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The Campbell Collaboration | www.campbellcollaboration.org Music Instruction for Improving Cognitive and Social Emotional Development and Academic Achievement in School-aged Children and Youth: A Systematic Review Gabrielle Chapman, Jan Morrison & Mark Lipsey Submitted to the Coordinating Group of: Crime and Justice Education Disability International Development Nutrition Social Welfare Other: Plans to co-register: No Yes Cochrane Other Maybe Date Submitted: 28 April 2016 Date Revision Submitted: 19 July 2016 Approval Date: 31 July 2016 Publication Date: 01 September 2016

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Page 1: Music Instruction for Improving Cognitive and Social ...€¦ · Music Instruction for Improving Cognitive and Social Emotional Development and Academic ... Research on the benefits

The Campbell Collaboration | www.campbellcollaboration.org

Music Instruction for Improving Cognitive and

Social Emotional Development and Academic

Achievement in School-aged Children and

Youth: A Systematic Review Gabrielle Chapman, Jan Morrison & Mark Lipsey

Submitted to the Coordinating Group of:

Crime and Justice

Education

Disability

International Development

Nutrition

Social Welfare

Other:

Plans to co-register:

No

Yes Cochrane Other

Maybe

Date Submitted: 28 April 2016

Date Revision Submitted: 19 July 2016

Approval Date: 31 July 2016

Publication Date: 01 September 2016

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TITLE OF THE REVIEW

Music Instruction for Improving Cognitive and Social Emotional Development and

Academic Achievement in School-aged Children and Youth: A Systematic Review.

BACKGROUND

Music instruction, while available in most public schools, has struggled to remain relevant in

today’s test-focused curriculum. While 89-97% of elementary students receive some kind of

music instruction in school, the type and quality of instruction varies widely (Parsad &

Spiegelman, 2012). In elementary schools where at least 50% of the students are on free or

reduced lunch, 84% of music teachers had a district curriculum to follow, 49% of teachers

taught at more than one school, and 25% of teachers taught music class outside of regular

school hours. In 2013, as many as 159 art and music teachers were laid off in the Chicago

Public School system because of budget cuts (Fang, 2013); Philadelphia city schools

completely eliminated funding for art and music programs to deal with a $304 million

budget shortfall. (Woodall & Chea-Annan, 2013).

In December of 2015, President Obama signed into law the Every Student Succeeds Act

(ESSA) which rejects the overuse of standardized tests and empowers each state to develop

their own strong systems for school improvement based upon evidence. This new law also

ensures that arts education programs (Section 4104, b, II) are eligible to receive federal

funds and Sec 4107 states “programs and activities that use music and arts as tools to

support student success” will be funded. With the ESSA grants beginning in July 1, 2016 now

is the perfect time to explore the impact of music instruction on student achievement and

cognitive development.

Research on the benefits of music instruction has blossomed over that past 20 years.

Studies on intelligence, academic success, and cognitive skills have documented the value of

music in the lives of children. Concerning IQ, Schellenberg (2004) found a significant

increase in children receiving 36 weeks of music. On the other hand, Gromko & Poorman

(1998) found no significant difference in IQ for pre-schoolers who received weekly piano

instruction for 3 years and those who did not. Ho, Cheung & Chan (2003) found that boys in

Hong Kong, who had classical music training for 1-5 years, significantly improved on verbal

memory tasks compared with boys who had no music training. However they found no

significant difference on visual memory tasks. Johnson & Memmott (2006) found a slight

advantage in standardized math and English tests for 3rd, 4th, 8th & 9th graders who had

participated in high quality music programs. Both Harris (2008) and Helmrich (2008)

found that students who engaged in music instruction performed better in elementary

mathematics and algebra. For reading outcomes, Baek’s 2009 study of preschoolers showed

that children who received music instruction for 8 weeks had significantly higher reading

scores than those with no music instruction.

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Theory of change: Many skills are required when playing a musical instrument: motor,

listening, reading, translating the “language” of music, and memorization (the sharps or flats

of a key). Studies have shown that exposure to music can change the way the brain operates.

