Related Interest

Visit 'The Arts' section to read more music and performing arts news

 

Download 'The Benefits of Music Instruction' .pdf flyer

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Music Makes Your Brain Grow!

 

Did you know that music makes your brain grow? Well, it does, according to a new booklet prepared by Joan R. Fretz, director of fine and performing arts in the Huntington School District.

 

The publication, which can be downloaded during a visit to www.hufsd.edu, quotes various studies and findings and lays out a convincing case. It relies heavily on research conducted by Eric Jensen, a “celebrated authority” on “brain-based learning.”

 

The publication has been distributed at several events over the past few weeks and has people talking. “In one study, the violinists who practiced the longest had the greatest changes in their brains,” according to the booklet.

 

Some of the interesting findings include:

• “When you play an instrument, your brain needs more space for storing the skills you are developing, so it actually grows.”


• “The auditory cortex of a renowned violinist was found to be twice as thick as normal. This is the area of the brain for hearing reception.”

 

• “The corpus callosum was 15 percent larger in musicians than in non-musicians. This is the bundle of nerve fibers that connects the left and right hemispheres of the brain.”

 

• “The cerebellus, which contains about half of the brain’s neurons, was five percent larger in musicians than in non-musicians. This is the part of the brain that is involved in keeping beat and rhythm.”

 

Mrs. Fretz discovered a study that found music can help with academic performance and emotional intelligence and that it also makes a person healthier by lowing levels of a stress hormone, improving heart rate and blood pressure and increasing antibodies in children.

 

“After four years of coursework in music, students averaged 49 points higher on the combined verbal and math SAT scores,” the publication boasts.

 

For more information contact Mrs. Fretz at 673-2106 or jfretz@hufsd.edu.

 

All graphics, photographs, and text appearing on the Huntington Public Schools home page and subsequent official web pages are protected by copyright. Redistribution or commercial use is prohibited without express written permission. Comments or Questions? email the Public Information Office

 

Back to Top Back to Home