Recently a number of reports
have appeared that attest to the connection between music and academic
achievement. In a study of the ability of fourteen year-old science
students in seventeen countries, the top three countries were Hungary,
the Netherlands, and Japan. All three include music throughout the
curriculum from kindergarten through high school. In the 1960's, the
Kodály system of music education was instituted in the schools of
Hungary as a result of the outstanding academic achievement of children
in its "singing schools." Today, there are no third graders who cannot
sing on pitch and sing beautifully. In addition, the academic
achievement of Hungarian students, especially in math and science,
continues to be outstanding. The Netherlands began their music program
in 1968, and Japan followed suit by learning from the experience of
these other countries.
Another report disclosed the
fact that the foremost technical designers and engineers in Silicon
Valley are almost all practicing musicians.
A third report reveals that
the schools who produced the highest academic achievement in the United
States today are spending 20 to 30% of the day on the arts, with
special emphasis on music. Included are St. Augustine Bronx elementary
school, which, as it was about to fail in 1984, implemented an
intensive music program. Today 90% of the students are reading at or
above grade level.
Davidson School in Augusta,
Georgia (grades 5-12), which began its music and arts program in 1981,
is #1 academically in the country. Ashley River Elementary in
Charleston, North Carolina is #2 academically, second only to a school
for the academically gifted.
I personally experienced the
relationship between music and scholarship when I was director of the
Seattle Creative Activities Center many years ago. At that time, we did
not have the research at hand to explain why many children who were
taking music and painting classes suddenly began to excel in math at
school. Other children began to improve in their language arts skills.
Today, the research emerging
from the cognitive sciences gives us useful information to explain
those connections. As a result of technology which allows us to see the
human brain while it is in the process of thinking, we can observe, for
example, t hat when people listen to melodies with a variety of pitch
and timbre, the right hemisphere of the brain is activated. It also
"lights up" when people play music by ear. When, however, people learn
to read music, understand key signatures, notation, and other details
of scores, and are able to follow the sequence of notes, then the left
hemisphere "lights up." Significantly, it is activated in the same area
that is involved in analytical and mathematical thinking.
Why are the Arts Important?
1. They are languages that all people speak --that cut across racial,
cultural, social, educational, and economic barriers and enhance
cultural appreciation and awareness.
2. They are symbol systems as important as letters and numbers.
3. They integrate mind, body, and spirit.
4. They provide opportunities for self-expression, bringing the inner
world into the outer world of concrete reality.
5. They offer the avenue to "flow states" and peak experiences.
6. They create a seamless connection between motivation, instruction,
assessment, and practical application-- leading to "deep
understanding."
7. They make it possible to experience processes from beginning to end.
8. They develop both independence and collaboration.
9. They provide immediate feedback and opportunities for reflection.
10. They make it possible to use personal strengths in meaningful ways
and to bridge into understanding sometimes difficult abstractions
through these strengths.
11. They merge the learning of process and content.
12. They improve academic achievement-- enhancing test scores,
attitudes, social skills, critical and creative thinking.
13. They exercise and develop higher order thinking skills including
analysis, synthesis, evaluation, and "problem-finding."
14. They are essential components of any alternative assessment
program.
15. They provide the means for every student to learn.
The work of Dr. Paul MacLean
at the National Institute of Mental Health gives us further insights
into the value of music education. His triune brain theory suggests
that the human brain is really three brains in one. The smallest part,
about 5% of the brain, the reticular formation, is the gateway for most
sensory input and is devoted to maintaining the operation of automatic
body process, such as respiration and heartbeat. It is also the seat of
habitual or automatic behavior. The second part, the limbic system, is
another 10% of the brain and is the seat of the emotions, certain kinds
of memory, and glandular control. The largest part, the cerebral
cortex, which is about 85% of the brain, is devoted to higher order
thinking processes.
MacLean points out that the
limbic system is so powerful that it can literally facilitate or
inhibit learning and higher order thinking. It appears that positive
emotions, such as love, tenderness, and humor, can facilitate higher
order thinking skills; whereas negative emotions, such as anger,
hostility, and fear, can literally downshift the brain to basic
survival thinking.