Schlaug, Norton, Overy & Winner’s (2005) study used MRI to examine the brain changes in

children involved (or not) in music training. For children aged 5-7, there were no structural

brain difference at baseline between the instrumental and matched control groups. After one

year of instrumental music training, there was a greater increase in gray matter volume (not

significant) for the music group compared to the control group. However, in another study

with 9-11 years old subjects with an average of four years of music training, the music group

had significantly more gray matter volume compared to a matched group of non-

instrumentalists. The music group also performed significantly better on the WISC-III

Vocabulary test, and outperformed the controls on phonemic awareness, the Raven’s

Progressive Matrices and the Key Math test, although differences were not significant.

Gains in academic achievement, cognitive and social-emotional skills are considered to be

far-transfer benefits of music instruction (Jaschke, Eggermont, Honing & Scherder, 2013).

While far-transfer effects are harder to detect than near-transfer benefits (fine motor skills,

perception of pitch and rhythm), significant effects of music instruction were found for

reading, writing and math in their meta-analysis. Miendlarzewska & Trost (2014) describe

the effects of music training in childhood in their review. Listening skills are routinely

improved by music instruction, which in-turn improves language processing and reading.

Miendlarzewska & Trost theorize that music lessons act as additional schooling and that

focused attention, memorization, and mastery of technical skills translate into higher IQ

scores and achievement.

Effects of music instruction on children not at-risk: Bilhartz et al. (1999) reported on

preschoolers who had 30 weeks of parent-involved music instruction. These children showed

significant gain in the Stanford-Binet Bead Test compared with controls. In another study,

upper-middle-income kindergarten and first grade children were followed for three years

after receiving 8 months of keyboard lessons (Rauscher, 2002; Rauscher & Zupan, 2000).

Children who received music instruction scored higher on spatial-temporal tasks compared

to children in the control condition. However, Rickard, Bambrick & Gill (2012) found no

advantage for children engaging in a music education program in reading or math while

attending private schools in Australia. A recent study (Hogenes, Oers, Diekstra & Sklad,

2015) of Dutch 5th and 6th graders reports that after 6 months of a music composition

intervention, subjects were more engaged in music education and performed better on

reading comprehension measures than the control group.

Music programs, cognitive and social abilities with low-income, high risk children: Costa-

Giomi (2004) studied 63 low-income Montreal fourth graders who were provided with

weekly piano lessons for three years; 54 children were not. The children were assessed using

the Developing Cognitive Abilities Test (DCAT), language and math subtests from the

Canadian Achievement Tests, and other measures. At post-test there was a small effect for

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the treatment group on general cognitive abilities and spatial development, but not for

verbal and quantitative abilities. There was no difference in academic achievement in math

and language as measured by standardized tests and report cards. Rauscher (2005) studied

economically disadvantaged elementary school children to see the effects of twice-weekly or

three times per month group keyboard lessons or no lessons at all. By the third year, and

after improvement of the quality of musical instruction, the keyboard group scored higher on

spatial-temporal tasks and arithmetic; however there no difference between groups on verbal

measures. A study evaluating the impact of a music program designed to foster cognitive

development and social esteem among high-risk 7-9 year old children in Israel (Portowitz, et

al., 2009) favored children in the experimental group. The treatment group received private

instrumental lessons for two years and the control group did not. Pre and post assessments

evaluated the development of cognitive skills with the Raven and the Complex Figure Tests

and social esteem (Fitts). Both groups improved their cognition after two years; however,

the treatment group’s cognitive skills were significantly greater than the control group’s

skills. In another Portowitz study (2014), elementary-aged children who participated in 32

hours of music training had significantly better memory outcomes than the control group.

In our own pilot study at the W. O. Smith Music School in Nashville, TN, our two-year

findings have shown significant differences for children in the music-treatment group. The

W. O. Smith Music School is an afterschool program that provides quality music instruction

for low-income, at-risk children for a nominal fee. For the spring 2015 follow-up, children

who were exposed to music classes and/or private lessons were significantly more accurate

on the Cogstate One-Back Working Memory Task than children on the wait-list at a 9-month

(Tx = 27, C = 21, p = .018) and 21-month assessment (Tx = 14, C = 10, p = .038).

