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- Benefits of Music Education
- Music Education Advocacy
- What Parents can do to Encourage their Children in Music
- How Music Connects with Core Subject Areas-Research and Ideas that are
used in the Music Classroom
- Elementary Music Education in Broward County Schools
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- Success in Society
- Success in School
- Success in Developing Intelligence
- Success in Life
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- Every human culture uses music to communicate ideas and ideals
- The arts are identified as one of the six basic academic subject areas
students should study to succeed in college
- Academic Preparation for College: What Students Need to Know and Be
Able to Do, 1983 [still in use], The College Board, New York
- The arts create jobs, increase local tax base, spur growth in businesses
(hotels, restaurants), and improve the quality of life for our cities
and towns
- American Arts Alliance Fact Sheet, October 1996
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- Students with music performance or appreciation experience scored higher
on the SAT than those not involved.
How much higher?
- 53 points higher on verbal and 39 points higher on math for those
involved in music performance
- 61 points higher on the verbal and 42 points higher on the math for
those involved in music appreciation
- 1999 College-Bound Seniors National Report: Profile of SAT Program
Test Takers, The College Entrance Examination Board, Princeton, New
Jersey
- Students participating in arts programs in selected elementary and
middle schools in New York City showed significant increases in
self-esteem and thinking skills
- National Arts Education Research Center, New York University, 1990
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- Music training is superior to computer instruction in enhancing
children’s abstract reasoning skills, those necessary for learning math
and science
- Shaw, Rauscher, Levine, Wright, Dennis, and Newcomb
- Two Rhode Island schools gave an enriched, sequential, skill-building
music program which showed marked improvements in reading and math
skills. Students in this program
who had started out behind the control group caught up to statistical
equality in reading, and pulled ahead in math
- Gardiner, Fox, Jeffrey, and Knowles
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- A study at the University of California (Irvine) showed that after eight
months of keyboard lessons, preschoolers showed a 46% boost in their
spatial reasoning IQ
- Rauscher, Shaw, Levine, Ky, and Wright
- Children given piano lessons significantly improved in their
spatial-temporal IQ scores (important for some types of math reasoning)
compared to children who received computer lessons, casual singing, or
no lessons
- Rauscher, F.H., Shaw, G.L., Levine, L.J., Wright, E.L., Dennis, W.R.,
and Newcomb, R.
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- An Auburn University study found significant increases in overall
self-concept of at-risk children participating in an arts program that
included music, movement, dramatics, and art, as measured by the
Piers-Harris Children’s Self-Concept Scale
- N.H. Barry, Project ARISE: Meeting the needs of disadvantaged
students through the arts
- A study at McGill University found that pattern recognition and mental
representation scores improved significantly for students given piano
instruction over a three-year period.
They also found that self-esteem and musical skills measures
improved for those students
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- Opens doors that help children transition from school into the world
around them-world of work, culture, intellectual activity, and human
involvement
- Gerald Ford, former President, United States of America
- By studying music in school, students have the opportunity to build on
skills such as communication, creativity, and cooperation. They enrich their lives by building on
these skills and seeing the world from different perspectives
- Michael E. DeBakey, M.D., Leading Heart Surgeon, Baylor College of
Music.
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- Listen to music with your child from little on up-nursery rhymes, folk
songs, children’s songs
- Sing and play music with your child
- Go to concerts or watch concerts on television
- Encourage your child to participate in musical activities at school,
church, and home
- Listen and show enthusiasm for your child’s musical achievements
- Attend your child’s school/church music programs
- Be active in your child’s everyday life
- Engage in musical activities with your child on the internet. There are many interactive sites…
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- Spatial/temporal relationships in music exist as pitch and rhythm
patterns
- The cognitive skills used to process music are used in math as well
- When singing on pitch: “Do” is less than “re”, and “re” is less than
“mi”. As students develop these
skills, it can help students understand math concepts such as number
lines
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- 2nd and 3rd graders were taught fractions using
concept of rhythmic notation-relationships between different note values
- Peers received traditional fraction instruction
- Students taught fractions using music concept scored 100% higher on
fractions tests than those who learned using the traditional method
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- Students use addition and subtraction skills when working with measures
and beats-ex: Creating and/or completing measures using quarter, half,
eighth notes and their respective number of counts.
- Musical notation-notes and rhythms-are sets of graphs
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- Science and Sound
- Experiments on sound waves and vibrations-using a rubber band plucked
between two fingers to show vibration.
- See salt move on a surface when sound is made: Put plastic tightly
over a coffee can and secure with a rubber band. Place salt on the plastic. Tap a smaller can with a ruler to
see the salt move. The salt
moves because the plastic is vibrating due to the sound waves hitting
it!
