Music Therapy: How Does It Help Your Child?

This #WorldMusicDay learn why you must get your kids started on music and how it helps them.
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Music is practically indispensable in our lives. We are continually surrounded by melodies and songs, and we do well. Music is a universal medium of expression that has many positive effects on humans, especially during their early years. It affects our brain right from the moment that we are born. It also helps our cognitive, social, motor, emotional, and language development during the first steps of our lives.

Music therapy uses the beneficial effects of music to treat certain alterations and disorders, as well as to enhance the development of physical and mental abilities, which is why it is frequently used in the treatment of childhood disorders, especially in the area of ​​Psychology. The best part is that in addition to its great benefits, music therapy techniques can easily be adapted to the characteristics and needs of the child.

Children’s Music Therapy Techniques:

Singing:

Singing songs helps children learn the correct structure of words and phrases, making it an excellent tool for enhancing language. Furthermore, it stimulates the phonatory apparatus, while improving memory and neural association.

Musical audition:

This type of therapy is perfect for promoting attention and sound recognition while helping to relax or activate children, depending on the type of music. It also stimulates language and helps in the development of association memory.

Musical games

These are activities based on an instrument or a musical action, in which certain rules are followed. The best thing is that they can be applied in any treatment as they favor the development of thought, creativity, concentration, and memory. They also stimulate motor coordination, making them perfect for children who have motor problems.

Song composition:

This technique encourages children’s creativity and imagination. It also stimulates word association, language development, and evocative memory. Basically, the child must compose a song by changing a letter that he already knows or creating a new melody.

Play instruments

Playing a musical instrument requires not only knowledge but also motor skills, making it a good exercise for children who have physical disabilities or coordination problems. It is also an excellent tool for developing hearing and fixation memory.

Positive effects of music on children:

Various studies show the importance of music as an aid for intellectual growth since it generates a large amount of neural activity. Exposure from newborns to music, especially classical, and their musical development as they grow up, whether singing, dancing, or playing an instrument, have the following positive effects on children- scroll down to read them:

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