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Why do kids need music?

July 4, 2006

Children instinctively enjoy music and that is why it is a
perfect medium for inspiring learning in a whole host of
areas. The best way for anyone to learn is voluntarily
through rewarding activity. This is where music can really
come into its own.
For 2 to 5 year olds, singing songs, making music together
with different instruments and dancing around are all too
much fun to be thought of as learning tools! However, the
fact remains that music activities can provide a central
core of intelligence for the development of basic skills
right across the board.
All areas of the government's "Desirable Learning
Outcomes", on which most schools around the world base
their curriculum and which also form the basis of the Basic
Skills Test here, are addressed in some form by
music-related activities. This means that activities and
games involving music are not only highly enjoyable for
children and adults alike, but can be beneficial for child
development in areas including reading, mathematics and
science as well as social and personal development.

Social Development
As a group activity, music really takes-off. Children with
little else in common can form fruitful relationships when
it comes to playing together with musical instruments . In
a pre-school setting, group activities such as singing or
playing circle games, where children pass round an
instrument or clap rhythms, help to develop social skills
like taking turns, working together and sharing.
These are skills which don't come naturally and this is a
rewarding and enjoyable way to practice these. Sharing
enjoyable experiences through music like playing games,
singing and dancing can also help strengthen bonds between
children and their adults.

Personal Development
On a more personal level, these activities can help instill
a sense of self-confidence while encouraging children to
listen closely and be ready to respond. Music activities
also give pre-school children the opportunity to find out
that music can be enjoyed by everyone regardless of age or
ability.
Hearing music from other countries is a good place to start
in building awareness and respect for cultures other than
our own. Recent research has also shown that moving to
music by dancing and doing actions to songs can help with
brain development and memory.

Language and Literacy
Music activities help develop communication skills. Singing
and chanting repetitive songs and rhymes all help build up
confidence in using language while helping children to
remember new words.
It gives first experiences of language structures such as
phrasing in sentences and syllables within words. Listening
to music and talking about how it sounds and how it makes
you feel is also a great opportunity to discover new words
and to use them in descriptive ways. Listening carefully to
different types of sounds made by different objects is a
good way to build up the skill of concentrated listening
and the ability to discriminate between sounds.
These are essential when it comes to learning and using
language. Music is itself a non-verbal language of its own
which has the power to communicate emotions, sometimes very
powerfully. For children to experience this by hearing
music and by playing instruments lets them investigate
forms of communication which their limited verbal skills do
not allow.
This is a good introduction to the communicative potential
of language. Relating sounds to symbols that can be drawn
on paper and sequencing them from left to right in response
to rhythms they make, is also a good foundation for reading
and writing skills.

Mathematics
Maths doesn't escape music-time! For instance, counting
songs can help to clarify the sequence of numbers.
Recognising and recreating rhythmic patterns is a skill
closely related to mathematical concepts. If children are
given the opportunity to compare, sort and match different
kinds of sounds, such as those made by homemade shakers,
this can help introduce and develop the concept of
mathematical sets. Different rhythms are divided into a
variety of beats closely linked to fractions, addition and
subtraction.
The process of making homemade instruments can also be a
good introduction to Maths. Measuring and counting out
materials and dealing with objects of different shapes are
all mathematical practices.

Knowledge and understanding of the world
When it comes to a knowledge and understanding of the
world, pre-school children already seem to know a lot!
However, showing young children the excitement and rewards
of being inquisitive by a process of example, will provide
a sure foundation for a child's own self-motivated learning
throughout his or her educational career.
Music activities provide plenty of good opportunities to
foster the joy of finding things out. For instance,
manipulating everyday objects to see what noises can be
made, or putting a piece of paper to the lips and
speaking in different ways to feel the air vibrations that
make sounds. Making instruments out of unlikely materials:
a drum out of a flower pot, a triangle out of spoons, a
xylophone from bottles. These are all exciting ways to find
out about the world, with the bonus of a musical reward!
Listening to the music of other times and places can also
lead on to finding out more about people of a particular
country or period in history and perhaps a search in the
local library for some pictures! Music can bring a child's
investigations to life.

Physical Development
Young children's physical development is addressed in
several ways by music-related activities. Dancing and
moving around to music develops a spatial awareness while
also practising coordination and muscle control. It helps
children to 'feel' the rhythms of music through their
bodies, something which is also important when instruments
are played.
Playing instruments and making sounds with the body, such
as clapping or tapping, helps develop fine motor skills in
the hands and fingers while also defining relationships
between sound and physical movement.

Creative Development
A major area of child development, and one which is often
overlooked, is creativity. The use of imagination and the
ability to communicate and express ideas and feelings is
very well served by musical activities. Listening to music
and generating personal responses either verbally or
through movement or by making pictures, can all be good
ways for children to recognise and express their emotions.
Playing and 'composing' with instruments gives children a
command over levels of expression they simply don't possess
verbally. These creative 'outlets' are important for the
growth of a child's self-esteem, self-confidence and
general emotional well-being... allthings which can greatly
help a child's development in all other areas of life.
Music and its related activities can bring together all
aspects of balanced development. As well as having all of
these benefits, it paves the way for a lifetime's enjoyment
of music and most would agree this makes a happier and
healthier society.

Copyright 2003 Christobel Llewellyn