Ask any music teacher if studying music will help your child improve academics, and they will tell you that research has proven that music helps develop both sides of the brain, and improve mental ability.  Here is some research and links to articles that support or refute this claim:

One year of musical training affects development of auditory cortical-evoked fields in young children

Takako Fujioka 1 *, Bernhard Ross 2, Ryusuke Kakigi 3, Christo Pantev 4, and Laurel J. Trainor 5

1 Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada; Department of Integrative Physiology, National Institute for Physiological Sciences, Okazaki, Japan
2 Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
3 Department of Integrative Physiology, National Institute for Physiological Sciences, Okazaki, Japan
4 Institute for Biomagnetism and Biosignal analysis, University of Münster, Münster, Germany
5 Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada; Department of Psychology, Neuroscience and Behaviour, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada
 

Click here to see the full article: http://brain.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/awl247v1

 
 Abstract

Auditory evoked responses to a violin tone and a noise-burst stimulus were recorded from 4- to 6-year-old children in four repeated measurements over a 1-year period using magnetoencephalography (MEG). Half of the subjects participated in musical lessons throughout the year; the other half had no music lessons. Auditory evoked magnetic fields showed prominent bilateral P100m, N250m, P320m and N450m peaks. Significant change in the peak latencies of all components except P100m was observed over time. Larger P100m and N450m amplitude as well as more rapid change of N250m amplitude and latency was associated with the violin rather than the noise stimuli. Larger P100m and P320m peak amplitudes in the left hemisphere than in the right are consistent with left-lateralized cortical development in this age group. A clear musical training effect was expressed in a larger and earlier N250m peak in the left hemisphere in response to the violin sound in musically trained children compared with untrained children. This difference coincided with pronounced morphological change in a time window between 100 and 400 ms, which was observed in musically trained children in response to violin stimuli only, whereas in untrained children a similar change was present regardless of stimulus type. This transition could be related to establishing a neural network associated with sound categorization and/or involuntary attention, which can be altered by music learning experience.

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Music lessons improve kids' brain development, memory: study

Last Updated: Wednesday, September 20, 2006 | 10:43 AM ET

Music lessons can help children as young as four show advanced brain development and improve their memory, even when it sounds like a budding musician is banging out little more than noise, a new Canadian study suggests. Researchers at McMaster University in Hamilton used magnetoencephalography (MEG) brain-scanning technology to compare the developmental changes in 12 children aged four to six over the course of a year.

The study, to be published in the October edition of Oxford University's neurology journal Brain, found that those who took music lessons showed more changes in brain responses. Even when parents hear only what sounds like random notes or nonsense, it's likely their children are developing their brains in ways that could enhance their overall thinking, said professor Laurel Trainor, who led the study with Takako Fujioka, a scientist at the Rotman Research Institute in Toronto.

"There are probably really fundamental things going on in the brain as those kids are learning over that first year, so even though they appear on the surface to maybe only play a few pieces, very simple pieces, it's probably setting up networks in their brain," Trainor said. Music training could lead to improvements in literacy, verbal memory, visiospatial processing, mathematics and IQ, she added.

The study found particular changes in the attentional systems of children who took music lessons, which affected their ability to pay attention to important things around them. "A child with a superior attentional system will be able to apply that in different domains, so they'll be able to focus in on what's important in a verbal learning task, they'll be able to concentrate when figuring out a mathematical problem," Trainor said.

"So you can imagine how a superior attentional system would have wide-ranging consequences across many domains." Trainor said the study represents the first time researchers have identified the benefits of music lessons for preschool children.

Value of music education

Previous studies compared the impact of music classes and drama classes in older children and found kids who learned an instrument had better improvements in IQ scores   "I think our study and other studies show that music has benefits … for cognitive processing and cognitive development," she said.

"We would hope that when decisions have to be made, music would be considered a core part of the preschool and school curriculum."  Many studies have shown the value of music education and many parents want it for their children, said Ingrid Whyte, executive director of the Coalition for Music Education in Canada."There's this tremendous emphasis on math and English and science, and those are wonderful and important things, but here's a study proving, yet again, that music education does help develop the brain," Whyte said.

"There's also a whole range of other skills that are being developed in terms of social skills and creativity, and a sense of belonging and community and collaboration with one another."

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Neuroscience for kids...Does Listening to Mozart improve memory?  Perhaps not according to this study: This article reviews various research studies on music and its effect on improving brain development, memory and schoolwork.  It also describes several fun music experiments that you can do yourself to see the effects music  study on the brain.  Check out Music, Mozart & Memory and more:   http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/music.html 

 

Learn more:

Since we are on the topic of music, why don't you relax and sing some Brain Songs and test your sense of hearing with these experiments and activities.

Music Education Beyond the Mozart Effect - a special article about new ways to teach music. Also read:

Bringing the Classics Into the Classroom: how to enhance authentic listening and extended literature response in middle school through music.

Anxiety and Memory: Their Effects on Cognition and Musical Performance

For more information about music and the brain, see:

 

  1. Listen to an interview with Dr. Frances Rauscher - the main researcher involved with the Mozart Effect. This is a "real audio" file.
  2. Music and the Brain radio program from Science Friday (May 9, 2003)
  3. Music Training and the Brain - from the Society for Neuroscience

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Music Makes You Smart : 

Playing Music Makes You Smart

By Charles Q. Choi, Special to LiveScience

posted: 19 March 2007 09:06 am ET

Scientists have uncovered the first concrete evidence that playing music can significantly enhance the brain and sharpen hearing for all kinds of sounds, including speech.

"Experience with music appears to help with many other things in life, potentially transferring to activities like reading or picking up nuances in tones of voices or hearing sounds in a noisy classroom better," researcher Nina Kraus, a neuroscientist at Northwestern University, told LiveScience.

These new findings highlight the importance of music classes, she said.

"Music classes are often among the first to be cut when school budgets get tight," Kraus said. "That's a mistake."