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Why Take Band?
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We know that band students represent the top of the academic
scale in our schools. We know they are averaging 62 points
higher on SAT tests, which would indicate they are stronger
in verbal and math scores than other members of the student
body. We also know band students are the ones who enjoy a
successful high school career, go on to college, and become
the leaders in our society. There is a definite link between
the top achiever academically and the band student. They are
one and the same.
- In many
respects, band is a microcosm of our society. It demands
high levels of responsibility, social skills, ongoing
communication, analytical talents, and the important
ability to work with others. Simply put, learning a
musical instrument and continuing to explore the
limitless possibilities of music provide an excellent
preparation for life.
- In The Arts: An
Essential Ingredient in Education, J. Buchen Milley
states that "research shows that when arts are included
in the student's curriculum, reading, writing and math
scores improve." Like all arts, music has a profound
effect on the academic success of the student.
Band is a group effort. Members are required to shift
from an I/Me reasoning to a We/Us concept. This means
extending oneself beyond the normal considerations of
much of our day-to-day living. Instead of the logic
being, what's in it for me, it becomes, what's in it for
us? The values of cooperation, communication,
concentration, correlation, and completion come into
play each rehearsal and performance.
- Band builds
positive self-worth. Although we share many similarities
with our athletic counterparts, BAND is a place for
everyone. Rarely is a person serving as an alternate or
substitute. Everyone in the band plays a starting role.
- Music is one of
the few academic disciplines that requires the student
to master skills and apply them in performance. In other
words, music involves multiple forms of learning.
Studies by the College Entrance Examination Board show that:
- "New research on
intelligence and brain function point in exciting future
directions that tie directly to music, while the
continuing use of music as part of the curriculum is
clearly associated with both academic skills and
personal characteristics that are highly desirable for
school progress and for developing the kind of
well-educated young people we know we need for the
nation's well-being."
- Students (1993)
with experience in music performance scored measurably
higher in both the verbal and math sections of the
Standardized Achievement Test (22 points above the mean
on verbal and 18 points above the mean on math).
- There continues
to be a significant (and growing) spread between the
scores obtained by musicians and those of their
non-musical counterparts.
- The correlation
between cognitive learning and musical understanding
continues to prove they are linked, and improving one
will develop the other. In fact, music is suspected to
be the key for unlocking the scientific mind.
- The theory of
"multiple intelligences" tags music as one of the
separate minds, and being exposed to music strengthens
all other learning forms.
- Scores rise
proportionately higher with the length of time spent
studying music in school.
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Copyright © 2009
Dwyer High School Band
Website made possible through funding by the Dwyer High School
Band Boosters
info@dwyerband.org
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