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The Case for Music Education

March 9th, 2021 | 1 min read

By Steven Greenall

The San Francisco Conservatory of Music (SFCM) has announced “the publication of a groundbreaking white paper on the extraordinary impact of music education on child development.” Titled Music for Every Child, the white paper was written by Indre Viskontas, a neuroscientist who’s also a soprano with a master’s degree in vocal performance from SFCM, where she’s been teaching.

 

Combining a passion for music with scientific curiosity, Indre Viskontas is affectionately known as Dr. Dre by students at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music where she is pioneering the application of neuroscience to music training at the University of San Francisco where she teaches neuroscience. She holds a Bachelor of Science in Psychology from the University of Toronto, a Master of Music in Voice Performance from the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, and a Doctor of Philosophy in Cognitive Neuroscience from UCLA.

Music for Every Child: a special report for parents, educators, community organizers, policy-makers and citizens of the world, aggregates existing research to codify and clarify the precise impacts music education has on developing minds, from improving skills like planning and following instructions to building stronger neuroplasticity and providing a quantifiably significant incentive for children at risk for dropping out to remain in school.

Screenshot 2021-03-09 at 16.27.50

The report's findings included:

  • Both music and language play distinct roles in our evolution as a species, our development as individuals, and our capacity to build communities
  • Musical training not only accelerates brain development but also produces long-lasting changes even in the mature adult brain
  • Kids between the ages of five and seven who are better at clapping in time to a rhythm show
    neurophysiological responses that correlate with better literacy skills
  • Music lessons in childhood correlate with better academic performance and higher IQ scores, even
    when controlling for family income and parental education.
  • Adolescents in performing arts programs were less likely to engage in risky behaviors compared with
    peers who were primarily involved in athletics

Download the Report


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Steven Greenall

Steven has over twenty years of experience working in the music industry. With degrees in Electrical Engineering and an MA in European Cultural Policy & Administration from the University of Warwick, where he now serves as a Course Tutor on their MA in Creative and Media Enterprises, Steven served as Executive Director of a non-profit international music association based in the United States from 2000 – 2007.

Steven is founder and CEO of Warwick Music Group now known as pBone Music, and started playing the trombone at the age of nine. Based in North Warwickshire, the company manufactures musical instruments that make the joy of music accessible. sustainable and fun including the world's first plastic trombone, pBone, which has sold over 250,000 units worldwide and won major international awards including the prestigious Queen's Award for Enterprise (Innovation) in 2019.

He was elected as a board director for the UK music industry trade body, the Music Industries Association, in 2019 becoming its chair in 2020, and is frequently interviewed or invited to present guest lectures on cultural entrepreneurship, music education, and the future of the music industry. At the request of the owner, Denis Wick, Steven joined the board of Denis Wick Products in 2021 subsequently being appointed their Chief Executive Officer in 2022, a role he performs alongside his role as CEO for pBone Music.

Steven lives in Warwickshire with his wife, Kate, their three young children, two ponies and a faithful labrador, and enjoys coaching his local youth rugby team.