Additionally, children exposed to music performed more accurately on the Cogstate Social-

Emotional Task than children on the wait-list at a 9-month (p = .07) and 21-month follow-

up. The treatment group had higher language arts grades after 9-months, while the control

group had higher grades in science, math and social studies, but none of these differences

were significant. These were parent-reported grades, however, and some subjects’ grades

were missing (Tx = 26-25, C = 16-18).

Previous Systematic Reviews: While some meta-analyses in this topic area have been

completed, they have been quite limited in scope with regard to intervention type, context,

and outcomes. This review team proposes to conduct a robust systematic review that will fill

the evidence gap in five key areas. First, our outcomes will be comprehensive. We are seeking

the effects of music instruction on all areas of academic achievement as well as prosocial

behaviour, social emotional skills and cognition. Most of the existing reviews of the effects of

music instruction focus on a very narrow set of outcomes often limited to those most

commonly associated with the primary author’s discipline (see for example, Butzlaff 2000,

Hetland 2000b, Pietschnig 2010, Vaughn 2000). This proposal seeks to avoid the silo effect

and look at a wide variety of outcome types, essentially covering all the outcome categories

examined in the primary literature. This inclusivity among outcomes will allow the review

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team to examine variations of effects across outcome domains and with sufficient data, may

even allow for the examination of relationships among/between the various outcomes,

something that has not been done in systematic review literature in this area before. Second,

similar to the outcome situation identified above, most of the completed reviews include only

a very narrow definition of music instruction (see for example Hetland 2000a, Pietschnig

2010, Standley 1996) or included both passive listening and active learning but did not

differentiate between the two in terms of effects (Jaschke 2013). Third, and to the latter

point, the proposed study is designed to examine a wide variety of music instruction formats

and will identify which instruction formats and structures are associated with larger effects

on the outcome categories. Fourth, in examining the existing systematic reviews in this topic

area, issues were discovered with regard to the limited and somewhat flawed use of literature

search terms (see for example Jaschke 2013, Standley 1996). The proposed study will be

exhaustive when developing search terms to include terms across all academic disciplines. A

few of these reviews limited the eligibility criteria to English only studies (Hetland 2000a &

2000b, Standley 1996). To make the proposed study more representative, the review team

will utilize Peabody Research Institute’s existing relationships with systematic reviewers

outside the U.S. and the U.K. to identify any eligible non-English studies. The fifth and final

way the proposed study will fill the gap in literature is by expanding the search years

included in the review. The existing reviews examine a limited time frame, most of which

end in the late 1990s and our proposed study will perform a literature search on a somewhat

unlimited time frame that will cover 1950 through July 2016.

By expanding the inclusion criteria to overcome gaps in previous systematic reviews, we will

be able to provide empirically supported answers to questions that have not been posed

before due to the narrow scope of much of the music instruction literature. In addition to

these key questions, the overall objective is to draw on this systematic review of the available

research to identify implications for practice and policy and answer questions such as: how

can research about children’s exposure to music instruction programs inform educational

policy and governmental (local, state, and federal) funding priorities?

OBJECTIVES

The proposed review is intended to provide empirically supported answers to the following

questions:

1. Do music instruction programs have positive effects on the following outcome

categories: children’s academic success, cognitive development, socio-emotional

growth?

2. Which music program types (e.g., voice or instrument-based) have the largest effects

on each outcome category?

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3. Which characteristics of music programs (e.g., instruction duration, instructor

background, one-on-one or group instruction) are associated with the largest effects

on each outcome category?

4. Which characteristics of music program participants (e.g., at risk youth, age, sex, etc.)

are associated with the largest effects on each outcome category?

In addition to these key questions, the overall objective is to draw on the systematic

review of the available research to identify implications for practice and policy and

answer questions such as: how can research about children’s exposure to music

instruction programs inform educational policy and governmental (local, state, and

federal) funding priorities?

