Senate debates
Thursday, 19 June 2008
Music Education
9:40 am
Lyn Allison (Victoria, Australian Democrats) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
I, and also on behalf of Senator Kemp, move:
- That the Senate—
- (a) recognises that there is a growing body of scientific research demonstrating that children who receive a comprehensive, sequential music instruction gain many academic and social benefits, including findings that:
- (i) playing music:
- (a) builds or modifies neural pathways related to spatial-temporal reasoning tasks, which are crucial for higher brain functions like complex maths and science,
- (b) improves concentration, memory and self expression,
- (c) increases reasoning capacity, time management and the ability to think in the abstract, and
- (d) improves the ability to think,
- (ii) learning music helps underperforming students improve, and
- (iii) music students learn critical teamwork and social skills;
- (i) playing music:
- (b) appreciates the positive link between the well-being of Australia’s youth and their appreciation and active participation in music activities;
- (c) understands the special benefits that active music making has for at risk, vulnerable and Indigenous children;
- (d) acknowledges the significant contribution and effort that people from all walks of life make to their local communities through music and arts initiatives, particularly those that support Australia’s youth;
- (e) concedes that many Australian children, including the overwhelming majority of children attending state schools nationally, do not have access to a comprehensive, sequential music instruction as part of their education;
- (f) highlights the progress in measuring and enunciating the current scarcity of school music education, through:
- (i) the Trends in School Music Education Provision in Australia report,
- (ii) the National Review of School Music Education, and
- (iii) the National Music Workshop;
- (g) calls on all governments nationally, through the Ministerial Council on Education, Employment, Training and Youth Affairs and the Cultural Ministers Council to actively support and encourage:
- (i) an increased presence and heightened importance of learning music within the various education curricula throughout Australia, and
- (ii) a closing of the gap between school sectors on access to music education, and
- (iii) the inclusion of meaningful and effective instruction on the delivery of school music within qualifications for school teachers; and
- (h) calls on the Government to.
- (i) assist all school systems nationally in their ability to deliver a comprehensive, sequential music instruction for all Australian children in the years from Kindergarten to Year 10,
- (ii) increase funding for school music education programs, and
- (iii) include the delivery of a comprehensive, sequential music instruction in the development of the national curriculum.
- (a) recognises that there is a growing body of scientific research demonstrating that children who receive a comprehensive, sequential music instruction gain many academic and social benefits, including findings that:
Question agreed to.