-- but only at higher-income schools
From: Portland State University
October 27, 2022 -- Music
and arts classes are often first on the chopping block when schools face tight
budgets and pressure to achieve high scores on standardized tests. But it's
precisely those classes that can increase student interest in school and even
benefit their math achievement, according to a new study.
Daniel Mackin Freeman,
a doctoral candidate in sociology, and Dara Shifrer, an associate professor of
sociology, used a large nationally representative dataset to see which types of
arts classes impact math achievement and how it varies based on the
socio-economic composition of the school. Schools with lower socio-economic
status (SES) have a higher percentage of students eligible for free or reduced
lunch.
The researchers found
that taking music courses at higher- or mid-SES schools relates to higher math
scores. Mackin Freeman said that's not a surprise given the ways in which music
and math overlap.
"If you think
about it at an intuitive level, reading music is just doing math," he
said. "Of course, it's a different type of math but it might be a more
engaging form of math for students than learning calculus."
However, the positive
relationship between music course-taking and math achievement is primarily
isolated to schools that serve more socially privileged students. The study
suggests this could be because arts courses in low-SES schools are of lower
quality and/or under-resourced. Students in low-SES schools also take fewer
music and arts classes on average compared to their peers, also suggesting
low-SES schools are under-resourced when it comes to arts courses.
"It'd be
reasonable to expect that at under-resourced schools, the quality of the music
program would differentiate any potential connection to other subjects,"
Mackin Freeman said. "For programs as resource-intensive as something like
band, under-resourced schools are less likely to even have working instruments,
let alone an instructor who can teach students to read music in a way that they
can make connections to arithmetic."
Mackin Freeman said the
findings suggest that learning shouldn't happen in subject silos and the ways
some schools have attempted to increase math achievement -- by doubling down on
math and cutting the arts -- is shortsighted and counterproductive.
"Creating an
environment where students have access to a well-rounded curriculum might
indirectly affect math achievement," he said. "That could be
something as simple as, they're willing to go to class because they have band
or painting class to look forward to."
Music
class in sync with higher math scores -- but only at higher-income schools --
ScienceDaily
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