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Dobrota, Snježana – Bulgarian Comparative Education Society, 2022
Musical activities in early and preschool age significantly contribute to the overall development of the child. The paper has explored music preferences of preschool children for classical music and "world music." As a part of the research, a general data questionnaire and music preferences questionnaire were used. The research was…
Descriptors: Music Education, Singing, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries
Bernhofer, Andreas – Hungarian Educational Research Journal, 2020
Many European cities offer a vivid cultural landscape and numerous live-music opportunities. Some of the events aim at young audiences and develop cooperation projects with schools (Schwanse, 2003). The "Schools@Concerts" research project focuses on long-established cooperation projects between schools and concert hosts and tries to give…
Descriptors: Music Activities, Music Education, Music Teachers, Teacher Education Programs
Hui, Ken – Early Child Development and Care, 2006
In 1993, Rauscher et al. reported a temporary increase in spatial-temporal ability after listening to Mozart's music. This led to numerous replication and extension studies with mixed findings in the past decade. This study investigated the "Mozart effect" in preschool children. Forty-one boys and girls, aged three to five, attempted a series of…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Music Education, Classical Music, Intervention
Shore, Rebecca; Strasser, Janis – Young Children, 2006
Hearing causes brain cells (neurons) to connect and neural networks to form. Advanced brain-scan technology and neuroscience research reveal that when children participate in music, the brain "light[s] up like a Christmas tree" in many different areas (Parr, Radford, & Snyder 1998, cited in Isenberg & Jalongo 2001, 159). The growing neural…
Descriptors: Music, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Hearing (Physiology), Music Education