Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Effects of Background Music on Preschoolers' Attention.
View through CrossRef
Background music is often used in preschool classrooms with the belief that music makes children smarter and increases attention. The purpose of this study was to determine if background music increased children's focused attention during play activities. Focused attention occurs when children maintain attention to a task regardless of distractions. This quasiexperimental study investigated background music and play in a laboratory setting. I videotaped individual children during play with math manipulatives in a pretest-posttest research design with background music used as the treatment. Forty-three 3-, 4-, and 5-year-olds played for 15 minutes. The first 5 minutes of play had no music (pretest), the second 5-minute play episode had background music (treatment), and the final 5-minute play episode had no background music (posttest). Data were analyzed using one-way repeated measures analysis of variance. Findings revealed that the subjects paid less attention to the play task with background music than they did during the pretest, with no music. Another key finding was that children with more musical experiences at home, as reported by the Child's Home Musical Experience Survey (CHIMES), exhibited longer periods of focused attention with background music. This study confirmed previous research that 3-year-old children have shorter focused attention than 4- and 5-year-old children with and without background music. These findings have implications for teachers and parents that background music, instead of increasing attention in children, might indeed decrease children's focused attention during play activities.
Title: Effects of Background Music on Preschoolers' Attention.
Description:
Background music is often used in preschool classrooms with the belief that music makes children smarter and increases attention.
The purpose of this study was to determine if background music increased children's focused attention during play activities.
Focused attention occurs when children maintain attention to a task regardless of distractions.
This quasiexperimental study investigated background music and play in a laboratory setting.
I videotaped individual children during play with math manipulatives in a pretest-posttest research design with background music used as the treatment.
Forty-three 3-, 4-, and 5-year-olds played for 15 minutes.
The first 5 minutes of play had no music (pretest), the second 5-minute play episode had background music (treatment), and the final 5-minute play episode had no background music (posttest).
Data were analyzed using one-way repeated measures analysis of variance.
Findings revealed that the subjects paid less attention to the play task with background music than they did during the pretest, with no music.
Another key finding was that children with more musical experiences at home, as reported by the Child's Home Musical Experience Survey (CHIMES), exhibited longer periods of focused attention with background music.
This study confirmed previous research that 3-year-old children have shorter focused attention than 4- and 5-year-old children with and without background music.
These findings have implications for teachers and parents that background music, instead of increasing attention in children, might indeed decrease children's focused attention during play activities.
Related Results
The impact of Fathers’ Involvement on Preschoolers’ Resilience: a Moderated Mediation Model
The impact of Fathers’ Involvement on Preschoolers’ Resilience: a Moderated Mediation Model
Abstract
Objective:
This study based on the Kumpfer’s resilience framework, examines the relationship between fathers’ involvem...
Music and Mysticism
Music and Mysticism
The word “mystic” has a common meaning in philosophical traditions like neo-Platonism and religions (Hindu, Jewish, Christian, and Muslim)—namely the elevation of a human being to ...
Welcome to Approaches: Music Therapy & Special Music Education
Welcome to Approaches: Music Therapy & Special Music Education
Welcome to the inaugural issue of Approaches: Music Therapy & Special Music Education!
Approaches is the first peer-reviewed journal in Greece which is dedicated to the fields ...
Owner Bound Music: A study of popular sheet music selling and music making in the New Zealand home 1840-1940
Owner Bound Music: A study of popular sheet music selling and music making in the New Zealand home 1840-1940
<p>From 1840, when New Zealand became part of the British Empire, until 1940 when the nation celebrated its Centennial, the piano was the most dominant instrument in domestic...
Effect of Screen Time on Behavior of Preschoolers in Islamabad: Descriptive Cross-sectional Study (Preprint)
Effect of Screen Time on Behavior of Preschoolers in Islamabad: Descriptive Cross-sectional Study (Preprint)
BACKGROUND
The early years of childhood form the basis of intelligence, personality, social behavior, and the capacity to learn and nurture oneself as an ad...
Hartsa med brylcreme
Hartsa med brylcreme
From the point of departure of a folk song (Marching melody from Gärdeby) which by way of radio and television gained great popularity both in Sweden and abroad, light is thrown up...
Invited commentary on using music intervention and imagined interaction to deal with aggression and conflict
Invited commentary on using music intervention and imagined interaction to deal with aggression and conflict
Purpose
The purpose of this commentary is discuss how musical intervention and imagined interactions can be used to deal with conflict. Music has been called the universal language...
On Flores Island, do "ape-men" still exist? https://www.sapiens.org/biology/flores-island-ape-men/
On Flores Island, do "ape-men" still exist? https://www.sapiens.org/biology/flores-island-ape-men/
<span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><b><spa...

