Music&Literacy OurTime Research Highlights
Music&Literacy OurTime Research Highlights
Music&Literacy OurTime Research Highlights
Active Listening
What is it?
Babies come into the world with brains hard-wired for listening. A fetus in the
third trimester can already hear its mother’s heartbeat and other environmental
sounds, including music. During the first year of life, infants develop their
listening skills further, responding increasingly to music, language, and tone.
Listening is a major avenue for learning: hearing and recognizing
* All reference citations are included in the “Full Research Paper” version
of this piece, also available at www.kindermusik.com/benefits.
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the voices of different familiar people;
recognizing the connection of certain
sounds (e.g., lullabies vs. active songs)
to certain activities (sleep vs. play); or simply
knowing that a parent’s voice or footsteps
Developmental Milestones:
signal that food, a dry diaper, or comfort
is coming.
Listening
By the age of three, many children can:
Listening seems like such a simple thing,
hardly something that takes training—but Point to the source of a sound,
how many times have you thought I know
such as a telephone ringing.
Here’s where music comes in. Researchers believe that music instruction
helps children build active listening skills. By “tuning in” to music and other
specific sounds carefully, one at a time, and with full attention, children
hone their listening skills. Through songs and chants, children develop an
ear for the patterns of sounds in words, phrases, and sentences. And as
children listen to and sing words set to music, they become familiar with
other sounds, rhymes, rhythms, and patterns in language.
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How It Works in a Kindermusik Class
Listen. You and your toddler stop, focus, and listen to the
sound, for example, of a baby elephant.
Connect. Your child hears the teacher’s directions, hears
your voice repeating the words, and learns to focus on the
sounds entering his or her ears and then connect them to the
concepts you describe: Listen to the sound of a baby elephant.
Imitate. You and your child will use vocal play to playfully
repeat the sounds you hear.
Discuss. Together, the class may discuss what they heard,
what it sounded like, and how it was different from other
sounds they’ve listened to.
Vocabulary
What is it?
How do we raise children to have and use a good vocabulary? Believe it
or not, researchers have found that the number of words a child knows
by the age of three is one of the most reliable predictors of his or her
reading ability in third grade. Children who have had word-rich experiences
in the first three years of life usually already display about twice the
vocabulary of children who do not.
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Fortunately, researchers point out that
children gain most of their vocabulary
simply by listening to and talking with
adults. In other words, you are the most
important source of new words for your child!
Research shows that when parents engage Developmental Milestones:
young children in singing songs, reciting Vocabulary
rhymes, telling stories, and introducing other
In a word-rich environment, by the
enriching activities, the children’s vocabulary
age of three, your child most likely:
and language improve. Researchers also
suggest that songs are a great source
Hears up to 30,700 words
per day.
of new words, motivating children to
Knows and uses over 200 words.
understand new vocabulary through playful
Is beginning to use prepositions
interactions. Your positive attitude about (in, on); pronouns (he, we);
reading, singing, and word-learning makes and information words (who,
all the difference in your child’s interest in where, what, why).
learning to read. Combines words to speak in
two- to three-word sentences.
Experienced teachers know that movement Makes his or her needs and
helps solidify the meanings of new words. wants known through spoken
Songs, poems, and rhymes that have words and motions.
accompanying movements to emphasize
the word meanings, in fact, have been found to be particularly effective
in helping children gather and retain new words in their vocabularies. Of
course, vocabulary is not just about understanding the words spoken to
you (called receptive language)—it’s also about being able to use those
words in your own speaking (expressive language). A major accomplishment
of the first three years of life is for your child to begin to put his or her ideas
and feelings into words to communicate with others. Researchers believe
that as a playful avenue for children to vocalize and communicate, singing
contributes to young children’s language development.
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How It Works in a Kindermusik Class
Listen. Every Kindermusik class is naturally vocabulary-rich,
with songs, rhymes, poems, and stories at the heart of much
of the action.
