Music
Education Facts and Figures
Facts
compiled by MENC Staff, Spring 2002. When using factual quotes, please be sure
to cite individual research source which follows each quote/fact. Other text
copy was authored by MENC Staff. When citing from these sections, please
reference as: “Source: MENC—The National Association for Music Education
"Music Education Facts and Figures" 2002". For further
questions, contact info@menc.org.
“Every student in the nation should have an education in the arts.”
This is the opening statement of “The Value and Quality of Arts Education: A
Statement of Principles,” a document from the nation’s ten most important
educational organizations, including the American Association of School
Administrators, the National Education Association, the National Parent
Teacher Association, and the National School Boards Association.
The basic statement is unlikely to be
challenged by anyone involved in education. In the sometime harsh reality of
limited time and funding for instruction, however, the inclusion of the arts
in every student’s education can sometimes be relegated to a distant wish
rather than an exciting reality.
It doesn’t have to be that way! All that’s
needed is a clear message sent to all those who must make the hard choices
involved in running a school or school system. The basic message is that music
programs in the schools help our kids and communities in real and substantial
ways. You can use the following facts about the benefits of music education,
based on a growing body of convincing research, to move decision-makers to
make the right choices.The benefits conveyed by music education can be grouped
in four categories:
Success
in society
Success in school
Success in developing intelligence
Success in life
When presented with the many and manifest benefits of music education,
officials at all levels should universally support a full, balanced,
sequential course of music instruction taught by qualified teachers. And every
student will have an education in the arts.
Benefit One: Success in Society
Perhaps the basic reason that every child must
have an education in music is that music is a part of the fabric of our
society. The intrinsic value of music for each individual is widely recognized
in the many cultures that make up American life — indeed, every human
culture uses music to carry forward its ideas and ideals. The importance of
music to our economy is without doubt. And the value of music in shaping
individual abilities and character are attested in a number of places:
Secondary
students who participated in band or orchestra reported the lowest lifetime
and current use of all substances (alcohol, tobacco, illicit drugs). — Texas
Commission on Drug and Alcohol Abuse Report. Reported in Houston Chronicle,
January 1998
“Music is a magical gift we must nourish and cultivate in our children,
especially now as scientific evidence proves that an education in the arts
makes better math and science students, enhances spatial intelligence in
newborns, and let's not forget that the arts are a compelling solution to teen
violence, certainly not the cause of it!”— Michael Greene, Recording
Academy President and CEO at the 42nd Annual Grammy Awards, February 2000.
The U.S. Department of Education lists the arts as subjects that college-bound
middle and junior high school students should take, stating "Many
colleges view participation in the arts and music as a valuable experience
that broadens students’ understanding and appreciation of the world around
them. It is also well known and widely recognized that the arts contribute
significantly to children’s intellectual development." In addition, one
year of Visual and Performing Arts is recommended for college-bound high
school students. — Getting Ready for College Early: A Handbook for
Parents of Students in the Middle and Junior High School Years, U.S.
Department of Education, 1997
The College Board identifies the arts as one of the six basic academic subject
areas students should study in order to succeed in college. — Academic
Preparation for College: What Students Need to Know and Be Able to Do, 1983
[still in use], The College Board, New York
The arts create jobs, increase the local tax base, boost tourism, spur growth
in related businesses (hotels, restaurants, printing, etc.) and improve the
overall quality of life for our cities and towns. On a national level,
non-profit arts institutions and organizations generate an estimated $37
billion in economic activity and return $3.4 billion in federal income taxes
to the U.S. Treasury each year. — American Arts Alliance Fact Sheet,
October 1996
The very best engineers and technical designers in the Silicon Valley industry
are, nearly without exception, practicing musicians. — Grant Venerable,
"The Paradox of the Silicon Savior," as reported in "The Case
for Sequential Music Education in the Core Curriculum of the Public
Schools," The Center for the Arts in the Basic Curriculum, New York, 1989
Benefit Two: Success
in School
Success in society, of course, is predicated on success in school. Any music
teacher or parent of a music student can call to mind anecdotes about
effectiveness of music study in helping children become better students.
