Music In Education
Music in education is essential to our children because it increases their
listening skills and is a common method of communication for cultures worldwide.
Music is Education There are schools attempting to eliminate teaching musical
arts to our children. The board of education claims they must provide education
by concentrating on the basic academic courses, but what they don't realize is
that music is a major part of basic education. We must not allow them to pull
the teaching of music out of our school curriculums because music is an
essential form of communication. Our children do not have to be fluent in the
arts to receive the value of broad exposure to the different musical dialogues.
Deprivation of a very valuable part of education occurs if we do not teach them
to appreciate a wide variety of music. Metaphorically speaking, we often
associate the terms language and grammar with the term music. This association
leads us to believe that music is a form of language, possibly because no symbol
system other than language has the same potential as music of infinite
productivity and precision. It takes a multitude of directions and phonetic-type
symbolism to produce a pleasant sounding musical composition. This relates very
closely to the requirements of everyday language. The primary objective of any
spoken language is to convey a person's thoughts in a comprehensible fashion,
but we must remember that everyone thinks and comprehends everything
differently.
Musical language contains vast quantities of words to help people
understand how original composers intended to play a specific piece. Musical
language also has directions that allow and encourage some scope of original
interpretation and minor departures from the written score, resulting in no two
performances sounding exactly alike. The English language, as we know it,
carries a very strong parallel to these same interpretable words. Dialect and
slang are just two of the many connotative forms to speak different languages.
All languages contain these variations and reinforce the need for striving
toward understanding a basically generic language. It would be very difficult to
speak to a non-English speaking person and clearly convey a message unless both
persons were familiar with basic terminology. It would be just as unlikely to
communicate a musical message to someone not educated or interested in musical
interpretation. The term music in itself has many different connotations. One in
the United States may not have the same perceptions as one whose origin is
France or Australia, or elsewhere in the world. In my travels through Europe and
South America I had a hard time finding any truly original, locally produced
music. The majority of the music I searched through were also popular in the
United States.