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Music in Childhood
Builds Life Skills
Copyright © 2004, Dr. Caron B. Goode
Love, respect, and appreciation for
music are easy to share with our children and build life
skills at the same time. During the first years of our
child's life, musical skills build self-esteem and
enhance expression. Musical rhythms spur motor
development. Learning melodies and words stimulates
listening capacity and help children develop receptive
language. Specific areas of child development and
learning are positively affected by exposure to and
training in music. Preschoolers given piano and voice
lessons, for example, have been found to improve
dramatically in their ability to put together picture
puzzles of animals. Playing the piano at the preschool
age influences development of the cortex, the part of
the brain used for thinking, talking, seeing, hearing,
and creating. Music training contributes to the
ability to learn or enhance mathematics skills.
Music clearly is a resource for living, growing, and
learning and can be an integral part of our children's
growing experiences.
Exploring Sound, Rhythm, Melody and Music
Music is controlled movement of sound, in time.
Music is three basic components: Sound + Rhythm + Melody
= Music
Sound
To help children understand music, it is helpful to look
at each component separately. First there is sound, one
that we make or one from another source. A few examples
of sound are a bird chirping, a teakettle whistling, and
a child banging on a pot with a spoon. If music were
compared to a painting, sound would be the background
color. In our bodies, sound corresponds with our central
nervous system. A pleasant sound opens and expands us.
It can energize or calm us. A shrieking sound puts our
nerves on edge. Like the background in a painting, sound
is
the first step in creating music.
Here are some ways to explore sound with our children.
- Have your children listen to the
sounds around them. How many different sounds can
they find in the kitchen or backyard?
- Encourage children to be creative
making sounds. Have them use their voices or
household objects to make sound. Allow them to make
pretty, irritating, or silly sounds. They are all
music if they reflect creative exploration or honest
feelings.
The purpose for creating sound is not
necessarily to make "beautiful music" but to foster
self-expression and open up our children's ears to the
world around them.
Rhythm
The second component of music is rhythm. Rhythm defines
and organizes the sound through a beat. For example, is
the whistling of the teakettle long and steady or short
and choppy? Is the child's banging on the pot fast and
upbeat or smooth and slow? In a painting, the rhythm
would be the overall movement or flow of the
composition. When you first look at the painting, where
do your eyes go? Is the painting easy to look at or is
it busy and annoying? This is its rhythm.
In our bodies, rhythm corresponds to our own internal
body rhythm-our pulse and breath. If the musical beat is
quick and steady, our heartbeat and body movements will
mirror it. If we are tired, listening to African
drumming can kick our body back into gear. On the other
hand, if a two-year-old is running around out of
control, slow rhythmic music like Bach or Vivaldi
restores
inner calm and slows most children down. Explore and add
rhythm to the sounds that children make.
- Have your children play with
different beats: fast, slow, steady, and erratic.
- Have them practice listening to
the different rhythms around them, like the water
dripping from the faucet or the ticking of a clock.
- Ask them if they can feel the
vibration of a musical beat in their bodies, and if
so, where? How do the different rhythms feel in
their body? How do their feet want to move with the
different beats?
- Try hand clapping to the rhythm
of a poem and foot tapping to a favorite piece of
music. These activities are every child's favorite,
free entertainment.
Melody
Finally there is melody. Melody corresponds to our
emotions. It gives sound and rhythm its feeling and
sensual quality. It is the part of music that expresses
the hills and valleys of an individual's
experience. It goes straight to our heart and feeling
center. Melody can uplift our spirit, calm us during
times of stress, or move us to tears. Returning to the
painting metaphor, melody would be the overall feeling
that the painting evokes as we look at it. Does the
painting draw us in and create a feeling of peace,
excitement, distress, or discomfort? Introducing
melody to the earlier sounds and rhythms will help
children learn self-expression.
- Have them hum a tune or create a
melody, adding emotion to sound.
- Experiment expressing sounds that
are emotional: happy, sad, funny, etc.
Melody turns a sound into a personal
and unique statement. By playing with sound, rhythm and
melody our children discover a new vocabulary and tool
to use for expression when words are hard to find.
We can use creativity and imagination to choose
different styles of music by which our children can
express their feelings, relax, stimulate their minds or
allow their creative juices to flow. A variety of
selections, rhythms, tones, and melodies allows children
to develop their own musical tastes and sparks their
natural curiosity to explore the world of music on their
own.
Resource Box:
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Dr. Caron Goode is a parenting expert who speaks and
writes about how parents can nurture their children's
gift. Go to
http://www.InspiredParenting.net
to order "Nurture Your Child's Gift, Inspired
Parenting," and sign up for the online parenting
magazine. To discover your personal parenting styles,
click on the Four Tool Every Parent Needs.
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