A good heart is better than all the heads in the world-edward bulwer-lytton
What did your school smell like?
What did your school smell like? Was
it noisy or peaceful?
It might not seem important, but a
growing body of research suggests that smells and sounds can have an impact on
learning, performance and creativity. Indeed, some head teachers have recently taken
to broadcasting noises and pumping whiffs into their schools to see whether it
can boost grades. Is there anything in it? And if so, what are the implications
for the way we all work and study?
There is certainly some
well-established research to suggest that some noises can have a detrimental
effect on learning. Numerous studies over the past 15 years have found that
children attending schools under the flight paths of large airports lag behind in their exam results.
But general noise seems to have an
effect too. Bridget Shield, a professor of acoustics at London South Bank
University, and Julie Dockrell, now at the Institute of Education, have been
conducting studies and advising politicians on the effects of all sorts of
noises, such as traffic and sirens, as well as noise generated by the children
themselves. When they recreated those particular sounds in an experimental
setting whilst children completed various cognitive tasks, they found a
significant negative effect on exam scores. “Everything points to a detrimental
impact of the noise on children’s performance, in numeracy, in literacy, and in
spelling,” says Shield. The noise seemed to have an especially detrimental
effect on children with special needs. `
Shield says the sound of “babble” –
the chatter of other children, is particularly distracting in the classroom.
Architects that fashion open-plan classrooms in schools would do well to take
this on board. “People are very distracted by speech – particularly if it’s
understandable, but you’re not involved in it.” This phenomenon is also known
as the irrelevant speech effect, she says, adding that “it’s a very common
finding in open-plan offices as well.”
Whether background sounds are
beneficial or not seems to depend on what kind of noise it is – and the volume.
In a series of studies published last year, Ravi Mehta from the College of
Business at Illinois and colleagues tested people’s creativity while exposed to
a soundtrack made up of background noises – such as coffee-shop chatter and
construction-site drilling – at different volumes. They found that people were
more creative when the background noises were played at a medium level than
when volume was low. Loud background noise, however, damaged their creativity.
This makes sense for a couple of
reasons, says psychologist Dr Nick Perham, at Cardiff Metropolitan University
in the UK, who studies the effect of sounds on learning but was not involved in
the study. Firstly, he says, sounds that are most distracting tend to be
very variable. A general hum in the background suggests a steady-state
sound with not much acoustical variation. “So there’s not much there to capture
your attention – nothing distracting the subjects,” he says. At the same time,
the background noise might cause the subjects to be in a slightly heightened
state of arousal, says Perham. You don’t want too much or too little arousal. “Medium
arousal is best for good performance. So it might be that a general hum in the
background gives an optimum level of arousal.” With that in mind, Perham
suggests there may be some benefit to playing music or other sounds in an art
class or other situations where creativity is key.
Many teachers all over the world
already play music to students in class. Many are inspired by the belief that
hearing music can boost IQ in subsequent tasks, the so-called Mozart effect. While the evidence actually suggests it’s a stretch to say
classical music boosts brainpower, researchers do think pleasant sounds before
a task can sometimes lift your mood and help you perform well, says Perham, who
has done his own studies on the phenomenon. The key appears to be that you
enjoy what you’re hearing. “If you like the music or you like the sound – even
listening to a Stephen King novel – then you did better. It didn’t matter about
the music,” he says.
However, it’s worth considering that
music is not always helpful while you’re trying to work. Trying to perform a
task which involves serial recall – for instance, doing mental arithmetic –
will be impaired by sounds with acoustic variation, which includes most types
of music, says Perham. (Except a few, like extreme death metal.) Songs with
lyrics, on the other hand, are more likely to interfere with tasks that involve
semantics – such as reading comprehension. “The task and the sound are important,
when you have both of them using the same process then you get problems,” he
says.
So, it seems that schools that
choose to screen out disturbing noises and create positive soundscapes could
enhance the learning of their students, so long as they make careful choices.
This isn’t the only sense being
tweaked to affect learning. Special educational needs students at Sydenham high
school in London are being encouraged to revise different subjects in the
presence of different smells – grapefruit scents for maths, lavender for French
and spearmint for history.
Less research has gone into the idea
of whether scents can help with cognitive performance, although there have been
intriguing findings. In 2003, psychologist Mark Moss, at Northumbria
University, carried out a range of cognitive tests on subjects who were exposed either to lavender or rosemary aromas. “Rosemary in particular caught my attention as it is
considered to be arousing and linked to memory,” he says, whereas lavender is
considered to be sedating. Moss found that those who were smelling lavender
performed significantly worse in working memory tests, and had impaired
reaction times for both memory and attention-based tasks, compared to controls.
Those in the rosemary group, on the other hand, did much better than controls
overall in the memory tasks, although their reaction times were slower.
Why might this be? It’s perhaps not
surprising that smells affect memory, given that the brain’s olfactory bulb is
intimately linked to the hippocampus, which deals with learning. But Moss
suspected there was more to it. To explore the pharmacological effects of
rosemary on the body, he drew blood samples from volunteers who had just
undergone cognitive tests in a rosemary-infused room, and found that they had
elevated levels of a compound called 1,8-cineole in their blood. Previous
research has shown that this compound increases communication between brain
cells, which might explain how it improves brain function.
So, as you finish reading this story, take a moment to tune into your senses. Close your eyes and take a few nice deep breaths. What can you hear and smell? The answer, it seems, may affect how much you learnt in the past few minutes.
So, as you finish reading this story, take a moment to tune into your senses. Close your eyes and take a few nice deep breaths. What can you hear and smell? The answer, it seems, may affect how much you learnt in the past few minutes.
Source: bbc/co.uk/future
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