A just-published study
from Canada suggests early music education stimulates a child’s brain,
leading to improved performance in an entirely different arena – verbal
intelligence.
“These results are dramatic not only because they
clearly connect cognitive improvement to musical training, but also
because the improvements in language and attention are found in
completely different domains than the one used for training,” said York
University psychologist Ellen Bialystok, one of the paper’s co-authors. “This has enormous implications for development and education.”
The study, published in the journal Psychological Science, was conducted at York University by psychologist Sylvain Moreno,
who is now with Baycrest’s Rotman Research Institute. It focused on 48
children between the ages of 4 and 6, who took part in one of two
computerized training programs Moreno designed.
Half participated
in a music program, which “included training in rhythm, pitch, melody,
voice and basic musical concepts,” the researchers write. The other 24
took part in a visual-arts program, which “emphasized the development of
visuo-spatial skills relating to concepts such as shape, color, line,
dimension, and perspective.”
All received their respective
training one hour per day, five days per week for four weeks. The
programs were projected onto a classroom wall and conducted in groups
led by a teacher.
Read the article at Miller-McCune.com
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