ADVOCACY TOP TEN 2000

Versatile, Concise Music Advocacy Facts
Provided by the Selmer Company

 

Music Advocacy's Top Ten for Directors

  1. In a 1995 study in Hamilton, Ohio, string students who participated in pullout lessons averaged higher scores than the non-pullout students in all areas of the Ohio Proficiency Test. Sixty-eight (68) percent of the string students achieved satisfactory ratings on all sections of the test, compared to fifty-eight (58) percent of the non-pullout students.
    - Michael D. Wallick, A Comparison Study of the ohio Proficiency Test Results Between Fourth String Pullout Students and Those of matched Ability, Ohio State University, 1995.

  2. According to a 2000 survey, eighty t-one (81) percent of people responding believe that participating school music corresponds with better grades and test scores. This is an increase of fourteen (14) percent over the 1997 results for the same question.
    - Attitudes, NAMM (International Music Products Association), 2000.

  3. More music teachers are role models for minority students than teachers of any other subject. Thirty-six (36) percent of surveyed minority students identified music teachers as their role models, compared to twenty-eight (28) percent for English teachers, eleven (11) percent for elementary teachers, and severn (7) percent for physical education teachers.
    - "Music teachers as role models for African-American students," Journal of Research in Music Education, 1993.

  4. Only thirty t-one (31) percent of teenagers and adults in a 2000 survey who do not play an instrument feel they are too old to start learning.
    - Americans Love Making Music - And Value Music Education More Highly Than Ever, American Music Conference, 2000.

  5. Researchers at the University of California and the Niigata Brain Research Institute in Japan have found an area of the brain that is activated only when reading music scores.
    - "Musical Brain - Special Brain Area Found for Reading Music Scores," Nevermore, 1998.

  6. In the 1998 federal study Gaining the Arts Advantage, music teachers in many of the strongest arts programs nationwide are encouraged by their schools to perform in their communities and to improve their own performing skills.
    - Gaining the Arts Advantage, The President's Council on the Arts and humanities, 1998.

  7. Ninety-two (92) percent of people who play and instrument say they were glad they learned to do so, according to a 2000 Gallup Poll.
    - Gallup Poll Shows Strong Support for Putting Music in Every School's Curriculum, Giles Communications, 2000.

  8. In academic situations, students in music programs are less likely to draw unfounded conclusions.
    - Champions of Change, Federal study, 1999.

  9. The scores of elementary instrumental music students on standardized math tests increased with each year they participated in the instrumental program.
    - "Music Training Helps Underachievers," Nature, May 26, 1996

  10. Nine out of ten adults and teenagers who play instruments agree that music making brings the family closer together.
    - Music Making and Our Schools, American Music Conference, 2000.

 

 

Music Advocacy's Top Ten for Students

  1. A 2000 Georgia Tech study indicates that a student who participates in a least one elective music course is 4.5 times more likely to stay in college than the general student population.
    - Dr. Denise C. Gardner, Effects of Music Courses on Retention, Georgia Tech, 2000. 2.

  2. On the 1999 SAT, music students continued to outperform their non-arts peers, scoring 61 points higher on the verbal portion and 42 points higher on the math portion of the exam.
    - Steven M. Demorest and Steven J. Morrison, "Does Music Make you Smarter?, Music Educators Journal, September, 2000.

  3. Students who participate in All-State ensembles consistently score over 200 points higher on the SAT than non-music students. This figure indicates that students can pursue excellence in music while also excelling academically.
    - Texas Music Educators Association, 1988-1996.

  4. Students with good rhythmic performance ability can more easily detect and differentiate between patterns in math, music, science, and the visual arts.
    - "Rhythm seen as key to man's evolutionary development," TCAMS Professional Resource Center, 2000.

  5. Students in arts programs are more likely to try new things, and they can better express their own ideas to friends, teachers, and parents.
    - Champions of Change, the President's Council on the Arts and Humanities, 1999.

  6. College students majoring in music achieve scores higher than students of all other majors on college reading exams.
    - Carl Hartman, "Arts May Improve Students' Grades," The Associated Press, October, 1999.

  7. Music student demonstrate less test anxiety and performance anxiety than students who do not study music.
    - "College-Age Musicians Emotionally healthier than non-Musician Counterparts," Houston Chronicle, 1998.

  8. The average scores achieved by music students on the 1999 SAT increased for every year of musical study. This same trend was found in SAT scores of previous years.
    - Steven M. Demorest and Steven J. Morrison, "Does Music make You Smarter?," Music Educators Journal, September, 2000.

  9. A majority of the engineers and technical designers in Silicon Valley are also practicing musicians.
    - The Case for Sequential Music Education in the Core Curriculum of the Public Schools, Center for the Arts in the Basic Curriculum, 1997.

  10. Nine out of ten people with instrumental music experience are glad that they have learned to play an instrument.
    - "Music Ed Survey," Giles Communications, 2000.

