MUSIC AND
ACHIEVEMENT
There have
been a number of studies done on the effect of music on academic development.
It has been shown that high school music students have higher grade point
averages than non-music students in the same school. At Mission Viejo High
School in Southern California in 1981, the overall grade point average of music
students was 3.59 and for non-music students the overall grade point average
was 2.91. This same study also found that 16% of the music students had a 4.0
overall grade point average and only 5% of the non-music students had a 4.0
overall grade point average.3 A study of graduates of the New York City School
of Performing Arts found that 90% of them go on to college.4
Rees feels
that involvement in high school music programs helps students develop the
skills necessary for a variety of occupations. She states: "Successful
music students tend to possess the qualities and skills that are generally
considered essential to employers in business, education and service
organizations."5 She also recognizes that music education assists students
in improving their writing, communication skills and DOES improve analytical
skills. Rees further states that to be successful in music, takes a great deal
of self-discipline and notes that "music majors have the highest SAT
scores in all areas."
Fred
Hargadon, former Dean of Admissions for Stanford University, in a 1983
interview with Stauffer said, "We look for students who have taken part in
orchestra, symphonic band, chorus and drama. It shows a level of energy and an
ability to organize time that we are after here. It shows that they can carry a
full academic load and learn something else. It means that these particular
students already know how to get involved and that's the kind of campus we want
to have."
Christensen
(Biernat) has found that research studies have consistently shown that
participation in student activities is beneficial to students.6 Success in
college can be more accurately predicted by levels of individual achievements
in student activities (drama, debate, music etc.) than it can from SAT scores,
class rank and grades in school. Conversely, studies of dropout students show
that these students have had the least amount of participation in school
activities.
The Mode of
American Youth (Biernat) reported that the most frequent co-curricular activity
in American high schools was participation in a musical group. They reported
that 38.3% of all high school students say that they belonged to a band,
orchestra or choir.7
MUSIC AND READING
Music
participation does have a positive impact on reading. a reading program in New
York dramatically improved reading achievement scores by including music and
art in the curriculum.8 Winston writes about how learning to read music
enhances the student's ability to perform the skills necessary for reading,
listening, anticipating, forecasting, memory training, recall skills,
concentration techniques and speed reading.9 It has also been found that music
students can out-perform non-music students on achievement tests in reading and
math.10
Referring to
reading and communication skills, Kuffler recognized the contributions the arts
can make to the development of perceptual and cognitive skills.11
There are
similar studies in the area of mathematics that show gains in test scores in
math for music students when compared to non-music students.12 Maltester found
that increased instruction in music can lead to increased learning in
mathematics.13 A study conducted in the Albuquerque, New Mexico public schools
concluded by comparing all areas of the California Test of Basic Skills (CTBS).
It was found that music students in an instrumental class for two or more years
scored significantly higher than non-music students.14 Grace Nash, an Arizona
music educator, has found that incorporating music into mathematics lessons has
enabled students to learn multiplication tables and math formulas more
easily.15
MUSIC AND
SELF-ESTEEM
The
Norwegian Research Council for Science and the Humanities has found a
connection between students having musical competence and high motivation in
that they were more likely to achieve success in school. They concluded that
there is a high correlation between positive self-perception, high cognitive
competence scores, self-esteem and interest and involvement in school music.16
Whitwell came to much the same conclusion and contends that creative
participation in music improves self-image, self-awareness and creates positive
attitudes about oneself.17 Marshall fount that involvement and achievement in
school music builds positive self-image which is a motivation for academic
learning among urban black middle school students.18
It has also
been found that through involvement in group music activities on the high
school level, individuals learn to support each other, maintain commitment and
bond together for group goals. The process is a significant part of improved
self-esteem.19 Sward, in writing about Fred Miller, president of the Miller
Summer Clinics, says that Miller has found that musical experiences
"instill: 1)positive attitude; 2) positive self image; 3) desire to
achieve excellence; 4) co-operation; 5) group cohesiveness; and 5) ability to
set goals." Eisner writes about the importance of arts in education
because they develop intellectual and aesthetic abilities.20
MUSIC AND
THE BRAIN
There are a
number of studies that show a connection between music and the development of
the brain. Dr. Frank Wilson is an assistant clinical professor neurology at the
University of California School of Medicine, San Francisco. He reports that his
studies show that instrumental practice enhances coordination, concentration
and memory and also brings about the improvement of eyesight and hearing. He
further reports that the process of learning to play an instrument refines the
development of the brain and the entire neurological system (Mueller, 1984). In
a speech at the California Music Educators Association State Convention on
March 17, 1989, Dr. Wilson said that he has found through music, people become
an active participant in their own physiological development. He says that
people can discover themselves and a sense of self in community through musical
involvement. His research has shown that involvement in music connects and
develops the motor systems of the brain in a way that cannot be done by any
other activity. In support of this, Dr. Wilson shared recent data from UCLA
brain scan research studies which shows that music more fully involves brain
functions (both left and right hemispheres) than any other activities
studied. Dr. Wilson feels these findings are so significant that it
will lead to a universal understanding in the next century that music is an
absolute necessity for the total development of the brain and the individual.
A separate
study shows that performance in music develops the intellect. These musical
activities train the brain in aesthetic literacy and the students' perceptual,
imaginative and visual abilities (Sinatra, 1986). Whitwell (1977) deals with
the left brain/right brain issue. He says that when one talks about music, he
is using the left side of the brain. To utilize the right side of the brain,
one must creatively produce in an activity such as music. He says the
"music is independent, separate unique from of intellect, a form of
intellect through which man can communicate directly in its own inherent
form" (p9). This seems to confirm Wilson's contention that music does have
a developmental impact on the brain. Whitwell chides the educational system for
only educating half a brain. He points out that most attention or day-dreaming,
the answer is to involve the right side of the brain in the learning process.
Whitwell says that the complete man must have equal access to both domains
(left and right brain) of understanding and this access has to include a
creative activity such as the performance of music.
Tedd Judd in
a speech at the 1984 conference on the Biology of Music-Making entitled,
"A Neurologist Looks at Musical Behavior", comes to the conclusion
that involvement in music involves many parts of the interconnected brain
(Roehmann, 1988). Dr. Jean Houston of the Foundation for Mind Research
says that children without access to an arts program are actually damaging
their brain. They are not being exposed to non-verbal modalities which help
them learn skills like reading, writing and math much more easily (Roehmann,
1988).
SUMMARY
We, as music
educators, must take the lead in sharing this information with the people that
can make the difference in the future; school boards, administrators, parents,
and legislative representatives. We must advocate for the arts. It is vital
that we become proactive in our support of the arts. By reviewing the studies
involving music we have found that participation in school music has a positive
impact on areas considered outside the realm of music.
As more
people become aware of the research in this area, we should see increased
enrollments in arts classes. The use if the arts throughout the curriculum, as
a tool for better learning, is an area that will expand. With dropout rates
being so high, educators need to combine resources and to use the tools
available for a more effective method of education. I feel that the arts will play
a major roll in the future success of the education system. Don't stand on the
sidelines and watch the profession dwindle away. Get involved and help it grow.
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