Quantcast
breaking news

Special Music Class Targets Young Children

By: William Seay
Updated: March 21, 2013
watch video
(ST. JOSEPH, Mo.) Stomping their feet, and shaking to the beat, even the littlest kids can get into a good song.

"Music is a way that you can bridge barriers of difference and create unity.  It's a language on its own," said Debbie Kunz from St. Joseph's Parents as Leaders.

Kunz is speaking on behalf of Tunes of Fun, a special music class developed by stay-at-home mom Jill Swann in 2002.

Filling in for Jill and leading this class Paula Jessen. 

Jessen is here with her two boys, Parker, 3, and Landon, 10 months.

"I think it's good to interact with your kids.  You can do these things at home, obviously.  But I'm a stay at home mom.  They don't get the interaction with the other children," she said.

And allowing her children to be with other small children and allowing parents to be around other parents is one of the big reasons Tunes of Fun has so much to offer.

"Kids love to be around other kids.  What they're doing socially is they're developing empathy.  They're learning to make eye contact with other people.  They're learning that human relationships are important," Kunz said.

They even use musical instruments.

At their disposal is an array of drums and shakers and other noisemakers.

It's all about having fun, but there are developmental rewards to being around music at such a young age.

"The brain grows to about 80% of its adult size by the age of three," Kunz explains.  "So when we expose a child's brain to music from a very young age, you're building connections in the child's brain that make a stronger brain."

The big lesson is, you're never too young to enjoy a little music.

Comments

Readers Feel...

hello
Related Content

Members of the Marine Corps League are looking for a few good men to join their military brothers in service to the community....

A proposal from her boyfriend was the last thing Melanie Pankiewicz was expecting when she went to her last day of school Wednesday....

Free money for college students just got even better at Missouri Western State University....

Wednesday marked the last day of school before summer vacation for St. Joseph schools, but the staff is already looking ahead to next year....

New legislation waits for the governor's signature as a result of Maysville school threat...

Medical personnel went back to school today to learn the ABC's of Hepatitis. ...

Two years after a deadly tornado ripped through Joplin, St. Joseph volunteers keep building homes for those affected by the storm....

Sunshine Law violations alleged in two separate complaints...

The anniversary of the Joplin tornado hits home for many local volunteers who responded immediately after the twister hit....

A northwest Missouri man is behind bars, facing felony charges after posing as a Livingston County Sheriff's Deputy....

Medical personnel went back to school today to learn the ABC's of Hepatitis.
Two Years Later, Volunteers Continue Work in Joplin
Two years after a deadly tornado ripped through Joplin, St. Joseph volunteers keep building homes for those affected by the storm.
Attorney General's Office Looking into Possible SJSD Violation
Sunshine Law violations alleged in two separate complaints
Joplin Tornado Remembered Through Eyes of Volunteer
The anniversary of the Joplin tornado hits home for many local volunteers who responded immediately after the twister hit.
Police Say Man Charged with Exploiting Elderly Impersonated Deputy
A northwest Missouri man is behind bars, facing felony charges after posing as a Livingston County Sheriff's Deputy.
-->
 
 
 
 
 
©1998 - 2013 Stjoechannel.com
Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc.
All Rights Reserved