 

Music Advocacy's Top Ten for Parents

  1. In a 2000 survey, 73 percent of respondents agree that teens who play an instrument are less likely to have discipline problems.
    - Americans Love Making Music - And Value Music Education More Highly Than Ever, American Music Conference, 2000.

  2. Students who can perform complex rhythms can also make faster and more precise corrections in many academic and physical situations, according to the Center for Timing Coordination, and Motor Skills.
    - Rhythm seen as key to music's evolutionary role in human intellectual development, Center for Timing, Coordination, and Motor Skills, 2000.

  3. A ten-year study indicates that students who study music achieve higher test scores, regardless of socioeconomic background.
    - Dr. James Catterall, UCLA.

  4. A 1997 study of elementary students in an arts-based program concluded that students' math test scores rose as their time in arts education classes increased.
    - "Arts Exposure and Class Performance," Phi Delta kappan, October, 1998.

  5. First-grade students who had daily music instruction scored higher on creativity tests than a control group without music instruction.
    - K.L. Wolff, The Effects of General Music Education on the Academeic Achievement, Perceptual-Motor Development, Creative Thinking, and Schools Attendance of First-Grade Children, 1992.

  6. In a Scottish study, one group of elementary students received musical training, while another other group received an equal amount of discussion skills training. After six (6) months, the music group achieved a significant increase in reading test scores, while the reading test scores of the discussion skills group did not change.
    - Sheila Douglas and Peter Willatts, Journal of Research in Reading, 1994.

  7. According to a 1991 study, students in schools with arts-focused curriculums reported significantly more positive perceptions about their academic abilities than students in a comparison group.
    - Pamela Aschbacher and Joan Herman, The Humanists Program Evaluation, 1991.

  8. Students who are rhythmically skilled also tend to better plan, sequence, and coordinate actions in their daily lives.
    - Cassily Column," TCAMS Professional Resource Center, 2000.

  9. In a 1999 Columbia university study, students in the arts are found to be more cooperative with teachers and peers, more self-confident, and better able to express their ideas. These benefits exist across socioeconomic levels.
    - The Arts Education Partnership, 1999.

  10. College admissions officers continue to cite participation in music as an important factor in making admissions decisions. They claim that music participation demonstrates time management, creativity, expression, and open-mindedness.
    - Carl Hartman, "Arts May Improve Students' Grades," The Associated Press, October, 1999.

 

Music Advocacy's Top Ten for Administrators

  1. A group of second grade students in inner-city Los Angeles received piano training twice a week, and they used specialized computer software that related the piano lessons to math concepts. On standardized math tests, fifty (50) percent of the second graders scored as well as fifth grade students in affluent Orange County, California. The scores of the entire second grade group were equal to the scores of fourth grade students in Orange County.
    - "Music On the Mind." Newsweek, July 24, 2000.

  2. In a 2000 Gallup Poll, seventy-five (75) percent of respondents believe learning a musical instrument helps students do better in other subjects, such as math and science.
    - Gallup Poll Shows Strong Support for Putting Music in Every School's Curriculum, Giles Communication, 2000.

  3. Second and third grade students who were taught fractions through musical rhythms scored one hundred (100) percent higher on fractions tests than those who learned in the conventional manner.
    - "Rhythm Students Learn Fractions More Easily," Neurological Research, March 15, 1999.

  4. Students involved in arts programs had significantly higher class attendance rates than a comparison group.
    - Pamela Aschbacher and Joan Herman, The Humanitas Program Evaluation, 1991.

  5. Classroom teachers in Rhode Island noted improved behavior and attitudes among a test group of students given intensive arts training.
    - "Music Training Helps Underachievers," Nature, May 26, 1996.

  6. More than nine out of ten people believe that schools should offer musical instruction as part of their regular curriculum.
    - Americans Love Making Music - And Value Music Education More Highly Than Ever, American Music Conference, 2000.

  7. Teachers in schools with strong arts programs report greater professional interest, motivation, self-development, and increased innovation in the classroom.
    - Champions of Change federal study, 1999.

  8. States should mandate music education for all students, according to seventy-eight (78) percent of respondents in a 2000 survey.
    - Attitudes, NAMM (International Music Products Association), 2000.

  9. Ninth grade students in a Chicago arts program achieved reading scores that were a full grade level higher than students not in the program. All other variables, including race, gender, and socioeconomic status, were equal in this study.
    - CAPE Study, President's Council on the Arts and Humanities, 2000.

  10. When faced with a problem to solve, students in music and the arts produce more possible solutions, and their solutions are more creative, according to a nationwide study.
    - N.M.Weinberger, "Arts Education Enhances 'Real Life' Personal Skills," MuSICA Research Notes, Spring 2000.

