Benifits Of Music Essay, Research Paper
A Study of Evidence that Music Education is a Positive Factor in K-8 Student Academic Achievement, Fall 1987, California State University. Copied with permission from Wyoming MEA Journal (1991). Wyoming MEA web-site is http://www.uwyo.edu/a&s/musc/wmea.htm
Research–whoa, don t turn the page–is important in music education. It is not the dusty, dry study of facts and statistics. Research decides what we teach, when we teach it, and how we teach. It can also help you justify your music education program when faced with budget cuts and program elimination. Research in music education is reported in numerous journals throughout the United States. Some of the more prominent journals include the Music Educators Journal, Journal of Research in Music Education, Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education, and Update: Applications of Research in Music Education. Other regional journals are gaining a reputation like the Southeastern Journal of Music Education published by the University of Georgia. More limited publications are also being pursued by smaller universities and local organizations. An example is the development of a one-time publication by the Utah Music Education Association to report research done in music education in the state of Utah.
An excellent article on applying research findings is Putting Research to Work in the Music Classroom in the May 1991 Music Educators Journal by H. Eugene Karjala. The article describes the process of reporting research through publication, linking the research to the classroom through workshops and applying the findings to actual classroom situations. The author also lists several important sources of research reports.
If you or your music education program is faced with cuts because of declining revenues (a possibility even in Evanston!), an excellent article to help build your defense was recently published in the August 1991 Instrumentalist. Although the author defends program cuts on a purely economical basis, many school administrators propose cuts in music programs for exactly those reasons. Defending Music Programs with Economic Analysis by John Benham basically states that music teachers are cost efficient. They teach more students than classroom teachers, so if a school eliminates three music teachers, they must be replaced by a least four classroom teachers. In an effort to save money by dropping the music program, school administrators will actually spend more to replace it.
Research in music education also shows many correlations of the value of music education with learning other subject matter. A master s thesis by Jeanne Akin, Music Makes a Difference, documents numerous studies that show the value of music education to learning the core curriculum. Highlights from a summary of Ms. Akin s findings are as follows: 1. Arts education leads to cognitive and basic skills development (Medeja 1978) (Milley 1984). 2. Arts education increases interest in academic learning (Kaufman 1976). 3. High school music students have been shown to hold higher grade point averages (GPA) than non-musicians in the same school (Horne 1983). 4. The study of music produces the development of academic achievement skills (State of California 1986). 5. Learning to play a musical instrument helps students to develop fas
Finally, a few more interesting tidbits of the value of music education as evidenced by research findings. Edward P. Asmus of the University of Utah, as quoted in MENC s Soundpost and other sources, has documented a direct correlation between the number of music teachers per 100 students and SAT and ACT scores. The greater the music teacher/pupil ratio directly corresponds to higher scores on nationally standardized academic achievement tests. This relationship is even stronger the overall teacher/pupil ratio. This suggests that music education plays a powerful role in the overall educational process.
An article in the July 1990 Instrumentalist states that music majors have the highest rate of admittance to medical school, higher than any other subject area including biochemistry, chemistry and physics. The article quotes facts and figures from a Rockefeller Foundation study and concludes by suggesting that students eager to be admitted to medical school should be music majors. (We knew this all along, right?)
If you need more details for any of the above, please feel free to call or write. If you have suggestions for other areas of research to be reported on, also feel free to let me know. My address is Randall Royer, c/o Evanston Middle School, PO Box 6002, Evanston WY 82931-6002. Telephone (307) 789-7571.
P.S. I have no documentation for this right now (I know I read it somewhere), but I know that chopping firewood is a great stress-reliever. Time to go get ready for winter and unload some of that first nine-week s anxiety.