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Positive Parenting: How Music Helps Young Minds

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Five years ago, psychologists at the Brain And Creativity Institute at the University of Southern California studied how learning music might affect brain development in young children.

Today in Positive Parenting, we check out the potential brain changes after participation in music and other activities.

12-year-old Raquel Montoya has played violin with the LA Philharmonic Youth Orchestra after school two hours a day, since she was 6. She’s in USC’s study on how music training affects kids’ brains.

“We saw that children who have had music training had stronger brain activation in the frontal region of the brain. These are the areas that are responsible for decision-making,” says Assal Habibi, assistant research professor of psychology.

Researchers tracked 25 kids from age 6, using MRIs to measure things like brain maturation, social skills and learning abilities.

They compared their results with a control groups of kids in sports programs and kids with no organized training.

The music-trained group had a stronger connection between the right and left sides of the brain. Their cognitive skills, including executive function abilities and auditory skills, were better.

Raquel says the training helps her learn.

“When I’m at school and I see other kids that don’t do any other activities, like they just go home, I see them struggle a lot,” she says. “And sometimes, I am just like, how’s this so hard when it’s easy?”

Music has the benefit of being fun for many kids.

Habibi is spreading the word about her study results, hoping they’ll convince policy makers that music and the arts are just as critical as science and math are to children’s learning.

“Not only is it fun and brings children together and teaches them social skills, but it does seem to be important toward the brain and cognitive development,” she says.

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