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- Instruments and Science
- Size and Pitch:
- Large instruments have low sounds
- Small instruments have high sounds
- Using Boomwhackers (plastic tubes that are pitched to certain notes),
you can build a pyramid to visually show the students that to support
the pyramid, the large tube must be on the bottom (and it makes the
lowest sound). The smallest
tube must be on the top of the pyramid (it makes the highest sound)
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- Other interesting ideas:
- Glasses filled with different amounts of water-have the students put
them in order from the lowest to the highest (the lowest will be the
one with the least amount of water; the highest will be the one with
the most water-the instrument is actually the air column created by
the space not filled up with water: smaller air space = more water =
higher sound larger air
space = less water = lower sound
- There are numerous songs and movement activities that have a science
focus to them.
- The opportunities to connect music to science are ENDLESS!!!
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- Happens often when teaching/learning songs about:
- Countries
- Continents
- States
- Game songs from other cultures
- Folk dances from around the world
- While learning these songs, we also learn:
- Games
- Dances
- Instruments-both American and foreign
- Rhythms
- Songs in native languages
- History of American music and world music
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- Both music and reading rely on the discrimination of sounds from each
other
- When learning to read, we learn how to relate letters to their spoken
sounds
- Phonemic stage of learning to read is promoted by good pitch
discrimination skills (learning association between visual parts of
words and their spoken sounds)
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- Music is constantly connected to the core subjects of education
- By it’s nature, music education naturally addresses all subject areas!
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- The amount of instructional time for music varies from school to school
in Broward County. This is due to budget, enrollment, number of special
subject areas, and scheduling challenges at each location.
- Your school’s principal makes decisions regarding how much music
education the students at your school receive.
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- Learn how to sing
- Learn how to read music
- Learn how to play instruments
- Learn musical games
- Learn dances
- Learn important musical terms
- Perform for others
- Create rhythms, melodies, and dances
- Listen to music from many cultures and time periods
- Make instruments
- Show musical expression
- And much, much more!
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- Better Music Facilities~Currently many music teachers do not have a
room!
- Parents, Parents, Parents!~You are the foundation of our program~Without
your support, our program could not succeed!
- Community Support~Our community needs to be aware of our program, it’s
successes, and it’s needs.
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- Science~it is exact, specific, and demands acoustics. Music scores are graphs which indicate
frequencies, volume changes, melody, harmony, and intensities all at
once with exact control of time
- Mathematical~it is rhythmically based on subdivisions of time into
fractions
- Foreign Language~terms are often in Italian, German, or French. Notation is a set of symbols used to
represent ideas that everyone, regardless of language can understand
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- Arts Improve Reading and Math. (n.d.).
Retrieved February 16, 2002 from
- http://www.bcmusiccoalition.org/resources/artsimprovereadmath.html
- Campbell, D. (1996). Introduction to the Musical
Brain. Saint Louis: MMB Music,
- Inc.
- Campbell, D. (2001). The Mozart Effect. New York: HarperCollins Publishers
- Campbell, D. (2000). The Mozart Effect for Children. New York: HarperCollins
- Publishers
- Henriksson, L. Why Arts Education
Matters. Retrieved February 2,
2002, from
- http://www.bcmusiccoalition.org/resources/whyartsedmatters.html
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- Hopkins, G. (1999, March 15). Making
the Case for Music Education.
Education
- World. Retrieved December 1,
2001, from
- http://www.education-world.com/a_curr/curr123.shtml
- Music and Your Child. (n.d.).
Retrieved February 17, 2002 from
- http://www.coalitionformusiced.ca/yourchild.htm
- Music and Literacy. (n.d.). Retrieved April 27, 2002 from
- http://www.fresno.k12.ca.us/divdept/music/Literacy.htm
- Music Education Facts and Figures.
(n.d.). Retrieved February
16, 2002 from
- http://www.menc.org/information/advocate/facts.html
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- Weinberger, N. (n.d.). Music and the Brain. Retrieved February 16, 2002 from
- http://www.bcmusiccoalition.org/resources/musicbrain.html
- Weinberger, N. (1994). Music and Cognitive Achievement in
Children. MuSICA
- Research Notes, V1, I2.
Retrieved April 28, 2002 from MuSICA Research notes
- database.
- Why Music? (n.d.). Retrieved February 16, 2002 from
- http://www.musiceducationonline.org/links/why.html
- Why Music Matters (n.d.).
Retrieved February 16, 2002 from
- http://www.bcmusiccoalition.org/resources/why_mus_matters.html
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