The relationship to music
education is clear when we observe students joyfully making music
together and when we gather information about their academic
achievement in other areas. A study by Bloom on gifted musicians
reveals that most had very positive early learning experiences with
teachers who were patient, supportive, and loving. Task masters came
later in their lives.
Further research from the
cognitive sciences by Dr. Marian Diamond, Berkeley neurophysiologist,
offers information that the brain changes physiologically in relation
to learning and experience-- for better or worse. She has found that
positive, nurturing, stimulating learning experiences that offer
opportunities for interaction and response can result in richer neural
networks, which are the "hardware" of intelligence. The dynamic quality
of making music can be one of those kinds of experience.
I believe that it is
essential that music must be taught throughout the curriculum, and not
just in separate areas such as orchestra and choir. That is one way we
can assure sufficient future participants in those classes, and a way
we can offer opportunities for all students to develop their capacities
more fully.
How is this possible at a
time when many teachers are graduating from schools of education
without any background in music? It is important for everyone committed
to the importance of music education to join together to convince those
schools of the need for that background. Meanwhile, much of the new
technology now available can be implemented by any teacher. For
example, Amanda Amend, music educator at Grinnell College, has
developed a series of videotapes called Your Musical
Heritage . These tapes utilize accelerated learning
techniques to communicate the content in dynamic, imaginative ways.
Kathy Carroll, Washington
D.C. science teacher, has developed a cassette tape called Sing
a Song of Science , which was produced by the students at
Duke Ellington School of the Arts. That tape is useful in itself, and
can also stimulate students to create songs of their own to learn or
review material.
For older students, the
Warner Audio Notes computer programs that run on a CD-ROM, currently
include Beethoven's String Quartet #14 ,
Mozart's The Magic Flute , and Brahms' German
Requiem . The Voyager Company has produced Stravinsky's Rite
of Spring and Beethoven's Symphony #9. These programs
allow the viewer to follow the score as the music plays, make it
possible to listen to any instrument alone, analyze the score, and
learn about the composer and more about the composition using pictures,
text, spoken commentary, and various interpretations of the music.
There are many ways to
incorporate music in the curriculum of any subject, whether it is to
provide a rich background for literature and writing courses, concrete
ways to learn fractions and other mathematical concepts, understanding
of other cultures, and accelerated ways of learning foreign languages
and other subjects.
Dr. Georgi Lozonov,
Bulgarian founder of accelerated learning techniques, has researched
the most effective music to use in his system. He has found the Baroque
and Romantic music offer the ideal background for enhancing the
learning of any subject. In using this system, corporate training
programs and schools often cut learning time in half.
All teachers today are
challenged by the increasing diversity of their students, and they all
need more effective ways to work with these differences. Music is a
language that everyone speaks and understands. We are all born
rhythmical people-- we lived with our mother's heartbeat for nine
months before we were born. We all live with the rhythms of our
respiration and heartbeat. The human body and voice has surely been
used in early artistic self-expression not only by ancient humans, but
by every child today.
At Chicago's inner city
Guggenheim Elementary School, the faculty and students are finding new
success in learning through the visual arts and music. Attendance is
high, test scores are steadily rising, and enthusiasm is pervasive
throughout the school. At the Horton School in San Diego, music has
been used extensively to teach all the students to become bilingual in
Spanish and English.
If we are to make a strong
case for music education, we cannot do so merely by focusing on its
cultural value to civilization. We cannot do so by just discussing what
it does for the human spirit. We must begin to use the information at
hand from the cognitive sciences. We need to carry on research on the
academic achievement of music students and make that information
broadly available to all those engaged in educational planning and
practice. We need to note the results of music education in the
improved development of higher order thinking skills, including
analysis, synthesis, logic, and creativity; improved concentration and
lengthened attention spans; improved memory and retention; and improved
interpersonal skills and abilities to work with others in collaborative
ways.
And then we can discuss the
joy of learning that comes from listening to and making music. Peak
experiences, in which what people are thinking and what they are doing,
merge and are often experienced by musicians. These "flow states"
result in learning which becomes its own reward. When all educators
recognize the value of music as an integral and essential part of the
curriculum, we will see more opportunities for all students to be
successful.
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