Wednesday, February 18, 2015

The Impact of Music Education and Athletic Participation on Academic Achievement

The Impact of Music Education and AthleticParticipation on Academic Achievement 

This article was interesting to me beacuse of the fact that it was an actual study to see if students who were althetic performed different than students who were musical. Since this sort of correllates to my study (to see if students who are musically trained perform well on math assessments vs. students who haven't received musical training.)

"For many years, music educators have dealt with this question: Did their students achieve at a higher academic level than their nonmusician peers because they were more intelligent or could some portion of this higher achievement be attributed to their training as musicians? Music educators have long believed that music, as a discipline, was drawing the best and brightest, but the effect that music has on students' academic ability has just begun to come to light."

This thesis statement, written by Schneider, Timothy W.; Klotz, Jack, caught my attnetion because I was curious about the same thing before coming up with my thesis. 

"Music and Mathematics The connection between music and mathematics is evident in the very nature of the music discipline itself. Music is built on counting systems and is performed over time. Numerical subdivisions, overtone structure, and tuning systems (Pythagorean tuning) are examples of inherent relationships between math and music."

The researcher does find evidence that musicians do perform better than those who are not trained in music. I especially like his information found on page 6 regarding music and math.

AUTHOR Schneider, Timothy W.; Klotz, Jack TITLE The Impact of Music Education and Athletic Participation on Academic Achievement. PUB DATE 2000-11-00 NOTE 36p.; Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Mid-South Educational Research Association (28th, Bowling Green, KY, November 15-17, 2000). PUB TYPE Reports Research (143) Speeches/Meeting Papers (150)

1 comment:

  1. I am glad you found something useful to support your interest in the intersections between music, math and academic success.

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