| “Music
education helps kids learn other challenging subjects, like math”.
Music education gives children sharper skills
and increased confidence that help them to master other difficult
subjects. Particularly math. But don't just take our word for it!
Leading academic experts have researched this phenomenon over the
years, and here we've compiled some of their findings for you.

Dr. Frances Rauscher of the University of
Wisconsin demonstrated remarkable increases in spatial-temporal
IQs of young children exposed to music training. Using a standard
IQ test, [the study] found that spatial-temporal IQs of children
who received music training were 35 percent (35%) higher than those
of children who did not receive training. Eight months after instruction
began, the music students’ scores improved by 46 percent (46%)
while the scores of children who received no training improved by
only 6 percent. These findings were consistent across demographic
and socio-economic categories.
In a pilot program, Wisconsin’s School District of Kettle
Moraine conducted a similar™ study using kindergarten students
rather than preschoolers and group piano keyboard instruction rather
than private lessons. By December the piano students scored 33 to
35 percent higher than those who had received no formal music instruction,
and by the end of the school year, the difference was an astonishing
46 percent (46%)
The Neurological Report Magazine [March, 1999] published the results
of a study by Professor Gordon Shaw of the University of California,
Irvine. This project involved second graders from one of the poorest-performing
schools in Los Angeles. Students received piano lessons along with
a special computer program. After four months, they were tested
for their ability to analyze ratios and fractions. Students scored
twenty-seven percent (27%) higher than their counterparts from another
school district that did not receive piano instruction.
According to The College Board (Profiles of SAT and Achievement
Test takers), there is a direct correlation between improved SAT
scores and the length of time spent studying music. Those children
who studied music for four or more years scored 60 points higher
on verbal and 41 points higher on math portions of the SAT (for
a combined total of 101 points) than students with no coursework
or experience in music.
According to a nationwide survey conducted by the Gallup Organization,
more than nine in ten Americans believe music education should be
a part of every student’s day. In fact more than three-quarters
of the people questioned feel that states should mandate it.
“American Attitudes Toward Music”, conducted for NAMM
– International Music Products Association, also found that
active music making takes place in half the homes in America. Music
participation and support for school music education are both significantly
stronger than in an identical poll conducted in 1997. Another significant
finding is the sharp increase in the number of people who believe
music education helps students succeed in other academic areas.
“The results of this national survey leave no doubt that
Americans feel strongly about music,” says NAMM President
and CEO Larry Linkin. “It is especially dramatic to see the
growing clamor for music education in our schools.”
Among more than 1,500 people surveyed, 95 percent stated that they
feel music is part of a well-rounded education (up from 90% in 1997),
93 percent feel schools should offer musical instruction as apart
of the regular curriculum (up from 88 percent), and 78 percent (up
from 70%) feel states should mandate music education for all students.
Eighty-one percent of respondents said they feel participating
in school music corresponds with better grades and test scores,
up sharply from 69 percent in 1997. Seventy-five percent said they
believe learning a musical instrument helps students do better in
other subjects such as math and science, and 73 percent said they
believe teens who play an instrument are less likely to have discipline
problems.
The survey found that 50 percent of households have one person
age five or older who currently plays a musical instrument, up from
38 percent in 1997. Forty percent of households have two or more
persons who play a musical instrument, up from 34 percent in 1997.
In all, 53 percent of households own a musical instrument, up from
43 percent.
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