 

Music Advocacy's Top Ten for Everyone

 

  1. Ninety-five (95) percent of people responding to a 2000 Gallup Poll believe that music is part of a well-rounded education.
    - Gallup Poll Shows Strong Support for Putting Music in Every School's Curriculum, Giles Communications, 2000.

  2. Practicing musicians demonstrate 25 percent more brain activity than non-musicians when listening to musical sounds.
    - Exposure to Music Is Instrumental to the Brain, University of Muenster.

  3. In a 1998 study, retirees who participated in group keyboard lessons reported decreased anxiety, decreased depression, and decreased loneliness when compared to a control group.
    - Scientific Study Indicates That Making Music Makes the Elderly Healthier, American Music Conference, 1998.

  4. People who participate in the arts live longer than others, according to a Swedish study.
    - British Medical Journal, 1996.

  5. At-risk children participating in an arts program that includes music show significant increases in self-concept, as measured by the Piers-Harris Children's Self-Concept Scale.
    - Project ARISE: Meeting the needs of disadvantaged students through the arts, Auburn University, 1992.

  6. Martin Gardiner of Brown University tracked the criminal records of Rhode Island residents from birth through age 30, and he concluded the more a resident was involved in music, the lower the person's arrest record.
    - "Music Linked to Reduced Criminality," MuSICA Research Notes, Winter 2000.

  7. The part of the brain responsible for planning, foresight, and coordination is substantially larger for instrumental musicians than for the general public.
    - "Music On the Mind," Newsweek, July 24, 2000.

  8. Students who participate in school band or orchestra have the lowest levels of current and lifelong use of alcohol, tobacco, and illicit drugs among any group in our society.
    - H. Con. Res 266, United States Senate, June 13, 2000.

  9. In a French study, the use of melodies was shown to stimulate speech recovery in stroke victims.
    - Neurology, December, 1996.

  10. Taking a music elective course is a better indicator that a student will stay in college than high SAT scores or high GPA.
    - Dr. Denise C. Gardner, Effect of Music Courses On Retention, Georgia Tech, 2000.

 

Music Advocacy's Top Ten Advocacy Quotes

 

  1. "During the Gulf War, the few opportunities I had for relaxation I always listened to music, and it brought 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."
    - General H. Norman Schwarzkopf - United States Army

  2. "Music is exciting. It is thrilling to be sitting in a group of musicians playing (more or less) the same piece of music. You are part of a great, powerful, vibrant entity. And nothing beats the feeling you get when you've practiced a difficult section over and over and finally get it right, (yes even on the wood block.) Music is important. It says things your heart can't say any other way, and in a language everyone speaks. Music crosses borders, turns smiles into frowns, and vice versa. These observations are shared with a hope: that, when schools cut back on music classes, they really think about what they're doing - and don't take music for granted."
    - Dan Rather - CBS News

  3. "In every successful business...there is one budget line that never gets cut. It's called 'Product Development' - and it's the key to any company's future growth. Music education is critical to the product development of this nation's most important resource - our children."
    - John Sykes - President, VHI

  4. "The things I learned from my experience in music in school are discipline, perseverance, dependability, composure, courage and pride in results...Not a bad preparation for the workforce!"
    - Gregory Anrig - President, Educational Testing Service

  5. "Music is an essential part of everything we do. Like puppetry, music has an abstract quality which speaks to a worldwide audience in a wonderful way that nourishes the soul.
    - Jim Henson - television producer and puppeteer

  6. "Should we not be putting all our emphasis on reading, writing and math? The 'back-to-basics curricula,' while it has merit, ignores the most urgent void in our present system - absence of self-discipline. The arts, inspiring - indeed requiring - self-discipline, may be more 'basic' to our nation survival than traditional credit courses. Presently, we are spending 29 ties more on science than on the arts, and the result so far is worldwide intellectual embarrassment."
    - Paul Harvey - syndicated radio show host

  7. "It's [music education] terribly important, extremely important -- because when you are a child, you are in a receptive age...In high schools, public schools--that's where they must have the best influence, the first influence, which will go through their whole life."
    - Eugene Ormandy - conductor of the Philadelphia Orchestra

  8. "It is our job, as parents, educators, and friends, to see that our young people have the opportunity to attain the thorough education that will prepare them for the future. Much of that education takes place in the classroom. We must encourage our youngsters in such pursuits as music education. In addition to learning the valuable lesson that it takes hard work to achieve success, no matter what the arena, music education can provide students with a strong sense of determination, improved communication skills, and a host of other qualities essential for successful living."
    - Edward H. Rensi - President and Chief Operation Officer, U.S.A. McDonald's Corporation.

  9. "A grounding in the arts will help our children to see; to bring a uniquely human perspective to science and technology. In short, it will help them as they grow smarter to also grow wiser."
    - Robert E. Allen - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, AT & T Corporation

  10. "Some people think music education is a privilege, but I think it's essential to being human."
    - Jewel - singer, songwriter, and instrumentalist