape to our experience.
It is a pleasure and a joy for its own sake. The National Curriculum for
music says, "As an integral part of culture, past and present, it helps
pupils understand themselves and relate to others, forging important links
between the home, school and the wider world."
- Recent research emphasizes the benefits of
learning music: Music aids the development
of speech. Singing simple songs teaches your child how language is constructed.
According to Jessica Pitt from the Pre-School Music Association: "Babies
seem to learn best when songs are experienced through their bodies.
Movement and music greatly enhance acquisition of language."
- Music helps children to learn math. "When
children learn rhythm, they are learning ratios, fractions and proportions,"
says Professor Gordon Shaw, University of California, Irvine, after
his study of seven-year-olds in Los Angeles.
- Music enhances social skills. "Children who
take part in music develop higher levels of social cohesion and understanding
of themselves and others, and the emotional aspect of musical activities
seems to be beneficial for developing social skills like empathy," says
Dr. Alexandra Lamont, Lecturer in the Psychology of Music at the University
of Keele.
- Music enhances your child's intellectual development.
Dr. Frances Rauscher, from the University of Wisconsin, says that music
"helps improve children's ability to reason abstractly, by strengthening
neural firing patterns of the brain that are relevant to both musical
and spatial cognition."
- Most music teachers will tell you that music
encourages self-expression and self confidence. As a non-verbal language,
music can convey a complexity of emotions, and offers a means of expression
to a shy or diffident child who finds it hard to communicate through
speech.
|