<p align="justify" class="title">Music lessons can enhance children's memory, reasoning and planning abilities, leading to improved academic performance, a study has found.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">Visual arts lessons also significantly improve children's visual and spatial memory, researchers said.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">Music education has been decimated in schools around the globe, due to competition with academic subjects and an increasing lack of funding.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">These days, the opportunity to learn an instrument is seen as more of a luxury than a necessary part of education, researchers said.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">"Despite indications that music has beneficial effects on cognition, music is disappearing from general education curricula," said Artur Jaschke, from VU University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">"This inspired us to initiate a long-term study on the possible effects of music education on cognitive skills that may underlie academic achievement," said Jaschke.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">Published in Frontiers in Neuroscience, the research is the first large-scale, longitudinal study to be adapted into the regular school curriculum.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">The researchers conducted the study with 147 children across multiple Dutch schools, using a structured musical method.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">All schools followed the regular primary school curriculum, with some providing supplementary music or visual arts classes. In these, the children were given both theoretical and practical lessons.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">After 2.5 years, the children's academic performance was assessed, as well as various cognitive skills including planning, inhibition and memory skills.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">Researchers found that children who received music lessons had significant cognitive improvements compared to all other children in the study.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">Visual arts classes also showed a benefit: children in these classes had significantly improved visual and spatial short-term memory compared to students who had not received any supplementary lessons.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">"Children who received music lessons showed improved language-based reasoning and the ability to plan, organise and complete tasks, as well as improved academic achievement," said Jaschke.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">"This suggests that the cognitive skills developed during music lessons can influence children's cognitive abilities in completely unrelated subjects, leading to overall improved academic performance," he said.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">"We hope that this study will support political developments to reintegrate music and arts education into schools around the world," he said. </p>
<p align="justify" class="title">Music lessons can enhance children's memory, reasoning and planning abilities, leading to improved academic performance, a study has found.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">Visual arts lessons also significantly improve children's visual and spatial memory, researchers said.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">Music education has been decimated in schools around the globe, due to competition with academic subjects and an increasing lack of funding.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">These days, the opportunity to learn an instrument is seen as more of a luxury than a necessary part of education, researchers said.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">"Despite indications that music has beneficial effects on cognition, music is disappearing from general education curricula," said Artur Jaschke, from VU University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">"This inspired us to initiate a long-term study on the possible effects of music education on cognitive skills that may underlie academic achievement," said Jaschke.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">Published in Frontiers in Neuroscience, the research is the first large-scale, longitudinal study to be adapted into the regular school curriculum.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">The researchers conducted the study with 147 children across multiple Dutch schools, using a structured musical method.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">All schools followed the regular primary school curriculum, with some providing supplementary music or visual arts classes. In these, the children were given both theoretical and practical lessons.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">After 2.5 years, the children's academic performance was assessed, as well as various cognitive skills including planning, inhibition and memory skills.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">Researchers found that children who received music lessons had significant cognitive improvements compared to all other children in the study.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">Visual arts classes also showed a benefit: children in these classes had significantly improved visual and spatial short-term memory compared to students who had not received any supplementary lessons.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">"Children who received music lessons showed improved language-based reasoning and the ability to plan, organise and complete tasks, as well as improved academic achievement," said Jaschke.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">"This suggests that the cognitive skills developed during music lessons can influence children's cognitive abilities in completely unrelated subjects, leading to overall improved academic performance," he said.</p>.<p align="justify" class="bodytext">"We hope that this study will support political developments to reintegrate music and arts education into schools around the world," he said. </p>