Skills learned through the discipline of music, these stories commonly point
out, transfer to study skills, communication skills, and cognitive skills
useful in every part of the curriculum. Another common variety of story
emphasizes the way that the discipline of music study — particularly through
participation in ensembles — helps students learn to work effectively in the
school environment without resorting to violent or inappropriate behavior. And
there are a number of hard facts that we can report about the ways that music
study is correlated with success in school:
“The
term ‘core academic subjects’ means English, reading or language arts,
mathematics, science, foreign languages, civics and government, economics,
arts, history, and geography.” — No Child Left Behind Act of 2002,
Title IX, Part A, Sec. 9101 (11)
A study of 237 second grade children used piano keyboard training and newly
designed math software to demonstrate improvement in math skills. The group
scored 27% higher on proportional math and fractions tests than children that
used only the math software. — Graziano, Amy, Matthew Peterson, and
Gordon Shaw, "Enhanced learning of proportional math through music
training and spatial-temporal training." Neurological Research 21 (March
1999).
In an analysis of U.S. Department of Education data on more than 25,000
secondary school students (NELS:88, National Education Longitudinal Survey),
researchers found that students who report consistent high levels of
involvement in instrumental music over the middle and high school years show
“significantly higher levels of mathematics proficiency by grade 12.” This
observation holds regardless of students’ socio-economic status, and
differences in those who are involved with instrumental music vs. those who
are not is more significant over time. — Catterall, James S., Richard
Chapleau, and John Iwanaga. “Involvement in the Arts and Human Development:
General Involvement and Intensive Involvement in Music and Theater Arts.”
Los Angeles, CA: The Imagination Project at UCLA Graduate School of Education
and Information Studies, 1999.
Students with coursework/experience in music performance and music
appreciation scored higher on the SAT: students in music performance scored 57
points higher on the verbal and 41 points higher on the math, and students in
music appreciation scored 63 points higher on verbal and 44 points higher on
the math, than did students with no arts participation. — College-Bound
Seniors National Report: Profile of SAT Program Test Takers. Princeton, NJ:
The College Entrance Examination Board, 2001.
According to statistics compiled by the National Data Resource Center,
students who can be classified as “disruptive” (based on factors such as
frequent skipping of classes, times in trouble, in-school suspensions,
disciplinary reasons given, arrests, and drop-outs) total 12.14 percent of the
total school population. In contrast, only 8.08 percent of students involved
in music classes meet the same criteria as “disruptive.” — Based on
data from the NELS:88 (National Education Longitudinal Study), second
follow-up, 1992.
Data from the National Education Longitudinal Study of 1988 showed that music
participants received more academic honors and awards than non-music students,
and that the percentage of music participants receiving As, As/Bs, and Bs was
higher than the percentage of non- participants receiving those grades. — NELS:88
First Follow-up, 1990, National Center for Education Statistics, Washington DC
Physician and biologist Lewis Thomas studied the undergraduate majors of
medical school applicants. He found that 66% of music majors who applied to
medical school were admitted, the highest percentage of any group. 44% of
biochemistry majors were admitted. — As reported in "The Case for
Music in the Schools," Phi Delta Kappan, February 1994
A study of 811 high school students indicated that the proportion of minority
students with a music teacher role-model was significantly larger than for any
other discipline. 36% of these students identified music teachers as their
role models, as opposed to 28% English teachers, 11% elementary teachers, 7%
physical education/sports teachers, 1% principals. — D.L. Hamann and L.M.
Walker, "Music teachers as role models for African-American
students," Journal of Research in Music Education, 41, 1993
Students who participated in arts programs in selected elementary and middle
schools in New York City showed significant increases in self-esteem and
thinking skills. — National Arts Education Research Center, New York
University, 1990
Benefit Three:
Success in Developing Intelligence
Success in school and in society depends on an array of abilities. Without
joining the intense ongoing debate about the nature of intelligence as a basic
ability, we can demonstrate that some measures of a child’s intelligence are
indeed increased with music instruction. Once again, this burgeoning range of
data supports a long-established base of anecdotal knowledge to the effect
that music education makes kids smarter. What is new and especially
compelling, however, is a combination of tightly-controlled behavioral studies
and groundbreaking neurological research that show how music study can
actively contribute to brain development:
In
a study conducted by Dr. Timo Krings, pianists and non-musicians of the same
age and sex were required to perform complex sequences of finger movements.