Learn. Your child hears a word or sound and is challenged,
with your guidance, to react physically, i.e., by moving a scarf
high when he or she hears the word high, accompanied by high
music, and low when he or she hears the word low, accompanied
by low music.
Express. Together you and your child can speak the words
of poems and rhymes, sing the words to songs, and engage
in conversation with teacher and classmates—all of which build
vocal ability, expressiveness, and language confidence.
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Phonological Awareness
What is it?
Long before your child can tell you that the magnetic letter “m” on your
refrigerator stands for the /m/ sound, he or she is building sensitivity to
the sounds of spoken language. Researchers call this phonological
awareness, or “a general appreciation of the sounds of speech, as distinct
from their meaning.” Phonological awareness is a very important step in
the journey to learning to read. In fact, a child’s level of sound awareness
upon entering school “may be the single most powerful determinant of
the success he or she will experience in learning to read.” Academic
research has proven that the playful
experiences a parent has
with a young toddler can
have a positive impact on that
child’s level of phonological awareness Developmental Milestones:
later, at ages three and four. Phonological
From the perspective of a parent, however, Awareness
phonological awareness crops up most By the age of three, your child will
prominently in a few ways. It begins with most likely be able to:
an awareness of the spoken contours of
Repeat e-i-e-i-o or other favorite
speech (for example, using rising pitch to
song lyrics.
signal a question). It continues as children Notice repeating sounds, such
begin to notice syllables and sounds within as buh in bumble bee.
words (for example, “number” can be Fill in rhyming words in a
divided into two chunks: num- and -ber). predictable song.
The next step is rhyming. Early experiences Repeat words with certain
sounds, i.e, hop, hop, hop!
recognizing, repeating, and predicting
rhymes are a perfect and age-appropriate
way to build phonological sensitivity.
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Music is a great way to stimulate awareness of syllables, rhyming, and
changes in intonation. In fact, brain studies of eight-year-old children, amaz-
ingly, show that children who started musical training at the age of four or
five are better at processing the pitch changes within spoken language than
similar children without musical training.
Print Awareness
What is it?
Experts agree that print awareness is
an important predictor of reading success. Developmental Milestones:
Print awareness entails an understanding Print
of the idea that letters can come together Awareness
to build words, which can come together
By the age of three, your child can
to build sentences; that these letters, words,
probably:
and sentences are used to convey meaning;
and that there is a certain way that printed Listen carefully to and enjoy
materials, such as books, work (you read
books that you read aloud.
from left to right, turn the pages, etc.). Here’s
Recognize a favorite book by
its cover.
why it matters: children whose parents
Understand that books are
read books aloud to them early— handled in a certain way.
when they are toddlers and even Pretend to “read” books.
infants—have significantly elevated Begin to tell the difference
language abilities later on. between writing and drawing.
Show interest in writing, possibly
making more letter-like forms.
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books and stories, the benefits can hardly be overstated: they
build listening skills, learn new words, and are motivated to
interact with music and literature in positive, creative ways. In
fact, researchers suggest that song picture books, like
most of the books included with Kindermusik curricula, are
particularly well-suited for building language skills
and print awareness!
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You + Kindermusik: All the Right Stuff
If there’s one thing all the recent research proves without a doubt, it’s that
YOU are the biggest factor in determining your child’s readiness
for and interest in reading. Reading to your child, singing with your
child, and talking with your child—in other words, surrounding your
child with words of all kinds—are the best, easiest, and most
fun ways to prepare him or her for a lifetime of reading.
Another thing is clear, though: the kind of learning your child does in
Kindermusik—engaging in active, focused listening exercises; building both
receptive and expressed vocabulary; expanding awareness of phonemes,
the building blocks of language; and exploring an awareness of how the
printed word works to communicate—has been proven repeatedly and
convincingly to be the kind of learning that is specifically linked to
success in school.
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