Education
Related: About this forumNew Evidence of Mental Benefits From Music Training
http://www.psmag.com/navigation/books-and-culture/new-evidence-brain-benefits-music-training-83761/As weve reported, a large body of research has noted a link between music education and higher test scores. But precisely why learning an instrument would have a positive impact on academic achievement has never been clear.
A new study from Boston Childrens Hospital provides a possible answer. It reports musical training may promote the development and maintenance of a key set of mental skills.
These executive functions, which are coordinated in the brains frontal lobe, allow for planned, controlled behavior, writes a research team led by Harvard University scholar Nadine Gaab. They enable us to manage our time and attention, organize our thoughts, and regulate our behaviorabilities that are crucial to success in school, as well as later life.
Demeter
(85,373 posts)NV Whino
(20,886 posts)My "local"* classical station has promoted music in the classroom. They continually receive reports from teachers (and students) of improved concentration and better classroom behavior.
*Due to the Internet and cable, they are heard world wide, but they are located in San Francisco.
femmocrat
(28,394 posts)There have been studies linking all arts education to higher SAT scores. I don't know of any recent ones though. Art and music use higher-level thinking skills, not rote memorization, so the effect of brain stimulation seems evident.
dickthegrouch
(3,551 posts)I feel better, think more clearly, and overall function better after a prolonged exposure to the classical great masters.
My mood plummets if I have to listen to Jazz or Blues.
Of course music is a good thing. But what do they keep? Football, a violent, ugly, incomprehensible, slow travesty of an educational^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H money-raising tool.
Response to antigop (Original post)
Name removed Message auto-removed