How to use music to fine tune your child for school


(MENAFN- The Conversation) Can music actually make us smarter? Research suggests that from as early as 16 weeks of pregnancy, when auditory function is forming, . Their early adaptive exposure to sounds, including those familiar sounds of parents' voices, enhance extraordinary processing skills.

Neuroscience teaches us that a child's . By this, we mean it is malleable and has the ability to change. The first year of life, more than any other year, will see the most rapid change in brain size and function as all the sensory receptors activate. Intriguingly, neuro-imaging that music alone turns on large sectors of a child's brain, opening that will become the highways and byways for every piece of information the process.

We'd all love to think our children will grow up intelligent, blissfully free from academic struggle. Truth is, the learning journey is speckled with challenges, and each child will have a unique intelligence and learner disposition. One thing we know is that parental involvement in cognitive stimulation from the earliest years will help form solid foundations that underpin a more successful schooling journey.

So, what can parents do to prepare young learners for school?

Sing like no one's listening

Singing nursery rhymes to your child, however old fashioned you may think it is, will get them off to a flying start. Children become particularly responsive because occurs as they begin to mimic you - pre-empting certain sounds, tones or words that they recognise. Using pitch and rhythm in the rhymes and lullabies we introduce to our children will begin to create neural stimulation that develops the brain's auditory cortex, transforming their ability to communicate.

Bang on those pots and pans Shutterstock

While it may fray the nerves, banging on the pots and pans is a fantastic way to . With background music blaring, children first develop the coordination required to hit the metallic targets, and as their sensory cortex develops, they begin to keep in time. shows that spatial reasoning, along with a sense of beat and rhythm (which invariably includes an aural and tactile sense of measure and counting) will enhance mathematical abilities.

Join a children's music group

Early childhood music-based playgroups offer a unique learning context for children. The songs and activities employ beat patterns, movement, repeated chorus lines and echo singing to engage with young participants. The cerebellum at the base of our brains is responsible for movement and balance, and interestingly, is where . Universally, early childhood educators use rhyme and song to teach children how language is constructed, and with good reason. Movement, foot tapping and dancing to a beat are also good ways of developing the brain's motor cortex.

The 'Mozart Effect'

There is a popular hypothesis that listening to Mozart makes you smarter. The refers primarily to a landmark study in 1993, where participants listening to Mozart's music (rather than to relaxation music or silence) achieved higher . Importantly, spatial-temporal reasoning is crucially active when children are performing science and maths tasks. Listening to music in any capacity induces endorphin production in the brain, causing improvement in mood and creative problem solving.

Learn an instrument Shutterstock

Many parents wonder when a child should start learning their first musical instrument. Importantly, instrumental tuition is not about producing the next Mozart or Delta Goodrem. Music lessons, for even the briefest of periods, are enjoyable and establish a life-long skill. It has also been noted that musicians' brains develop a - their brains are actually bigger. And this is the area of the brain most crucially involved in memory. One thing researchers and music educators endorse is the amazing impact it has on the development of executive functions .

Many schools are putting research into practice, and Queensland is leading the way with . Immersion music programs, where all students learn an instrument for a one-year minimum, have become commonplace. The results speak for themselves.

Psychologists from a Californian University on pre-school aged children, and proved that those who had weekly keyboard lessons improved their spatial-temporal skills 34% more than those who didn't. The benefits did not stop there. Children developed fine motor skills, reading, auditory recognition, resilience, and increased their memory capacity. All of these benefits of instrumental tuition bode well for the classroom journey ahead.

You may never have considered the impact of music on the development of your child's brain, but it's not too late to start. Just because you can't sing, doesn't mean you shouldn't. Your little one's brain is far more malleable during infancy, and there is a 'window of opportunity' where . If you engage your child in musical activities, you are directly helping to fine tune them for success in later years.


The Conversation

MENAFN0611201701990000ID1096049882


Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.