AMERICANS OVERWHELMINGLY WANT MUSIC EDUCATION
IN SCHOOLS
GALLUP FINDING STANDS IN CONTRAST TO MOUNTING
NATIONWIDE CRISIS
CARLSBAD, CA—According to a new nationwide survey conducted
by the Gallup organization, 95 percent of Americans believe
that music is a key component in a child’s well-rounded education.
In fact, more than three quarters of those surveyed feel schools
should mandate music education.
The survey, "American Attitudes Toward Music," is conducted
for NAMM, the International Music Products Association, every
three years to gauge public attitudes toward musical participation
in the United States.
In a question asked for the first time this year, 80 percent
of respondents agreed that making music makes participants
smarter. This finding comes on the heels of a decade of scientific
research linking active participation in music with improved
mental capacity in young children, students and the elderly.
The impact of such news is also seen in the survey’s finding
that 78 percent of Americans feel learning a musical instrument
helps students perform better in other subjects, and that
88 percent believe participation in music helps teach children
discipline. Ninety-six percent believe participation in a
school band is a good way for children to develop teamwork
skills, and 71 percent believe that teenagers who play an
instrument are less likely to have disciplinary problems.
This year, a record 54 percent of households, the highest
figure since this study began in 1978, reported having at
least one musical instrument player.
Despite American’s clear support for music education and
participation, budget cuts and shifting priorities have placed
those programs in more danger than ever. Already, up to 28
million American students do not receive an adequate music
education, and cuts in education funding are either pending
or have been enacted in more than half the states nationwide.
Ironically, these cuts come at a time when the importance
of music education is better understood than ever before.
The College Entrance Examination Board found, for example,
that students in music appreciation scored 63 points higher
on verbal and 44 points higher on the math than students with
no arts participation. U.S. Department of Education data on
more than 25,000 secondary school students 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." And
a study published in Neurological Research in 1999 of 237
second grade children who used piano keyboard training and
newly designed math software scored 27 percent higher on proportional
math and fractions tests than children that used only the
math software.
To help people preserve music in their own communities, NAMM
and MENC: The National Association for Music Education have
created an online presence, www.SupportMusic.com,
that offers tips, facts and other useful resources. Another
website—that of NAMM’s affiliate, The American Music
Conference (www.amc-music.org)—contains
in-depth information on the benefits of music making.
The survey was conducted by The Gallup Organization on behalf
of NAMM. A random sample of consumers 12 years of age or older
in U.S. households was used to complete 1,005 telephone interviews
between February 4 and March 8, 2003.
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