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ASPartOfMe
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05 Jul 2023, 9:24 am

Drumming helps pupils with autism overcome fear of failure - study

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A study assessing the emotional benefits of drumming for teenagers with autism is being rolled out to schools.
Research led by the University of Essex suggested adolescents who improved their drumming showed fewer signs of hyperactivity and inattention.

The project is being showcased at an exhibition and the study will be broadened out with analysis in schools.
Blondie drummer Clem Burke said: "The research involves the mental awareness of drumming."

We see a whole range of behavioural and emotional benefits to drumming," said Dr Ruth Lowry, the study's co-author.
"What we see is children who learn how to play the drums aren't afraid of making mistakes.

"When they stop and make a mistake in their drumming they simply pause, reset, and off they go, and it's no big deal, and we see that transferring into their school situation where they are happy to give things a go rather than have a fear of failure."

The research was organised by the Clem Burke Drumming Project and funded by the Waterloo Foundation charity.
It involved experts from the campus in Colchester, the University of Chichester, King's College London and Hartpury in Gloucestershire.

A group of 36 teenagers were monitored which included some who received two individual drumming lessons per week for eight weeks and some who did not receive any.

MRI scans "clearly identified regions of the brain that respond to the stimulus of combining multiple limbs", researchers said.

The paper was published last year in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal.

Burke, whose band has had six UK number one singles, said he wanted drumming to be included in England's national curriculum and said it could be a "game-changer" for children with learning difficulties.

"When you play music and accompany the rest of your band, you develop a non-verbal communication," he said.
"That is a very positive way of communicating, not verbally, but through the music."

Andrew Franklin, a drumming teacher from Essex who taught lessons for the study, told the BBC drumming could benefit "anybody of any age" and brought people "into the now".

Small study but I see it as a possible positive way of channeling stimming.


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bee33
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06 Jul 2023, 7:21 am

This seems like it could be very good for people who have some sense of rhythm and some musical aptitude. For me, it would be very frustrating because I have no rhythm and would be completely incapable of drumming. :)



funeralxempire
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06 Jul 2023, 7:27 am

bee33 wrote:
This seems like it could be very good for people who have some sense of rhythm and some musical aptitude. For me, it would be very frustrating because I have no rhythm and would be completely incapable of drumming. :)


Just count to four.


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bee33
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06 Jul 2023, 7:43 am

funeralxempire wrote:
bee33 wrote:
This seems like it could be very good for people who have some sense of rhythm and some musical aptitude. For me, it would be very frustrating because I have no rhythm and would be completely incapable of drumming. :)


Just count to four.

Count to four how fast? How do I tell if the interval between each number I count is the same? It doesn't work for me. I can't even clap along when someone is performing and they encourage the audience to clap along. I have to watch someone else clapping and try to copy them. :)



babybird
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06 Jul 2023, 1:53 pm

It was on the news about it this morning


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TenMinutes
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06 Jul 2023, 11:11 pm

I have drum sticks, a couple buckets, a few pieces of wood and a glass tile that make different sounds when struck, and another sound when struck on the edge, and a metal water bottle. What I don't have very often is the absence of a housemate.



ToughDiamond
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07 Jul 2023, 8:43 am

Seems credible to me. The great thing about drums is that the pitch dimension isn't so exacting as it is with most instruments, though the timing may be a tad more critical. I always feel good when I notice I'm playing an instrumental part better than I did last time. I sometimes wish I had an electronic drumkit so I could keep the noise down, but all I have is a MIDI keyboard that can play computer drum samples. It's almost as good but not as satisfying as hitting things with sticks.



renaeden
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07 Jul 2023, 10:48 pm

My nephew who is most likely on the spectrum somewhere (my sister refuses to get him diagnosed because she doesn't like labels) has been bought a drum kit. I've watched him drumming away and he's already quite good. He's 14 this year.