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News
From Yahoo! News (11/14/07)
MUSIC LESSONS PAY OFF
Those hours practicing piano
scales or singing with a choral group weren't for nothing because people
with a background in music tend to have a higher education and earn more,
according to a new survey.
The poll by Harris Interactive,
an independent research company, showed that 88 percent of people with a
post-graduate education were involved in music while in school, and 83
percent of people earning $150,000 or more had a music education.
"Part of it is the discipline
itself in learning music, it's a rigorous discipline, and in an ensemble
situation, there's a great deal of working with others. Those types of
skills stand you well in careers later in life," said John Mahlmann, of the
National Association for Music Education in Reston, Virginia, which assisted
in the survey.
In addition to the practical
skills gained from studying music, people questioned in the online poll said
it also gave them a sense of personal fulfillment.
Students who found music to be
extremely or very influential to their fulfillment were those who had vocal
lessons and who played in a garage band. Nearly 80 percent of the 2,565
people who took part in the survey last month who were still involved in
music felt the same way.
"That's the beauty of music, that
they can bring both hard work and enjoyment together, which doesn't always
happen elsewhere," Mahlmann added.
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