Researchers find music education benefits
youth wellbeing
Results
highlight areas for state legislators and school leaders to consider as they
expand music education programs across California.
January
18, 2023
Nina
Raffio
The latest
USC research on the impact of music education shows that for adolescents, the
benefits appear to extend beyond a surge in neural connections in their brains.
It actually boosts their wellbeing.
The study
published Wednesday by the journal Frontiers
In Psychology comes just weeks after voters statewide approved
Proposition 28 to increase funding for arts and music education in California
public schools.
A USC
Thornton School of Music researcher said the results are especially meaningful
amid a nationwide mental health crisis.
ÒWe know
that the pandemic has taken a toll on student mental health. The many
narratives of learning loss that have emerged since the start of the pandemic
paint a grim picture of what some call a Ôlost generation,ÕÓ said Beatriz Ilari, a USC Thornton
associate professor of music education and corresponding author of the study.
ÒMusic might be an activity to help students develop skills and competencies,
work out their emotions, engage in identity work and strengthen connections to
the school and community.Ó
The work
was supported by grants including one from the Fender Play Foundation, a
nonprofit organization that places instruments in the hands of youth who aspire
to play and reap the powerful benefits of music education.
Evidence
of those benefits continues to mount, although many states and school districts
have reduced the amount of class time, faculty and curriculum dedicated to the
arts amid budget crunches and changes in curriculum
standards.
Ilari
contributed to prior studies, including a longitudinal one by the USC
Brain and Creativity Institute, that demonstrated children who learn a
musical instrument have enhanced cognitive function. Other research also has
shown music education contributes to improved creativity and confidence, better
mental health and emotional stability, and student performance, according to a
paper published last year by the International Journal of Environmental
Research and Public Health.
Music
education and hope for the future
For the
study, researchers examined the impact of music on Òpositive youth
development,Ó a measure of the strengths of adolescents and their potential to
contribute to society developed by scholars from Tufts University. Researchers
also included measures for school connectedness and hopeful future
expectations.
The
researchers found that students who started music education before age 8 were
more hopeful about the future. (Photo/Courtesy of Fender Play Foundation)
The
researchers administered anonymous, online surveys to 120 students from 52 Los
Angeles Unified School District middle schools. The survey questions covered
the key domains of positive youth development including competence and
confidence. Past research shows that adolescents who manifest these attributes
are more likely to make positive contributions to society and less likely to
engage in risky behaviors later in life.
Ilari and
her fellow researchers, including USC Thornton alumna Eun Cho, found many
positive effects. They found that students who started music education before
age 8 were more hopeful about the future, and younger students who received
musical training scored higher in key measures of positive youth
development.
The
research team also found that younger students scored higher in key development
measures than their older peers. Sixth-grade students, for example, scored
higher for overall positive youth development than eighth graders, and
scored higher in the confidence domain than both seventh- and eighth graders.
Seventh grade students also scored higher in overall positive youth development
than eighth graders.
In
completing the studyÕs survey questions, students were invited to choose from
multiple gender categories beyond the usual binary gender options, including
Ònon-binaryÓ and Òprefer not to answer,Ó to identify themselves. Non-binary
students scored lower in overall positive youth development and connection than
girls. They also scored lower in confidence and connection than
boys.
Our
study can be used to inform the development of programs and policy for all
young people.
Beatriz
Ilari, USC Thornton
ÒGiven the
high levels of depression and suicide ideation among LGBTQ+ and
non-gender-conforming students, it is crucial that research examining
adolescent well-being move beyond the gender binary,Ó Ilari said. ÒIn addition
to filling critical gaps in the existing literature, results from our study can
be used to inform the development of programs and policy for all young
people.Ó
The study
included students of diverse backgrounds. However, students participating in a
virtual music education program primarily came from poor neighborhoods,
indicating disparities in access to formal music education.
In
addition, the study explored studentsÕ engagement in different music programs,
including the Virtual Middle School Music Enrichment (VMSME), a tuition-free,
extracurricular program that focuses on popular music education and virtual
learning. The program is available through a school district partnership with
the Fender Play Foundation.
Researchers found that students participating in multiple forms of music
education and for longer periods of time scored higher in measures for
competence and hopeful future expectations. Some participants in these groups
were also enrolled in private lessons and/or playing in small ensembles that
offer more individual attention than large group classes. In contrast, students
in the extracurricular enrichment program came from low-income neighborhoods
and participated in fewer extracurricular activities.
ÒBy
expanding access to instruments and music classes for students from low
socioeconomic areas Ð a population that is often left out of school music
programs Ð VMSME contributed to the democratization of music education,Ó Ilari
said. ÒThroughout the pandemic, students in public schools, especially in urban
areas, were disproportionately impacted by the lockdowns that deprived them of
physical and social contact with peers. VMSME brought together students from
different neighborhoods and at a time when forming peer groups is essential to
social identity development.Ó
More
research is needed to better understand disparities in access to formal music
education, Ilari said, but she said programs that give student agency in their
learning and allow them to engage with peers from other schools, like VMSME,
have the potential to promote learning and well-being.
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