EXISTING REVIEWS

The following citations include existing systematic reviews on the topic of the cognitive,

socio-emotional or academic effects of music instruction:

Butzlaff, R. (2000). Can music be used to teach reading? Journal of Aesthetic Education, 34,

167-178. http://www.jstor.org/stable/3333642

Hetland, L. (2000a). Listening to Music Enhances Spatial-Temporal Reasoning: Evidence

for the "Mozart Effect". The Journal of Aesthetic Education 34(3/4), Special Issue,

The arts and academic achievement: What the evidence shows (Autumn-Winter, 105-

148. http://doi.org/10.2307/3333640

Hetland, L. (2000b). Learning to make music enhances spatial reasoning. Journal of

Aesthetic Education, 34(3/4), Special Issue, The arts and academic achievement:

What the evidence shows (Autumn-Winter), 179-238.

http://doi.org/10.2307/3333643

Jaschke, A. C., Eggermont, L. H. P., Honing, H. & Scherder, E. J. A. (2013). Music education

and its effect on intellectual abilities in children: A systematic review. Review in the

Neurosciences – DeGruyter, 24(6), 665-675. http://doi.org/10.1515/revneuro-2013-

0023

Miendlearzewska, E. A. & Trost, W. J. (2014). How musical training affects cognitive

development: rhythm, reward and other modulating variables. Frontiers in

Neuroscience, 7, 1-18. http://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2013.00279

Standley, J. M. (1996). A meta-analysis on the effects of music reinforcement for

education/therapy objectives. Journal of Research in Music Education, 44(2), 105-

133. http://doi.org/10.2307/3345665

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Vaughn, K. (2000) Music and Mathematics: Modest support for the oft-claimed relationship.

Journal of Aesthetic Education, 43(3/4), Special Issue: The Arts and Academic

Achievement: What the Evidence Shows (Fall/Winter 2000), 149-166.

http://www.jstor.org/stable/3333641

Our proposal for this systematic review of music effects will fill the evidence gap in the

following ways:

1) Our outcomes will be comprehensive. We are seeking the effects of music instruction

on all areas of academic achievement as well as prosocial behaviour, social emotional

skills and cognition. Each of the reviews listed above focus on a very narrow set of

outcomes often limited to those most commonly associated with the primary author’s

discipline. This proposal seeks to avoid the silo effect and look at a wide variety of

outcome types, essentially covering all the outcome categories examined in the

primary literature. This inclusivity among outcomes will allow the proposers to

examine the relationships among/between the various outcomes, something that has

not been done in systematic review literature in this area before.

2) Similar to the outcome situation identified in #1 above, each of the completed reviews

above includes only a very narrow definition of music instruction. The proposed

study is designed to examine a wide variety of music instruction formats and will

identify which instruction formats and structures are associated with larger effects on

the outcome categories.

3) In examining the systematic reviews listed above, issues were discovered with regard

to the limited and somewhat flawed use of literature search terms. The proposed

study will be exhaustive when developing search terms to include terms across all

academic disciplines.

4) Most of these reviews limited the eligibility criteria to English only studies. The

proposed study will utilize Peabody Research Institute’s existing relationships with

systematic reviewers outside the U.S. and the U.K. to identify any eligible non-

English studies.

5) Unlike many of the reviews listed above, the proposed study will perform a literature

search on a somewhat unlimited time frame that will cover 1950 through July 2016.

INTERVENTION

Based on existing research the underlying hypothesis for this study is that music instruction

positively effects other aspects of a child’s life. The logic here is that the acts of doing,

making, or learning music positively contributes to a growing and developing youth’s

improved cognitive function, socio-emotional capacity, and academic achievement.

Following this logic the authors will define music instruction as music programs that involve

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active music participation by the subjects of the intervention and limit the proposed review

to this intervention type. Active music instruction is defined as actively learning to read

music, playing an instrument in groups or one-on-one with a teacher or singing in a choral

ensemble. Any program where learning or performing music is the focus will be included.

What will not be included: 1) listening only to music, which might be called music

appreciation or general music; 2) Using music to learn other subjects, such as singing the

alphabet, memorizing the names of states or a dance class; or 3) listening to music while

taking a test.