Their brains were scanned using a technique called “functional magnetic
resource imaging” (fMRI) which detects the activity levels of brain cells.
The non-musicians were able to make the movements as correctly as the
pianists, but less activity was detected in the pianists’ brains. Thus,
compared to non-musicians, the brains of pianists are more efficient at making
skilled movements. These findings show that musical training can enhance brain
function. — Weinberger, Norm. “The Impact of Arts on Learning.”
MuSICa Research Notes 7, no. 2 (Spring 2000). Reporting on Krings, Timo et al.
“Cortical Activation Patterns during Complex Motor Tasks in Piano Players
and Control Subjects. A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study.”
Neuroscience Letters 278, no. 3 (2000): 189-93.
“The musician is constantly adjusting decisions on tempo, tone, style,
rhythm, phrasing, and feeling--training the brain to become incredibly good at
organizing and conducting numerous activities at once. Dedicated practice of
this orchestration can have a great payoff for lifelong attentional skills,
intelligence, and an ability for self-knowledge and expression.” — Ratey
John J., MD. A User’s Guide to the Brain. New York: Pantheon Books, 2001.
A research team exploring the link between music and intelligence reported
that music training is far superior to computer instruction in dramatically
enhancing children's abstract reasoning skills, the skills necessary for
learning math and science. — Shaw, Rauscher, Levine, Wright, Dennis and
Newcomb, "Music training causes long-term enhancement of preschool
children's spatial-temporal reasoning," Neurological Research, Vol. 19,
February 1997
Students in two Rhode Island elementary schools who were given an enriched,
sequential, skill-building music program showed marked improvement in reading
and math skills. Students in the enriched program who had started out behind
the control group caught up to statistical equality in reading, and pulled
ahead in math. — Gardiner, Fox, Jeffrey and Knowles, as reported in
Nature, May 23, 1996
Researchers at the University of Montreal used various brain imaging
techniques to investigate brain activity during musical tasks and found that
sight-reading musical scores and playing music both activate regions in all
four of the cortex's lobes; and that parts of the cerebellum are also
activated during those tasks. — Sergent, J., Zuck, E., Tenial, S., and
MacDonall, B. (1992). Distributed neural network underlying musical sight
reading and keyboard performance. Science, 257, 106-109.
Researchers in Leipzig found that brain scans of musicians showed larger
planum temporale (a brain region related to some reading skills) than those of
non-musicians. They also found that the musicians had a thicker corpus
callosum (the bundle of nerve fibers that connects the two halves of the
brain) than those of non-musicians, especially for those who had begun their
training before the age of seven. — Schlaug, G., Jancke, L., Huang, Y.,
and Steinmetz, H. (1994). In vivo morphometry of interhem ispheric assymetry
and connectivity in musicians. In I. Deliege (Ed.), Proceedings of the 3d
international conference for music perception and cognition (pp. 417-418).
Liege, Belgium.
A University of California (Irvine) study showed that after eight months of
keyboard lessons, preschoolers showed a 46% boost in their spatial reasoning
IQ. — Rauscher, Shaw, Levine, Ky and Wright, "Music and Spatial Task
Performance: A Causal Relationship," University of California, Irvine,
1994
Researchers found that children given piano lessons significantly improved in
their spatial- temporal IQ scores (important for some types of mathematical
reasoning) compared to children who received computer lessons, casual singing,
or no lessons. — Rauscher, F.H., Shaw, G.L., Levine, L.J., Wright, E.L.,
Dennis, W.R., and Newcomb, R. (1997) Music training causes long-term
enhancement of preschool children's spatial temporal reasoning. Neurological
Research, 19, 1-8.
A McGill University study found that pattern recognition and mental
representation scores improved significantly for students given piano
instruction over a three-year period. They also found that self-esteem and
musical skills measures improved for the students given piano instruction. —
Costa-Giomi, E. (1998, April). The McGill Piano Project: Effects of three
years of piano instruction on children's cognitive abilities, academic
achievement, and self-esteem. Paper presented at the meeting of the Music
Educators National Conference, Phoenix, AZ.
Researchers found that lessons on songbells (a standard classroom instrument)
led to significant improvement of spatial-temporal scores for three- and
four-year-olds. — Gromko, J.E., and Poorman, A.S. (1998) The effect of
music training on preschooler's spatial-temporal task performance. Journal of
Research in Music Education, 46, 173-181.
