Learning with
Sesame Street on the television is an example of melodic learning. Through Sesame Street, young children experience and advance emergent literacy processes through
poems,
jingles,
chants,
word games and singing
songs. Several of the principles of literacy learning interact. Rhyming and singing are high-level multi-modal interactions of visual, auditory/aural, and
kinesthetic modalities. Rhythmic and tonal processing also contribute to the success of this learning process.
Jumping rope is an example of melodic learning. Tonal, rhythmic, aural and visual elements interplay as children sing and rhyme. The rope's motion supplies the kinesthetic element to enhance the process. This may explain why many children learn jump rope rhymes faster and retain them longer than they do for many of their classroom lessons. A combination of five specific modalities or
Learning styles affect how a child learns while playing or while watching Sesame Street or jumping rope: •
Aural - The child says, hears and processes audio content as he listens to
Grover singing a song on Sesame Street. • Visual – The child sees and processes the images of Grover and what he is singing about. •
Kinesthetic learning– The child is animated, possibly singing, while processing the audio and visual content from Grover's song. • Rhythmic – As the melody and
accompaniment to the song are played, the child feels both the rhythm of the song and the rhythm of the language. This feeling of the rhythm can lead to kinesthetic involvement. • Tonal – The child feels the beat of the music (
rhythm) and is often moved to sing along. Singing encourages the child to modulate her
tone as she tries to follow the tune of the melody. Tone or
pitch helps transmit the meaning. The integration of these modalities creates more powerful and permanent measurable learning outcomes and can accelerate learning, especially struggling learners. ==Neuroscience evidence==