To be eligible for the meta-analysis proposed in this review, a study must involve a qualifying

music instruction program. As noted above, an eligible music intervention will be defined as

one that involves active music participation (as opposed to passive listening such as playing

Mozart in the classroom while students take a test). To be eligible, interventions must engage

subjects in some form of active learning that cognitively and/or physically engages the

subjects such as learning to read music and playing an instrument. An eligible intervention

can include any type of music instruction on any kind of instrument, including vocal lessons

or choral ensembles as long as it involves active learning. Interventions that are excluded

from this study include passive listening to music while engaging in another task and general

music classes in which students learn about music generally but do not learn to play an

instrument.

Interventions that meet eligibility criteria in terms of intervention type (active music

instruction) will be included regardless of intensity or duration of the programs (these

characteristics will be coded into the meta-analytic database). An eligible study will also

include music instruction programs in any setting or instructional format to include but not

limited to school music/band class, extracurricular or home school co-operational settings as

well as group or one-on-one instruction formats.

The studies to be included in the proposed meta-analysis must also involve a comparison

between one or more focal treatments or active music instruction program(s) and one or

more control conditions which can be no music instruction, passive listening (e.g., listening

to music during which the participant does not engage in active music learning), or

educational curriculum as usual (e.g., control group goes to an honors algebra class or

current events instead of music instruction). Additionally, a group of children who drop out

or refuse to attend music instruction will not be considered a qualifying control condition

however wait-list control groups will be acceptable.

POPULATION

The proposed study will focus on children and youth who participate in music instruction.

Children and youth will be defined as persons under 18 years of age for the purposes of this

study. The proposed study will include all children and youth receiving music instruction

regardless of sex, race, ethnicity, or socioeconomic status (these subject characteristics will

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all be coded). Because this study aims to assess the effects of music instruction on the

average child not constrained by significant medical or psychological deficits, the target

population for this study will exclude significantly medically, intellectually and/or

psychologically compromised youth. Three examples from searches of primary studies in this

topic area that illustrate this exclusion include music instruction and/or exposure for youth

diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, as well as youth undergoing chemotherapy where

music is used to limit the effects of “chemo brain” and music therapy for youth with clinical

psychopathologies.

It should also be noted that the proposed review will include studies conducted in any

country. There will be no limitation on the nationality, race or ethnicity of the subjects where

the intervention occurs. Additionally, this review will include studies conducted during or

after 1950 with a publication date in 1950 or later.

OUTCOMES

To be eligible for the proposed meta-analysis, studies must report at least one outcome

variable describing the treatment and control samples with regard to their post- intervention

cognition, socio-emotional, academic achievement or the like. This outcome must be

quantitative with results reported on at least one variable in a form that, at minimum, allows

the direction of the effect to be determined (whether the outcome was more favorable for the

treatment or control group). If an outcome is measured but the reported results fall short of

this standard, the study will still be acceptable if the required results can be obtained from

the author or other sources.

Based on a review of the primary studies in this topic area, the outcomes that will be the

focus of the proposed meta-analysis and which represent the different categories of

intervention effects in studies of music instruction effects will include but not necessarily be

limited to:

Cognitive function: working memory, IQ, attention, self-regulation, socio-emotional skills,

visual and verbal memory, spatial awareness, spatial memory, etc.

Socio-emotional capacity: school behavioural measures, self-esteem, empathy, social skills,

emotional comprehension, etc.

Academic gains or attainment: STEM achievement (science, technology, engineering, math),

language arts achievement (vocabulary, reading, language mechanics, phonological

awareness, spelling, reading comprehension, etc.), other academic achievement (e.g., social

studies, foreign language, history etc.), standardized testing results (WISC, Wechsler, etc.),

grade point average, graduation or degree completion.

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STUDY DESIGNS

To be a qualifying design for this review, a study must compare subject group(s) receiving

active music instruction with at least one qualifying control condition (no music instruction,

passive listening or educational curriculum as usual). To be included, the subjects in a study

must either be randomly assigned to a qualifying music intervention and control condition;

OR matched mechanically or statistically on recognized variables for music proficiency and

demographics such as prior participation in music training, age, and socioeconomic status;

OR, if not randomized or matched, must provide pre-treatment data that can be compared.

