People with autism can greatly benefit from music therapy. This
is people teaching the students to use and play music in a way that helps them
better understand what they need to accomplish. It helps them learn skills that
they may not have normally learned or understood. Simply by putting the concept
of music with something else, they are better able to relate to what they need
to know.
Some benefits are:
·
People
with diagnoses on the autism spectrum often show a heightened interest and
response to music, making it an excellent therapeutic tool to work with them.
·
Music
is a very basic human response, spanning all degrees of ability/disability.
Music therapists are able to meet clients at their own levels and allow them to
grow from there. The malleability of music makes it a medium that can be
adapted to meet the needs of each individual.
·
Music
is motivating and enjoyable.
·
Music
can promote relatedness, relaxation, learning, and self-expression.
·
Music
therapy addresses multiple developmental issues simultaneously.
·
Music
therapy can provide success-oriented opportunities for achievement and mastery.
- The structure and sensory input
inherent in music help to establish response and role expectations,
positive interactions, and organization.