minti, powered by parents Powered by Parents
First Visit?     Register     Login
 

This site gets better with user participation. Please participate... Some of the main things you can do is rate this advice, add comments to this advice, add links to and from this advice, and/or write your own advice.

  email  print
  report   
kindermusik_logo.gif
Like this topic?
Write Advice
Add to Favorites
Advice that links to this one
ADVICE RATING
 (Worth a try) (Worth a try) (Worth a try) (Worth a try) (Worth a try) 4.42 (Worth a try) from 23 votes (3544 Visits)

Music, Movement with your baby

rachelcook by rachelcook Minti Founder(February 2006) (rank 26th)
Music and movement utilizes all sensory parts of the body and mind, and is especially good for developing minds. Music classes are a great way to bond with your baby through dance, song and music rhythms. Bringing music and movement into your home creates a fun, calming effect on your little
ones and reinforces what  you did that day in your music class.

Form my experience, going to a music class with my little man was such an eye opening experience. You are given a little pack with a music CD and book with other information material for use at home. In class you gather around on a mat on the floor, all concentrating just on the singing teacher. You are also encouraged to join in the singing. My little man was roughly only 3 months old when he started his first class.

The teacher mentioned how babies brains are stimulated by a soprano tone, and so began our wonderous journey into music with my little man, Codi. The teacher would sing in this beautiful soprano voice and immediately all our babies would turn their heads to the sound of her voice. We all mentioned half jokingly, if we could take her home with us!

During the class, we danced and we twirled, we sung to different beats and moved in different formations. I found when I was at home and I played the same music we sung and danced to, my son would be transfixed and mesmerized. It was amazing to experience this when Codi was just 3 months old, as I was quite skeptical to start with.

Bonding
I also found that music and singing helped in my communication and bonding with my son. If he became impatient in the car or in his high car, I would sing his favorites and he would immediately settle and concentrate on me, until I could find that pacifier/dummy or bowl of food. Now in his third term, he laughs at my 'Kookaburra' song, and jiggles like he's dancing when I put the CD on. You also get a book to read based on the term's music theme, in your music pack and it's the only book that I can get him to focus his attention on and sit still to listen to. It's still a 'favorite' today, (at 18 months).

From three months onwards, I also found that these classes gave me ideas for what I could do with him during the day. I'd sometimes hold him swaying with a song, dancing to calm him for nap time or excite him from a distance with... 'go into the kitchen and take a peek' song, as I made his breakfast. In class, he loves the 'kids gathering drum' and finds fun in shaking the casters or listening for that 'humming bird'. It definitely encouraged me to recognize and really experience what it's like to 'get something back' from him, even when he was very little, at 3 months!! I was definitely hooked.

Connection
In his first term I experienced a connection I never thought I would get so early. Indeed they do give something back other than a smile and a kick. In the case with my son, he picked up on the rhythm, laughed back and recognised songs when I played them back to him. It felt like I had a communication link to my son, and we had fun together. I found a higher level of interaction and recognition and a much calmer baby in difficult situations. Other than the music from the music class, he also loves classic jazz in the car (now Delta Goodrum), as travel music and 'fur lise' on the piano, (which I played when he was in utero), and he just fades away into relaxation.

My husband didn't believe me and I am sure he thought I was using my imagination. But each time he put 'talk back' radio on in the car, he experienced loud protests from the passenger in the back. He learnt pretty quickly to put that jazz on I had mentioned to him to put on as his drove with Codi and he told me he put it on really fast to silence the cries. Eventually, this extended to the tough hours between 4-6pm where I would find my husband (on his turn to mind bub on the weekend), putting the actual music CD on from our classes!! Now all we do is both sing these songs to him throughout the whole day, with the grandparents getting in on the act. A few months down the track, he also bangs some tunes (noise) on the piano, very dramatic. He finds the microphone a funny thing, loves shouting and singing into the mic. Whilst in the toilet too, as the sound echos...(the toilet on the plane was also an interesting vocal experience, got lots of smiles as I returned to my seat, hehe).

In conclusion
There are many bub music classes to choose from however, the one I joined is Kindermusik (see external links below). I really have had a lot of fun with my son learning the world of music together. More importantly how it stimulates their brains and teaches them beat and rythym which helps babies later when they grow up and start learning mathematics. For now, it's just the most useful and heart warming experience I have had in helping me enjoy motherhood and make it more pleasant experience for Codi and the whole family.

---------
Kindermusik Philosophy

Kindermusik is the community of families and teachers passionately committed to bringing music to children's lives through developmentally appropriate curricula, CDs, books, instruments, and activities for our classes and for family time at home.

