Saturday, August 30, 2008

More on Music Advocacy

I've been researching a lot about how music adds to the quality of my life and the lives of my students. Here's a list of some fabulous websites that say it far better than I ever could. I hope you have time to check some of these out. If you're a parent, you can take satisfaction on what you are providing for your child, if you are a student you can be so proud of what music is bringing to your life, now and in the future, and if you are a teacher, you can take away inspiration and excitement for the coming teaching year and knowledge of the nobility of our profession:

http://www.music-for-all.org/blog/index.html

http://www.music-for-all.org/

http://www.childrensmusicworkshop.com/advocacy/

http://www.supportmusic.com/

http://www.amc-music.com/

http://nsbma.org/NSBAnew/Pages/Advocacy.html

http://www.kingmusic1.com/artspres.htm

http://www.schoolmusictoday.com/advocacy/topteneveryone.html

http://www.flmusiced.org/fmeafsma/advocacy/index.html

http://www.artistshousemusic.org/articles/music+advocacy+what+counts+is+the+seed

Sunday, August 17, 2008

The Worth of Music for You and Your Child

Music Advocacy is on the minds of all sectors of music teaching these days. Private music teachers know what music education contributes to our society, in particular, how it impacts your child. In the blog archives, one of my first posts was about all the life lessons we can learn from studying music. Here's an article that lists and explains the skills our children gain from music study.

Seven Important Skills Your Child Learns By Studying Music

Just an amazing list of how music makes a difference in childrens lives.
  1. Comprehending. Learning to perceive and derive meaning from musical sounds -- for example, to identify a musical theme -- sharpens your child's ability to comprehend abstractions.
  2. Solving Problems. The ability to understand a problem and reach an appropriate solution is one of the most important skills your child can learn. Learning the basics of musical language, such as harmony, or interpreting a work through performance teaches this skill.
  3. Reasoning Logically. Applying particular lessons to other problems and solutions requires sound reasoning. When your child leans to analyze a musical work from a cultural, structural, or historical perspective, or to improvise within a certain musical style, both indicative and deductive reasoning grow stronger.
  4. Making Value Judgments. Learning to comprehend, consider, and evaluate in music can help your child make informed decisions in other aspects of life. Discriminating between great and lesser works or justifying musical choices in compositions can teach your child how to make and uphold value judgments.
  5. Using Symbols. The ability to use symbols distinguishes the human race among all forms of life. Learning to read, write, and interpret musical notation provides access to a non-verbal world of thought and strengthens the use of other symbols systems as well, such as mathematics or language.
  6. Conceptualizing. Your child learns to classify and generalize by learning to identify different types and styles of music, to recognize how different cultures use music for personal expression, and to recognize common elements in different works.
  7. Communicating. Perhaps the greatest gift of music is its ability to cultivate our feelings and thoughts through non-verbal means. Being able to express these feelings and thoughts, and to respond to them in others, is part of every successful program of music study and indispensable in your child's total development.

Courtesy of The Foundation for the Advancement of Education in Music