In terms of sample size, to be eligible for this review a study must include at least 10 subjects

in the music instruction group and 10 in the control group at the point of assignment or

selection to the experimental conditions (i.e., pretest). Note that studies meeting all other

eligibility criteria will be included in this review regardless of their reporting format to help

ensure that there is no bias toward to formal journal publication. For example, technical

reports, dissertations and other forms of grey literature are eligible if they meet the inclusion

criteria.

REFERENCES

(* references we have identified for coding.)

Anvari, S. H., Trainor, L. J., Woodside, J. & Levy, B. A. (2002). Relations among music skills,

phonological processing, and early reading ability in preschool children. Journal of

Experimental Child Psychology, 83, 111-130. http://doi.org/10.1016/S0022-

0965(02)00124-8 *

Arnett-Gary, D. (1998). The effects of the arts on academic achievement. Masters Abstracts

International, 42(01), 22.

Baek, J. (2009). The effects of music instruction using picture books and creative activities

on musical creativity, music aptitude and reading ability of young children

(Doctoral dissertation). Available from ProQuest Dissertations and Theses database.

(Document ID 3361830). *

Bialystok, E. & DePape, A. M. (2009). Musical Expertise, Bilingualism, and Executive

Functioning. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and

Performance, 35(2), 565–574. http://doi.org/10.1037/a0012735

Bilhartz, T. D., Bruhn, R. A. & Olson, J. E. (2000). The effect of early music training on child

cognitive development. Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, 20(4), 615-

636. http://www.artsedsearch.org/summaries/the-effect-of-early-music-training-on-

child-cognitive-development *

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Bolduc, J. (2008). Effects of music instruction on emergent literacy capacities among

preschool children: A review. Early Childhood Research & Practice, 10(1).

http://ecrp.uiuc.edu/v10n1/bolduc.html

Bolduc, J. (2009). Effects of a music programme on kindergartners’ phonological awareness

skills. International Journal of Music Education, 27(1), 37-47.

http://doi.org/10.1177/0255761408099063 *

Bolduc, J. & Lefebvre, P. (2012). Using nursery rhymes to foster phonological and musical

processing skills in kindergarteners. Creative Education, 3(4), 495-502.

http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ce.2012.34075 *

Butzlaff, R. (2000). Can music be used to teach reading? Journal of Aesthetic Education, 34,

167-178. http://www.jstor.org/stable/3333642

Costa-Giomi, E. (1999). The effects of three years of piano instruction on children’s cognitive

development. Journal of Research in Music Education. 47(5), 198-212.

http://doi.org/10.2307/3345779 *

Costa-Giomi, E. (2004). Effects of three years of piano instruction on children’s academic

achievement, school performance and self-esteem. Psychology of Music, 32(2), 139-

152. http://doi.org/10.1177/0305735604041491 *

Costa-Giomi, E. (2015). The long-term effects of childhood music instruction on intelligence

and general cognitive abilities. Update: Applications of Research in Music

Education, 33(2), 20-26. http://doi.org/10.1177/8755123314540661

Courey, S., Balogh, E., Siker, J., Paik, J. (2012). Academic music: Music instruction to engage

third grade students in learning basic fraction concepts. Educational Studies in

Mathematics, 81. 251-278. http://doi.org/10.1007/s10649-012-9395-9 *

Crncec, R., Wilson, S. J. & Prior, M. (2006). The cognitive and academic benefits of music to

children: Facts and fiction. Educational Psychology, 26(4), 579-594.

http://berkscountymusicboosters.wikispaces.com/file/view/The+Cog+%26+academ

ic.pdf

Dege, F. & Schwarzer, G. (2011). The effect of a music program on phonological awareness in

pre-schoolers. Frontiers in Psychology, 2, 1 – 7.

http://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00124 *

Dege, F., Wehrum, S., Stark, R. & Schwarzer, G. (2009). Music training, cognitive abilities

and self-concept of ability in children. Proceedings of the 7th Triennial Conference of

