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Tuning Up the Twos! By Denie Riggs Administrator Early Childhood Music It occurs between the adorable bouncing baby and the able-to-be-reasoned-with three-year-old.
It’s the messy stage, the feeding themselves stage; the potty training stage…it’s the Terrible Twos!
Yet, for the demanding little person we call the toddler, there is an awesome miracle taking place. During the first two years, a baby grows faster and changes more than any other time in their entire life. A bouncing baby doesn’t just grow into an eager three-year-old without external stimulation. Toddlers are sponges for information, learning through experiencing…with pots and pans, by playing games, watching, and imitating. They soak up stimuli from everything around them.
A toddler contributes to their cognitive growth by actively being inquisitive, through experiences, play and baby-size experiments. This stimulation literally changes the toddler’s brain. At birth the brain is packed with an estimated 100 billion neurons. But a newborn brain is not completely formed. Although genes rough out where the brain’s visual and auditory centers will be, it’s the stimulation the child receives that dictate where the regions that govern emotion and the center of higher thought finally get established.
Scientists are finding that a baby’s brain is pre-wired for music, like a new computer is pre-wired for Windows. The brain seems to be a sponge for music and, like a sponge in water, is changed by it. The brain’s left and right hemispheres are connected by a big trunk-line called the corpus callosum. When scientists compared the corpus callosum in thirty non-musicians with the corpus callosum in thirty professional string and piano players, researchers found that the front part of this thick cable of neurons is larger in musicians, especially if they began their training in early childhood. The front of the corpus callosum connects the two sides of the prefrontal cortex, the site of planning and foresight. It also connects the two sides of the premotor cortex, where actions are mapped out before they’re executed. The neural highway connecting the right and left brain may explain something else, too. The right brain is linked to emotion, the left to cognition. The greatest musicians are able to perform quick and efficient technique, while enhancing it with strong emotion.
Children who study piano in early childhood develop a brain function that dies away if not stimulated. And no other activity will achieve the same results of brain function. Once the neuron connectors die, no activity will bring them back. They are gone… forever.
Here are some ideas to create a musical toddler:
Come on kids; let’s make music!
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Copyright © 2002 Perfect Praise, Inc.
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