Music’s
Top Ten Benefits for Parents
1.
In a 2000 survey, 73 percent of respondents agree that teens who play an
instrument are less likely to have discipline problems.
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Americans Love Making Music – And Value Music Education More Highly Than Ever,
American Music Conference, 2000.
2.
Students who can perform complex rhythms can also make faster and more precise
corrections in many academic and physical situations, according to the Center
for Timing, Coordination, and Motor Skills
-
Rhythm seen as key to music’s evolutionary role
in
human
intellectual
development, Center for Timing, Coordination, and Motor Skills, 2000.
3.
A ten-year study indicates that students who study music achieve higher test
scores, regardless of socioeconomic background.
-
Dr. James
Catterall, UCLA.
4.
A 1997 study of elementary students in an arts-based program concluded that
students’ math test scores rose as their time in arts education classes
increased.
-
“Arts Exposure and Class
Performance,” Phi Delta Kappan, October, 1998.
5.
First-grade students who had daily music instruction scored higher on creativity
tests than a control group without music instruction.
-
K.L. Wolff, The Effects of General Music Education on the Academeic Achievement,
Perceptual-Motor Development, Creative Thinking, and School Attendance of
First-Grade Children,
1992.
6.
In a Scottish study, one group of elementary students received musical training,
while another other group received an equal amount of discussion skills
training. After six (6) months, the students in the music group achieved a
significant increase in reading test scores, while the reading test scores of
the discussion skills group did not change.
-
Sheila Douglas and Peter Willatts,
Journal of Research in Reading, 1994.
7.
According to a 1991 study, students in schools with arts-focused curriculums
reported significantly more positive perceptions about their academic abilities
than students in a comparison group.
-
Pamela Aschbacher and Joan Herman,
The Humanitas Program Evaluation, 1991.
8.
Students who are rhythmically skilled also tend to better plan, sequence, and
coordinate actions in their daily lives.
-
“Cassily Column,” TCAMS Professional
Resource Center, 2000.
9.
In a 1999 Columbia University study, students in the arts are found to be more
cooperative with teachers and peers, more self-confident, and better able to
express their ideas. These benefits exist across socioeconomic levels.
-
The Arts Education Partnership,
1999.
10.
College admissions officers continue to cite participation in music as an
important factor in making admissions decisions. They claim that music
participation demonstrates time management, creativity, expression, and
open-mindedness.
-
Carl Hartman, “Arts May Improve Students’
Grades,” The Associated Press, October, 1999.