The U.S. Department of
Education recommends the arts to college-bound middle and junior high
school students asserting, “Many colleges view participation in the
arts and music as valuable experience that broadens students’
understanding and appreciation of the world around them.” In
addition, it plays a part in developing “children’s intellectual
development.” The U.S. DOE also suggests one year of Visual and
Performing Arts for college-bound high school students. (Source:
Getting Ready for College Early: A Handbook for Parents of Students
in the Middle and Junior High School Years, U.S. Department of
Education, 1997)
The arts are one of the six
subject areas in which the College Board recognizes as essential in
order to thrive in college. (Source: 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 produce jobs, generating
an estimate $37 billion with a return of $3.4 billion in federal
income taxes. (Source: American Arts Alliance Fact Sheet, October
1996 )
Students taking courses in music
performance and music appreciation scored higher in the SAT than
students with no arts participation. Music performance students
scored 53 points higher on the verbal and 39 points higher on the
math. Music appreciation students scored 61 points higher on the
verbal and 42 points higher on the math. (Source: 1999 College-Bound
Seniors National Report: Profile of SAT Program Test Takers, The
College Entrance Examination Board, Princeton, New Jersey)
According to the National
Education Longitudinal Study of 1988, music students received more
academic honors and awards than non-music students. A higher
percentage of music participants received As, As/Bs, and Bs than
non-music participants. (Source: NELS:88 First Follow-up, 1990,
National Center for Education Statistics, Washington D.C.)
Lewis Thomas, physician and
biologist, found that music majors comprise the highest percentage of
accepted medical students at 66%. (Source: As reported in “The Case
for Music in the Schools,” Phi Delta Kappan, February
1994.)
Research made between music and
intelligence concluded that music training is far greater than
computer instruction in improving children’s abstract reasoning
skills.(Source: Shaw, Rauscher, Levine, Wright, Dennis and Newcomb,
“Music training causes long-term enhancement of preschool children’s
spatial-temporal reasoning,” Neurological Research, vol. 19, February
1997 )
The University of Montreal
researched brain imaging techniques to study brain activity during
musical tasks. Researches concluded that sight-reading musical scores
and playing music “activate regions in all four of the cortex’s
lobes” and “parts of the cerebellum are also activated during those
tasks.” (Source: J. Sergent, E. Zuck, S. Tenial, and B. MacDonnall
(1992). Distributed neural network underlying musical sight reading
and keybpard performance. Science, 257, 106-109. )
Researchers in Leipzig discovered
through the use of brain scans that musicians had larger planum
temporale, the region of the brain associated with reading skills.
Also, musicians had a thicker corpus callosum, the nerve fibers that
connect the two halves of the brain. (Source: G. Schlaug, L. Jancke,
Y. Huang, and H. Steinmetz (1994). “In vivo morphometry of
interhemispheric asymmetry and connectivity in musicians.” In I.
Deliege (Ed.), Proceedings of the 3rd international conference for
music perception and cognition (pp. 417-418), Liege, Belgium.
)
“The arts enrich communities and
employees, and also stimulate the kind of intellectual curiosity our
company needs to stay competitive.” (Source: Norma R. Augustine,
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Martin Marietta
Corporation.)
“A grounding in the arts will help
our children to see; to bring a uniquely human perspective to science
and technology. In short, it will help them as they grow smarter to
also grow wiser. (Source: Robert E. Allen, Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer, AT&T Corporation, in “America’s Culture Begins
with Education”)
This data is exerpted from Music
Makes the Difference: Music, Brain Development, and Learning which is
MENC publication #1668 and may be purchased at the MENC website at
www.menc.org.
Arts Education aids students in
skills needed in the workplace: flexibility, the ability to solve
problems and communicate; the ability to learn new skills, to be
creative and innovative, and to strive for excellence. (Source:
Joseph M. Calahan, Director of Corporate Communications, Xerox.
Corporation)
I believe arts education in music,
theater, dance and the visual arts is one of the most creative ways
we have to find the gold that is buried just beneath the surface.
They (children) have an enthusiasm for life, a spark of creativity,
and vivied imaginations that need training...training that prepares
them to become confident young men and women. As I visit schools
around the country I see a renewed interest in arts education and a
growing concern about the negative impact of cutting art and music
out of curriculum. The creativity of the arts and the joy of music
should be central to the education of every American child. (Source:
Richard W. Riley, U.S. Secretary of Education)
Music is Beating Computers at
Enhancing Early Childhood Development. Music training, specifically
piano instruction, is far superior to computer instruction in
dramatically enhancing children's abstract reasoning skills necessary
for learning math and science. Learning music at an early age causes
long-term enhancement of spatial-temporal reasoning. (Source: Frances
Rauscher, Ph.D., Gordon Shaw, Ph.D., University of California,
Irvine, 1997)
Music Enhances Linguistic Skills.
Music -- specifically song -- is one of the best training grounds for
babies learning to recognize the tones that add up to spoken
language. (Source Sandra Trehubn, University of Toronto,
1997)
America Is a Country Full of
Music-Makers. 113 million, or 53% of Americans over the age of 12 are
current or former music makers. (Source: 1997 "American Attitudes
Towards Music" poll conducted by the Gallup Organization)
Americans Say Schools Should Offer
Instrumental Music Instruction as part of the regular curriculum. 88%
of respondents indicated this in a 1997 "American Attitudes Towards
Music" Gallup poll. (Source: Music Trades, September 1997)
Student involvement in
extracurricular or cocurricular activities makes students resilient
to current substance use among their peers, according to a recent
statewide survey of Texas Schools. Secondary students who
participated in band, orchestra or choir reported the lowest lifetime
use of all substances. (Source: 1994 Texas School Survey of Substance
Abuse Among Students: Grades 7-12)
Studying Music Strengthens
Students' Academic Performance. Rhode Island studies have indicated
that sequential, skill-building instruction in art and music
integrated with the rest of the curriculum can greatly improve
children's performance in reading and math. (Source: "Learning
Improved by Arts Training" by Martin Gardiner, Alan Fox, Faith
Knowles, and Donna Jeffrey, Nature, May 23, 1996)
Music and Spatial Task
Performance: A Casual Relationship. Music lessons, and even simply
listening to music, can enhance spatial reasoning performance, a
critical higher-brain function necessary to perform complex tasks
including mathematics. (Source: Frances Rauscher, Ph.D., Gordon Shaw,
Ph.D., University of California, Irvine, 1994)
The Mozart Effect surfaced about
four years ago when research uncovered that adults who listened to
music of complexity for ten minutes or so experienced temporary
increases in their spatial IQ scores. (Source: Frances Rauscher,
Ph.D., Gordon Shaw, Ph.D., University of California, Irvine,
1994)
Music Is One of Our Greatest
Economic Exports. "The arts are an economic plus -- second only to
aerospace as our most lucrative national export." (Source: Michael
Greene of The National Academy of Recording Arts and
Sciences)
Teacher Expertise in Music is a
Critical Factor in Student Learning. Research indicates that teachers
of all subjects -- including music -- who are more experienced and
educated are more effective in the classroom. Consequently, students
learn more from them. (Source: Paying for Public Education: New
Evidence on How and Why Money Matters, by Ronald Ferguson,
1991)