

STUDY SHOWS PLAYING PERCUSSION INSTRUMENTS
IMPROVES IQ SCORES OF CHILDREN
List of Benefits from Playing the Drums Continues to Grow
(CLEVELAND, Ohio) - Improved IQ scores can now officially be added to the ever-growing list of benefits from playing drums. A recent study shows that playing the drums or other percussion instruments actually improves IQ scores of children. While previous studies have hinted that musical training improves a child's literacy and math skills, this is the first time that a study has shown that one's intelligence level can be improved by drumming.
"Playing the drums makes the brain think in a way that very few activities can," said Pat Brown, International Drum Month chairman and Percussion Marketing Council co-executive director. "Being able to understand musical notes and dissect how rhythms work and go together is a very complicated thought process. The most recent study shows that being constantly exposed to this type of brain activity can actually improve one's IQ level."
According to the study by E. Glenn Shallenberg at the University of Toronto, IQ test scores of six-year-old children significantly improved after receiving drum lessons. Shallenberg recruited a group of 144 six-year-olds and separated them into four groups: those receiving drum lessons, voice lessons, drama lessons, and no lessons. Children receiving the drum lessons showed significant improvement in their IQ tests, gaining an average of seven IQ points. Meanwhile, children receiving voice lessons increased six points, those receiving drama lessons increased five points, and children receiving no lessons improved four points. In his article in Psychological Science, Shallenberg concluded that musical training, in particular, was responsible for the extra IQ points.
Among the other benefits of playing the drums are improved muscle coordination and brain activity, physical therapy and stress relief, improved social skills such as teamwork, self-esteem and discipline, and improved abstract thought processes. The benefits of drumming is one of things the PMC is confident that participants will get out of International Drum Month in November.
This year's PMC International Drum Month theme is "Discover Your Inner Drummer," which the PMC hopes will motivate and encourage people of all ages, cultures and musical backgrounds to become drummers. The group will bring its message to the public through a variety of print and broadcast media during November - specifically aiming for increased visibility and participation from the virtually untapped teen, female, baby boomer and Latin communities.
To receive more information on International Drum Month or schedule an interview, please contact Formula at 310.578.7050.
About Percussion Marketing Council:
Formed in 1995, the Percussion Marketing Council (PMC) is the percussion industry's trade organization comprised of diverse companies that are involved in all aspects of percussion products, services and accessories. More than just a governing body, the PMC is a nonprofit organization that promotes music participation and its many benefits. PMC is governed by a board made up of a representative group of its members who work together to develop programs for creating more players of all types of drum and percussion instruments.
In addition to International Drum Month and a variety of public relations-oriented campaigns, the PMC has developed a range of drumming programs for children, teens, adults, parents and families, including:
- Developmental Drumming - A program that reaches out to two- to seven-year-old children and their parents as well as child care centers, corporate day care providers, and population centers
- Roots of Rhythm - A new initiative that will be developed in collaboration with The International House Of Blues Foundation, Roots of Rhythm will provide a World Percussion curriculum and hands-on training sessions for fifth and sixth grade classroom teachers by the fall of 2004
- PLAYDRUMS First Drumming Experience - A comprehensive project that brings CD-ROM and Web-based educational materials containing two"first drum" lessons (Introduction To The Drumset and Introduction To Conga Drumming) to music stores and private drum instructors
To find out how you can support the efforts of the Percussion Marketing Council, please contact the PMC headquarters at:
P.O. Box 33252
Cleveland, Ohio 44133
Telephone: 440-582-7006
Fax: 440-230-1346
e-mail: kbdustman@aol.com
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