Education
EDUCATION Finding #1: Music training helps under-achievers.
In Rhode Island, researchers studied eight public school first grade classes. Half
of the classes became "test arts" groups, receiving ongoing music and
visual arts training. In kindergarten, this group had lagged behind in scholastic
performance. After seven months, the students were given a standardized test. The
"test arts" group had caught up to their fellow students in reading and
surpassed their classmates in math by 22 percent. In the second year of the project,
the arts students widened this margin even further. Students were also evaluated
on attitude and behavior. Classroom teachers noted improvement in these areas also.
SOURCE: Nature May 23, 1996
EDUCATION Finding #2: Students who were exposed to
the music-based lessons scored a full 100 percent higher on fractions tests than
those who learned in the conventional manner. Second-grade and third-grade students
were taught fractions in an untraditional manner by teaching them basic music rhythm
notation. The group was taught about the relationships between eighth, quarter,
half and whole notes. Their peers received traditional fraction instruction.
SOURCE: Neurological Research, March 15, 1999
EDUCATION Finding #3: High school music students
score higher on SATs in both verbal and math than their peers. In 2001, SAT takers
with coursework/experience in music performance scored 57 points higher on the verbal
portion of the test and 41 points higher on the math portion than students with
no coursework/experience in the arts.
SOURCE: Profile of SAT and Achievement Test Takers, The College Board,
compiled by Music Educators National Conference, 2001.
EDUCATION Finding #4: The world's top academic
countries place a high value on music education. Hungary, Netherlands and Japan
stand atop worldwide science achievement and have strong commitment to music education.
All three countries have required music training at the elementary and middle school
levels, both instrumental and vocal, for several decades. The centrality of music
education to learning in the top-ranked countries seems to contradict the United
States' focus on math, science, vocabulary, and technology.
SOURCE: 1988 International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement
(IAEEA) Test