In the Kindergarten classes of the school district of Kettle Moraine,
Wisconsin, children who were given music instruction scored 48 percent higher
on spatial-temporal skill tests than those who did not receive music training.
— Rauscher, F.H., and Zupan, M.A. (1999). Classroom keyboard instruction
improves kindergarten children's spatial-temporal performance: A field study.
Manuscript in press, Early Childhood Research Quarterly.
An Auburn University study found significant increases in overall self-concept
of at-risk children participating in an arts program that included music,
movement, dramatics and art, as measured by the Piers-Harris Children’s
Self-Concept Scale. — N.H. Barry, Project ARISE: Meeting the needs of
disadvantaged students through the arts, Auburn University, 1992
Benefit Four:
Success in Life
Each of us wants our children — and the children of all those around us —
to achieve success in school, success in employment, and success in the social
structures through which we move. But we also want our children to experience
“success” on a broader scale. Participation in music, often as not based
on a grounding in music education during the formative school years, brings
countless benefits to each individual throughout life. The benefits may be
psychological or spiritual, and they may be physical as well:
“Studying
music encourages self-discipline and diligence, traits that carry over into
intellectual pursuits and that lead to effective study and work habits. An
association of music and math has, in fact, long been noted. Creating and
performing music promotes self-expression and provides self-gratification
while giving pleasure to others. In medicine, increasing published reports
demonstrate that music has a healing effect on patients. For all these
reasons, it deserves strong support in our educational system, along with the
other arts, the sciences, and athletics.” — Michael E. DeBakey, M.D.,
Leading Heart Surgeon, Baylor College of Music.
“Music has a great power for bringing people together. With so many forces
in this world acting to drive wedges between people, it’s important to
preserve those things that help us experience our common humanity.” — Ted
Turner, Turner Broadcasting System.
“Music is one way for young people to connect with themselves, but it is
also a bridge for connecting with others. Through music, we can introduce
children to the richness and diversity of the human family and to the myriad
rhythms of life.” — Daniel A. Carp, Eastman Kodak Company Chairman and
CEO.
“Casals says music fills him with the wonder of life and the ‘incredible
marvel’ of being a human. Ives says it expands his mind and challenges him
to be a true individual. Bernstein says it is enriching and ennobling. To me,
that sounds like a good cause for making music and the arts an integral part
of every child’s education. Studying music and the arts elevates
children’s education, expands students’ horizons, and teaches them to
appreciate the wonder of life.” — U.S. Secretary of Education Richard
W. Riley, July 1999.
“The nation’s top business executives agree that arts education programs
can help repair weaknesses in American education and better prepare workers
for the 21st century.”— “The Changing Workplace is
Changing Our View of Education.” Business Week, October 1996.
“Music making makes the elderly healthier.... There were significant
decreases in anxiety, depression, and loneliness following keyboard lessons.
These are factors that are critical in coping with stress, stimulating the
immune system, and in improved health. Results also show significant increases
in human growth hormones following the same group keyboard lessons. (Human
growth hormone is implicated in aches and pains.)” — Dr. Frederick Tims,
reported in AMC Music News, June 2, 1999
“Music education opens doors that help children pass from school into the
world around them — a world of work, culture, intellectual activity, and
human involvement. The future of our nation depends on providing our children
with a complete education that includes music.” — Gerald Ford, former
President, United States of America
“During the Gulf War, the few opportunities I had for relaxation I always
listened to music, and it brought to me great peace of mind. I have shared my
love of music with people throughout this world, while listening to the drums
and special instruments of the Far East, Middle East, Africa, the Caribbean,
and the Far North — and all of this started with the music appreciation
course that I was taught in a third-grade elementary class in Princeton, New
Jersey. What a tragedy it would be if we lived in a world where music was not
taught to children.” — H. Norman Schwarzkopf, General, U.S. Army,
retired
“Music is about communication, creativity, and cooperation, and, by studying
music in school, students have the opportunity to build on these skills,
enrich their lives, and experience the world from a new perspective.” — Bill
Clinton, former President, United States of America
Need
specific press information? Contact Elizabeth Lasko at MENC (ElizabethL@menc.org).
Need specific advocacy information? Contact Sue Rarus at MENC (suer@menc.org).