Ellington Middle School Music

private lessons

 

Alexis Stolarun (Ellington, CT)
Can travel to your home for lessons. 
Flexible Scheduling.  

Can prepare students for eastern regionals (middle school) and all state (high school) audition music.

email: astolarun@ellingtonschools.net

All Band Instruments and Piano

Summit Studios Performing Arts Center
421 Main Street

Manchester, CT 06040

Phone: (860) 645-1502

All Band Instruments are offered at this location.

Music and Arts
The Center at
Vernon Circle

378 Kelly Road

Vernon, CT 06066

(860) 648-9178

Flute, Guitar, Percussion, Piano, Saxophone, Viola and Violin
call location to see if other instrumental lessons are offered

Music and Arts
42 Main Street (Glastonbury Line)

East Hartford, CT 06118

(860) 568-0692

Bass Guitar, Cello Clarinet, Flute, French Horn, Guitar, Oboe, Percussion, Piano, Saxophone, Trombone, Trumpet, Violin, Viola, and Vocals.
 call location to see if other instrumental lessons are offered

 

























 



 

 





Extra-musical benefits of taking private lessons
(some interesting reading!)

Some studies suggests that music lessons provide children with important developmental benefits beyond simply the knowledge or skill of playing a musical instrument. Research suggests that musical lessons may enhance intelligence and academic achievement, build self-esteem and improve discipline. A recent Rockefeller Foundation Study found that music majors have the highest rate of admittance to medical schools, followed by biochemistry and the humanities. On SAT tests, the national average scores were 427 on the verbal and 476 on math. At the same time, music students averaged 465 on the verbal and 497 on the math - 38 and 21 points higher, respectively. However, the observed correlation between musical and mathematical ability may be inherent rather than acquired.

Skills learned through the discipline of music may transfer to study skills, communication skills, and cognitive skills useful in every part of a child's studies at school, though. An in-depth Harvard University study found evidence that spatial-temporal reasoning improves when children learn to make music, and this kind of reasoning improves temporarily when adults listen to certain kinds of music, including Mozart (Rauscher, Shaw & Ky, 1993). This finding which has been named "The Mozart effect" suggests that music and spatial reasoning are related psychologically (i.e., they may rely on some of the same underlying skills) and perhaps neurologically as well.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_lessons