Monday, January 30, 2012

My name is jasmine and i want to ask you does music affect how well people read?

I used to pay Mozart and Beethoven in my high school classes when I taught, and it seemed to keep the students more focused. It played softly in the background.

My name is jasmine and i want to ask you does music affect how well people read?
Not really sure I can tell you this . from the time my youngest granddaughter was about 1 week old I played Carlos Naki very low and she is a straight A student. Did this help? I don't know, but it didn't hurt.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n7bKUMW8P...


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OBfVdr5Iv...


No, we are not Native Americans.


I played this as well


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-TT-BpXIW...


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9pYlG4Pdz...


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xwb5Ai7LN...


I think this is good for a babies well being.
Reply:I love music but whenever I read I like silence so that I can concentrate better.
Reply:Music distracts the right side of the brain. In the 1980's they tested music on programming skills - they wanted to know if white-collar technical work could be helped by music much as blue-collar assembly work was. The scores in each room (one with music, one without) were the same, but ONLY programmers in the room without music realized that the program was going to produce numbers idential to those put in - in other words, after all the program functions, the output would equal the input. So pattern recognition was distracted in those listening to the music. If you are reading something light, include music. If you are trying to get the big picture on some heavier concepts - leave it turned off.


This is also seen in that people who are lost instinctively turn their radios off, even when they are alone in the car - they instinctively realize there is a connection between figuring things out and musical distractions.

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