European Society for the Cognitive Sciences of Music, Jyvaskyla, Finland.

http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-2009411239 *

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Dos Santos-Luis, C., Monico, L. S. M., Almeida, L. S. & Coimbra, D. (2015). Exploring the

long-term associations between adolescents’ music training and academic

achievement. Musicae Scientiae, December 31.

http://doi.org/10.1177/1029864915623613 *

ESSA legislation: Senator Lamar Alexander, S.1177 – Every Student Succeeds Acts (114th

Congress (2015-2016), Became public law 114-95 on 12/10/2015. Retrieved from

https://www.congress.gov/bill/114th-congress/senate-bill/1177/text#toc-

H7CA5D4E1FD83498896322A96A940ABD6

Fang, M. (2013, August 5). Public schools slash arts education and turn to private funding.

Thinkprogress. Retrieved from http://thinkprogress.org

Fetzer, L. (1994). Facilitating print awareness and literacy development with familiar

children’s songs (Doctoral dissertation). Available from ProQuest Dissertations and

Theses database (Document ID 9519803). *

Foregard, M., Winner, E., Norton, A., Schlaug, G. (2008). Practicing a musical instrument in

childhood is associated with enhanced verbal ability and nonverbal reasoning. PLoS

ONE 3(10), e3566. http://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0003566 *

Franklin M., Moore, K., Yip, C., Jonides, J., Rattray, K., & Moher, J. (2008). The effects of

musical training on verbal memory. Psychology of Music, 36(3), 353-365.

http://doi.org/10.1177/0305735607086044

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REVIEW AUTHORS

Lead review author: The lead author is the person who develops and co-ordinates the

review team, discusses and assigns roles for individual members of the review team, liaises

with the editorial base and takes responsibility for the on-going updates of the review.

Name: Gabrielle Chapman

Title: Principal Investigator

Affiliation: Peabody Research Institute at Vanderbilt University

Address: 230 Appleton Place, PMB 181

City, State, Province or County: Nashville, TN

Postal Code: 37203-5721

Country: USA

Phone: 615-322-6024

Email: [email protected]

Co-author(s): (There should be at least one co-author)

Name: Jan Morrison

Title: Project Manager

Affiliation: Peabody Research Institute at Vanderbilt University

Address: 230 Appleton Place, PMB 181

City, State, Province or County: Nashville, TN

Postal Code: 37203-5721

Country: USA

Phone: 615-322-8546

Email: [email protected]

Co-author(s): (There should be at least one co-author)

Name: Mark Lipsey

Title: Research Director

Affiliation: Peabody Research Institute at Vanderbilt University

Address: 230 Appleton Place, PMB 181

City, State, Province or County: Nashville, TN

Postal Code: 37203-5721

Country: USA

Phone: 615-343-2696

Email: [email protected]

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ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES

• Content: Gabrielle Chapman and Jan Morrison have been working in the area of music

education’s effect on cognition and socio-emotional capacity for several years. They were

awarded a grant from Vanderbilt’s Curb Center to pursue a primary pilot study of a local

music education program in 2013 and have managed to build collaborations with faculty

interested in the effects of music education across several disciplines. Their conference

posters in this area have garnered a great deal of interest from the field as their multi-

disciplinary approach has provided unique insights into the impacts of music education.

While not in music education specifically, Lipsey’s exceptional knowledge of education-

based intervention studies and education research adds a great deal of expertise to the

review team.

• Systematic review methods: Chapman, a former doctoral student and current colleague

of Lipsey, has a great deal of methodological knowledge related to systematic reviews and

has worked on numerous meta-analysis projects. Chapman has assisted in the development

of a guidance document for evaluation of meta-analytic projects and contributed to the

development of a meta-analysis tool for Crimesolutions.gov through Development Service

Group, Inc. Additionally, Chapman has published a review and overseen the update of some

of the largest meta-analytic databases in the world. Morrison has worked with both

Chapman and Lipsey as an exceptional project coordinator on several meta-analysis projects

at Peabody Research Institute for over a decade. Lipsey has an extremely high level of

expertise in systematic review methods as he has published many completed critically

acclaimed reviews, taught graduate level meta-analysis classes, is co-author of a textbook

(Practical Meta-Analysis), was Co-Editor-in-Chief of the journal Research Synthesis Methods

and currently serves as a Features Editor, and served as a co-Chair of the Campbell

Collaboration Steering Group.

