A child and Miri the Elfcat from Kittelfdora Kids learning to read through music in a cozy bedroom setting, symbolizing the connection between songs and early literacy.

Do Songs Really Help Kids Learn? The Science Behind Music and Early Literacy

Quick Answer: Yes, but not in the way most people think. Songs don’t just make learning fun. They actually train the part of the brain that children need to learn how to read.

What happens in a child’s brain when they hear a song?

When a child hears a song, their brain is doing a lot more than enjoying the melody. It is picking up on patterns, rhythms, and sounds. And those exact same skills are what children need to start reading.

There is a term for this: phonological awareness. It is the ability to notice and work with the sounds inside words. For example, knowing that “cat” and “hat” rhyme, or that “sun” starts with an “s” sound. Research consistently shows that phonological awareness is one of the strongest predictors of how well a child will learn to read.

And songs? They are basically phonological awareness training in disguise.

What does the research actually say?

A 2015 meta-analysis published in Frontiers in Psychology (Gordon, Fehd & McCandliss) reviewed multiple studies on music training and reading skills. The finding was clear: music training transfers to phonological awareness, which is a core building block of literacy.

Another study compared two groups of preschoolers. One group followed a phonological skills program. The other group did a music program. Both groups showed significant improvements in phonological awareness compared to a control group. The researchers concluded that music and language likely share the same processing mechanisms in the young brain.

A 2020 study by Brady added that phonological awareness starts developing as early as preschool, and that songs with rhyming words and repetitive patterns help children break words into parts, which is a critical first step toward reading.

So no, this is not just a theory. The connection between songs and early literacy is well-documented.

Why does rhythm matter so much?

Rhythm is probably the most underrated part of this. When a child claps along to a beat or taps their foot to a song, they are practicing something called rhythmic entrainment. Research by Goswami (2011) found that children who struggle to keep a beat also tend to struggle with detecting syllables in words. That is a direct link between music and reading readiness.

This is also why nursery rhymes have been used for so long. A 1987 study by Maclean found that nursery rhymes were strongly linked to phonological skills in young children. The rhymes, the repetition, the rhythm, all of it helps children hear the structure of language before they ever look at a page.

This is something the characters at Kittelfdora Kids naturally reflect. Miri and Ori don’t just sing, they move, clap, and play with sounds. That kind of active engagement with music is exactly what the research points to as meaningful for children developing early language skills.

Does any type of song work better than others?

Songs with clear rhymes, repetition, and simple rhythmic patterns are the most useful for early literacy. This is why simple folk songs and reimagined nursery rhymes have worked across generations. They naturally repeat sounds, highlight word patterns, and invite movement, without any of it feeling like a structured activity.

A note on the Mozart Effect

You may have heard that playing classical music to babies makes them smarter. This is often called the Mozart Effect, and it is worth being honest about what the research actually supports. The original 1993 study (Rauscher, Shaw & Ky) found a short-term improvement in spatial reasoning in college students, not in babies. Later attempts to replicate the effect with infants produced very weak or no results.

Passive listening to classical music alone is not a proven path to higher intelligence. Active engagement with music, singing, clapping, moving to rhythm, is what the stronger research supports. There is a real difference between background music and participatory music, and it matters when thinking about how young children actually learn.

The bottom line

Songs have been helping children learn language long before anyone put them in a lab and studied them. The research just gave us the language to explain why it works. Rhythm trains the ear. Rhyme builds pattern recognition. Repetition locks sounds into memory. And all of it happens while a child is simply enjoying themselves.

That might be the most underrated thing about music in early childhood. The learning does not feel like learning at all.

Sources: Gordon, Fehd & McCandliss (2015), Frontiers in Psychology | Dege & Schwarzer (2011), PMC | Goswami (2011) | Brady (2020) | Maclean (1987)

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