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CREATIVE LEAPS:
Journal for the Arts in Leadership and Interdisciplinary
Learning
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The Well-Tempered Mind by Peter Perret (overview)
Source: The University of Chicago Press, http://www.press.uchicago.edu
Perret, Peter and Janet Fox
A Well-Tempered Mind:
Using
Music to Help Children Listen and Learn.
Foreword by Maya Angelou.
ISBN#: 1-9325940-3-5
$22.95
Peter Perret, conductor of the Winston-Salem Symphony, chronicles in A
Well-Tempered Mind how a brief NPR feature about music and the
brain inspired him to create an innovative music education program
for first- through third-graders at two elementary schools in Winston-Salem,
North Carolina. The musicians from his woodwind quintet taught the
children to listen to music, detect the roles of the instruments, discern
how music is constructed, and even compose their own music.
The effects of the quintets intervention reached beyond the music classes and
carried into other academic subjects as well, resulting in a significant improvement
in the childrens’ scores on annual state tests. A Well-Tempered Mind describes
how the children and musicians worked together, and explores the brain research
that seeks to understand how music engages the brains cognitive capabilities
ranging from memory and language and emotional processing.
Perret’s Bolton project inspires a host of tantalizing questions such
as: Does music physically change the brain? Can music help kids with short
attention spans, dyslexia, and other learning difficulties? Does music influence
the cognitive abilities needed for reading and math? Perret’s engaging
and candid narrative, previously featured in Symphony Magazine, tells
of a fascinating journey of discovery into the complexities and intricate workings
of the human brain. Further, it opens the door to new and exciting opportunities
for education, in its demonstration of how music can be a universal language
that expands young minds in unforeseen ways.
A Well-Tempered Mind demonstrates that by working together, we can
make a difference in our children's lives and replace cultural bankruptcy
with a full pocket of good music. Lord knows we need it. --Wynton
Marsalis, Artistic Director of Jazz at Lincoln Center
This book should persuade parents and administrators to give education in music
its deserved high priority in the schools under their care.--Walter J.
Freeman, M.D., professor in the Graduate School Division of Neuroscience, Department
of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of California at Berkeley

Learn more about Learning Arts music-based programs for students:
http://www.learningarts.org/guides/K-6/artsexplorations.htm
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