• Statistical analysis: Chapman, has a great deal of statistical analysis knowledge and

experience relative to meta-analysis having published a completed review and conducted

analysis for solo meta-analysis projects and in collaboration with Lipsey. Morrison has

competently assisted both Chapman and Lipsey in statistical analysis on numerous meta-

analysis projects over more than a decade. Lipsey has an extremely high level of expertise in

statistical analysis, especially analysis associated with a meta-analysis project. He has

published innumerable reviews, taught graduate level meta-analysis classes, is co-author of a

textbook (Practical Meta-Analysis), was Co-Editor-in-Chief of the journal Research

Synthesis Methods, currently serves as a Features Editor, and served as a co-Chair of the

Campbell Collaboration Steering Group.

• Information retrieval: While we do not have a dedicated information retrieval expert on

the review team, the authors and the staff at Peabody Research Institute have developed

their own expertise in this area over the past decade (decades in the case of Lipsey)

conducting a large number of meta-analysis research projects. Morrison in particular has

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successfully overseen complex and extremely large literature searches, managed retrieval,

and assisted in the development of coding databases for more than 10 large meta-analysis

projects.

Note: CVs for Chapman, Lipsey, and Morrison are attached and provide additional details

FUNDING

None of the members of the review team currently receive any financial support for the

proposed music education meta-analysis project. This is the first and only funding proposal

this team has submitted for this meta-analysis project either individually or together.

POTENTIAL CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

No member of the review team has a financial interest or other conflicts of interest in this

project or the results.

PRELIMINARY TIMEFRAME

• Date you plan to submit a draft protocol:

We will submit the draft protocol within four (4) months of title approval.

• Date you plan to submit a draft review:

We will submit a draft review within twelve (12) months of protocol approval.

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AUTHOR DECLARATION

Authors’ responsibilities

By completing this form, you accept responsibility for preparing, maintaining, and updating

the review in accordance with Campbell Collaboration policy. The Coordinating Group will

provide as much support as possible to assist with the preparation of the review.

A draft protocol must be submitted to the Coordinating Group within one year of title

acceptance. If drafts are not submitted before the agreed deadlines, or if we are unable to

contact you for an extended period, the Coordinating Group has the right to de-register the

title or transfer the title to alternative authors. The Coordinating Group also has the right to

de-register or transfer the title if it does not meet the standards of the Coordinating Group

and/or the Campbell Collaboration.

You accept responsibility for maintaining the review in light of new evidence, comments and

criticisms, and other developments, and updating the review every five years, when

substantial new evidence becomes available, or, if requested, transferring responsibility for

maintaining the review to others as agreed with the Coordinating Group.

Publication in the Campbell Library

The support of the Coordinating Group in preparing your review is conditional upon your

agreement to publish the protocol, finished review, and subsequent updates in the Campbell

Library. The Campbell Collaboration places no restrictions on publication of the findings of a

Campbell systematic review in a more abbreviated form as a journal article either before or

after the publication of the monograph version in Campbell Systematic Reviews. Some

journals, however, have restrictions that preclude publication of findings that have been, or

will be, reported elsewhere and authors considering publication in such a journal should be

aware of possible conflict with publication of the monograph version in Campbell Systematic

Reviews. Publication in a journal after publication or in press status in Campbell Systematic

Reviews should acknowledge the Campbell version and include a citation to it. Note that

systematic reviews published in Campbell Systematic Reviews and co-registered with the

Cochrane Collaboration may have additional requirements or restrictions for co-publication.

Review authors accept responsibility for meeting any co-publication requirements.

I understand the commitment required to undertake a Campbell review, and

agree to publish in the Campbell Library. Signed on behalf of the authors:

Form completed by: Gabrielle Lynn Chapman Date:28 March 2016