Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
CBE Life Sci Educ. 2012 Spring;11(1):26-30. doi: 10.1187/cbe.11-08-0068.
Music is recognized as an effective mode of teaching young children but is rarely used in university-level science courses. This article reviews the somewhat limited evidence on whether and how content-rich music might affect college students' understanding of science and offers practical suggestions for incorporating music into courses. Aside from aiding memorization, songs may potentially improve learning by helping students feel relaxed and welcome in stressful settings, engaging students through multiple modes (verbal vs. nonverbal) and modalities (auditory vs. visual vs. kinesthetic) simultaneously, challenging students to integrate and "own" the material through the medium of song lyrics, and increasing students' time on task outside of class through enjoyable listening or songwriting assignments. Students may produce content-rich songs of good quality if given sufficient assistance and encouragement by instructors and peers. The challenges ahead include 1) defining the circumstances in which music is most likely to promote learning and 2) developing rubrics for evaluating the quality of songs.
音乐被认为是教授幼儿的有效模式,但在大学阶段的科学课程中很少使用。本文回顾了一些关于内容丰富的音乐是否以及如何可能影响大学生对科学的理解的有限证据,并为将音乐纳入课程提供了实际建议。除了帮助记忆外,歌曲还可能通过帮助学生在紧张的环境中感到放松和受欢迎、通过多种模式(语言与非语言)和方式(听觉与视觉与动觉)同时吸引学生、通过歌曲歌词挑战学生整合和“拥有”材料以及通过愉快的聆听或歌曲创作作业增加学生课外的时间来促进学习。如果教师和同行给予学生足够的帮助和鼓励,学生可能会创作高质量的内容丰富的歌曲。未来的挑战包括 1)定义音乐最有可能促进学习的情况,以及 2)制定评估歌曲质量的评分标准。