It is
counterintuitive to add more studies to the schedule of an already busy child.
Our natural response to seeing our child struggle is to find a way to help, not
to add to the burden. If a child is struggling, why should we risk setting them
up for failure in music lessons?
The answer is
simple. Playing music has been discovered to
have a direct and almost immediate effect on
the brain of the student. That's right.
Music lessons have been shown in a German
study to have a significant impact on the
way the brain functions after as little as
five weeks!
What they found,
when comparing a group of students taking
music lessons with a control group that was
not, was that students who had taken as few
as ten music lessons over a five week period
exhibited a significant ear to hand link.
So? What's the
big deal? Life doesn't make much use of ear
to hand connections unless you want to play
an instrument by ear (I've always thought
that provoked a strange mental picture;
imagine the ears you would have to have to
play the trombone!). The significance is two
fold. First, it means that music lessons
lead to brain development which ultimately
means that music lessons have the effect of
giving the individual that is taking the
lessons improved brain function from which
to draw in the rest of his or her life.
Second, (and I saved the best for last) the
ear to hand brain connection from music
lessons is significant because researchers
in Hong Kong took the study one step further
and tested a group of students with music
lessons and a group without music lessons
for verbal memory and found that the group
that was taking music lessons outscored
their nonmusical peers by a significant
margin.
It gets better
still. The same groups of students were
tested a year later, even after some of them
had discontinued their music lessons, and
found that they still outscored their
nonmusical peers in verbal tests!
The moral to
that story is get your child (or even
yourself) into music lessons if you want
your child to have every advantage possible
in life, because even though these are only
benefits that we know of for sure, there are
bound to be far more yet to be discovered.
At the same
time, many children who originally objected
to music lessons discovered that they had a
talent for music, and went on to practice on
their own without having to be reminded.
Still others found that by playing an
instrument they could join the school band
and go on trips and participate in marches
and parades and football games. And others
discovered they could improvise on their
instruments, and so joined jazz groups and
swing groups and many other types of combos
and bands.
The bottom line
is that music study enhanced their lives and
their other studies rather than distracted
from it. And that is a benefit too huge to
be ignored.