Movement-based music in the classroom: Investigating the effects of music programs incorporating body movement in primary school children

The present studies investigated the impacts of the different implementation of body movement into classroom-based comprehensive music programs on the development of music-related and nonmusical abilities in Hungarian primary school children. In Study 1, science-focused classes received Kodály music...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychology of aesthetics, creativity, and the arts creativity, and the arts, 2022-06
Hauptverfasser: Lukács, Borbála, Asztalos, Kata, Maróti, Emese, Farnadi, Tamara, Deszpot, Gabriella, Szirányi, Borbála, Nemes, László Norbert, Honbolygó, Ferenc
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container_title Psychology of aesthetics, creativity, and the arts
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creator Lukács, Borbála
Asztalos, Kata
Maróti, Emese
Farnadi, Tamara
Deszpot, Gabriella
Szirányi, Borbála
Nemes, László Norbert
Honbolygó, Ferenc
description The present studies investigated the impacts of the different implementation of body movement into classroom-based comprehensive music programs on the development of music-related and nonmusical abilities in Hungarian primary school children. In Study 1, science-focused classes received Kodály music lessons completed with teacher-directed movements or no movement activities. In Study 2, intensive music classes participated in Kodály music lessons combined either with teacher-directed or improvised movement elements. From the beginning of schooling, participants were measured three times over 1.5 years for musical abilities, sensorimotor entrainment, phonemic awareness, rapid naming, reading, executive functions, and IQ. Results revealed distinct developmental trajectories for melody discrimination, phonemic awareness, and verbal IQ in the science classes; however, the classes’ comparable performance at the first and last measurements indicated that their overall growth was similar. Moreover, performance of the intense music classes was comparable at the end of the second school year even though the class with the music curriculum using teacher-directed movements showed greater improvements in rapid naming of pictures and verbal IQ. These findings suggest that in the early school years, diverse movement-based music programs provided in classroom settings supported musical, sensorimotor entrainment, early literacy, and cognitive development similarly. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved) (Source: journal abstract)
doi_str_mv 10.1037/aca0000496
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subjects Cognitive Ability
Cognitive Development
Elementary Schools
Female
Human
Intelligence Quotient
Literacy
Male
Music
Music Education
Musical Ability
title Movement-based music in the classroom: Investigating the effects of music programs incorporating body movement in primary school children
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