Music Education Important For Children

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Songs are a part of everyone’s life. You listen to them on the radio, they make your favorite movies more dramatic and billions of music CDs have been sold in the past year.

I believe music should be a fundamental part of a child’s education. E. Glenn Schellenberg from the University of Toronto, researched and wrote a paper on how “Music Lessons Enhance IQ.”

After experimenting with 144 children, he concluded that the children who took voice and keyboard lessons significantly improved their IQ scores over those who did not.

Schellenberg quotes Huttenlocker (2002): “Music lessons involve long periods of focused attention, daily practice, reading musical notation, memorization of extended musical passages, learning about a variety of musical structures (e.g., intervals, scales, chords, chord progressions), and progressive mastery of technical (i.e., fine-motor) skills and the conventions governing the expression of emotions in performance.

“This combination of experiences could have a positive impact on cognition, particularly during the childhood years when brain development is highly plastic and sensitive to environmental influence.”

There are many opportunities in our area to experience music – from local school performances to professional orchestras and theaters.

They can enjoy Symphony of the Mountains; Paramount Center for the Arts, including its summer concert series, Tunes at Noon; Barter Theatre; and the choirs of the Mountain Empire Children’s Choral Academy.

This holiday season, be sure to make every effort you can to support these wonderful musical programs.

Rachel Grunstra
Bristol, Va.

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Flag Comment Posted by captainkona on November 22, 2008 at 2:34 pm

“Music Education Important For Children”

Yes it is. Music is the voice of the soul. It creates happiness where none exists, it brings people together where they otherwise wouldn’t meet.

Musicians are often some of the wisest among us. Music opens the mind, something American is severely lacking in. Open minds.

Fine letter, well done.

Flag Comment Posted by Martin Walker on November 22, 2008 at 10:42 am

It can’t be overemphasized that music study and education should be an important aspect childhood development.

Why music speaks to us, compells us and drives us is still mostly a mystery. But the connections between music and intellectual development are becoming clearer. A recent study found that trained musicians scored higher that contemporaries on an intelligence test, for instance.

And the connection also works the other way. In my work with working-memory training, I’ve found that it has an immediate and dramatic effect on musical aptitude.

Martin Walker
www.mindsparke.com

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