Kindermusik's philosophy is founded upon rigorous research and our fundamental beliefs:

  • Every parent is the child's most important teacher.
  • Every child is musical.
  • The home is the most important learning environment.
  • Music nurtures a child's cognitive, emotional, social, language, and physical development.
  • Every child should experience the joy, fun, and learning which music brings to life.
Any contributed content above is the subjective opinion of that member or external author, and not of Minti.com Pty Ltd. If you are searching for health related advice we strongly suggest you seek professional medical support. View our Terms of Service for more details.

Related Content:

Bookmarks:

ADVICE RATING
 (Worth a try) (Worth a try) (Worth a try) (Worth a try) (Worth a try) 4.42 (Worth a try) from 23 votes
Report

Thankyou for your vote (you can change your vote at any time). Please leave some helpful comments about this advice using the box below.

ExcellentExcellentExcellentExcellentExcellent
GoodGoodGoodGoodGood
AverageAverageAverageAverageAverage
PoorPoorPoorPoorPoor
Very PoorVery PoorVery PoorVery PoorVery Poor

Voting help


 
Add a comment on this article.

 

MumKim
4.00 (Good) | October 2006 | MumKim
They have even got someone near me
Great article and believe it or not Kindermusik has even got someone only 60 km away from me in Bunbury. I will have to check it out. thanks


Reply Reply Report
Jessgore
4.00 (Good) | September 2006 | Jessgore
Music, Movement with your baby

I learnt very early on that my son loves music.. I always have music going on in the background... All sorts, from Neil Diamond to My sister singing (She made a small cd recording). He used to move with the music when he was on the floor. He actually had rythem it was great fun to watch.. Even more so when he started to walk and I'd have the music on he would actually headbang.. He loves to dance and when I put on his favorite music you would see the smile on his face, he'd run to the sterio and just dance in front of it...

music is very important to me and my family, and by the looks of things my son is going to follow suit... He loves it when I pick up the guitar, he even tries to help me play....



Reply Reply Report
michellei
4.00 (Good) | August 2006 | michellei
We Love.... Kindermusik
Kindermusik has only just started up where we live and this will be our second term. The difference it has made to our lives is truely remarkable.
Olivia does not often participate, but when we get home oh boy! Olivia likes to know her environment before she takes part in group activities.
I speak to other parents who are interested, but not will to part with their cash - how can you put a price on what you teach your child?

Music often soothes the savage beast in our house lol.


Reply Reply Report
JadieLady
4.00 (Good) | August 2006 | JadieLady
that add sounds really funny..
my little one used to squirm all over the place before he was bor n and we played music. my husband and i both love music and both play instruments, so it is very much one of the biggest parts of our lives.the first time my son smiled was when he was ilstening to pachelbel's canon on my husbands mobile in the hospital when we were re admitted. it was the song from our wedding and it is still his favourite song. now he gets grumpy if the music isnt on before 10am! :)


Reply Reply Report
allyp
4.00 (Good) | June 2006 | allyp
Music
I have to agree. Cadence love's music. It sooths her. I think it's because while I was pregnant with her, I always listened to music.


Reply Reply Report
hrs2004
3.47 (Average) | June 2006 | hrs2004
Music

I was just saying to Nick today how Leala, at 7 months, would only stop crying if she got fed up in the car if I sang her favourite songs from music classes. I found that I had to sing some over and over, and so I went out and bought the CD! Having said that, I have kind of made it a rule not to allow nursery rhymes and songs on in the car unless REALLY necessary - I want her to get used to other music and save my sanity!



Reply Reply Report
Anonymous Member
1.67 (Poor) | February 2006 | anonymous  
test comment - non member
test test


Reply Reply Report
ClayCook
3.39 (Average) | February 2006 | ClayCook
Fantastic article
Fantastic article rach. Yes I too really connect with him now through singing. His favourite with me is the seseme street "bird call boogie". Only problem is now that all I listen to in the car is his music... maybe an ipod with one ear phone could be my solution?


Reply Reply Report
      Izzy
3.38 (Average) | May 2006 | Izzy
Re: Fantastic article

You bring to mind a commercial here in the U.S. It's a car commercial that "talks" to the dealership if the car needs any work. In the commercial, a man is singing "the wheels on the bus goes round and round" and he is quite into it. Then the car phone rang so he turned off the music.  A woman identified herself as being from the dealership and that the man's car called her that it's time to schedule an oil change. The man got a little uncomfortable and was speechless for a second and then he replied, "what else did my car tell you?".    It's so hillarious!



Reply Reply Report

Know someone who would like this site? Refer a friend