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Learn The Music From The Core & Become Mastery

Are you worried about seeing your children with a lack of study skills, focus, low memory, very shorter attention span, low self-esteem, and psychological issues? Looking for a solution without making them go through hard times, that don’t requires expensive coaching and without making them force study?
curly is a psychology-based music academy, that provides training programs with the motive to reinforce the ability to perform well in the academic, social, and emotional activities of a student. we focus on objectives such as mathematics, language skills, improving reading ability, and strengthening memory and attention. music can improve a student’s academic and social performance only if done with the right guidance and determination. depending on the type of music they play, listen and the instruments they choose to play.

About Instructor

Abhishek mule, a clinical psychologist, and a singer-songwriter. Enthusiast music teacher from last 10 years, working on music and its effects on the enhancement of brain activity, and improvement of a child’s academic performance. the combination of music and psychology is what his master’s in. providing music education with his intense music programs to individuals and groups and schools, journey has just started. This program works on the connection of music and academic success, and the combination of creative and logical side of the brain we provide program learning music with mindfulness of a students meditational music practice for adults meditation programs music therapy psychological counseling.

We Provide Program

  • Learning music with the mindfulness of a student
  • Meditational music practice for adults
  • Meditation programs
  • Music therapy
  • Psychological counseling
Join Our Class

Learn The Music From The Core & Become Mastery

Curlys is a training academy that works with people, personally understating the problem and healing them with the help of our expert team of psychologists and musicians.

We help individuals to

  • Heal psychological disorders
  • Improve grades for students
  • Improve Personality
  • Reducing stress in adults
  • Enhance mental capacity to perform well at work
  • Child with autism
  • Child with special needs
  • Improve mathematical & logical skills to do well in future
  • Improve taking decision accuracy

Problems Only Music Can Solve

1 Illiteracy

2009 study comparing two groups of second graders from similar demographics suggests learning music boosts reading abilities. The only major difference between the two groups was that one learned music notation, sight-reading and other skills, while the control group did not. Each group was tested for literacy before and after the school year. The end-of-year scores for the control group improved only slightly from their beginning of the year scores, while the kids with a music education scored “significantly higher,” especially on vocabulary tests.

2. Low Birth Weight

Babies born too early often require extended stays in the hospital to help them gain weight and strength. To help facilitate this process, many hospitals turn to music. A team of Canadian researchers found that playing music to preemies reduced their pain levels and encouraged better feeding habits, which in turn helped with weight-gain. Hospitals use musical instruments to mimic the sounds of a mother’s heartbeat and womb to lull premature babies to sleep. Researchers also say that playing calming Mozart to premature infants significantly reduces the amount of energy they expend, which allows them gain weight.

It “makes you wonder whether neonatal intensive care units should consider music exposure as standard practice for at-risk infants,” says Dr. Nestor Lopez-Duran at child-psych.org.

3. The Damaging Effects of Brain Damage

Of the 1.5 million Americans who sustain brain damage each year, roughly 90,000 of them will be left with a long-term movement or speech disability. As treatment, researchers use music to stimulate the areas of the brain that control these two functions.

When given a rhythm to walk or dance to, people with neurological damage caused by stroke or Parkinson’s disease can “regain a symmetrical stride and a sense of balance.” The beats in music help serve as a footstep cue for the brain.

 4. Hearing Loss

OK, maybe music can’t cure hearing loss, but it may help prevent it. A study of 163 adults, 74 of them lifelong musicians, had participants take a series of hearing tests. The lifelong musicians processed sound better than non-musicians, with the gap widening with age. “A 70-year-old musician understood speech in a noisy environment as well as a 50-year-old non-musician,” explains Linda Searing at the Washington Post.

Similarly, rhythm and pitch can help patients sing what words they can’t say. A study of autistic children who couldn’t speak found that music therapy helped these children articulate words. Some of these kids said their first words ever as a result of the treatment.

“We are just starting to understand how powerful music can be. We don’t know what the limits are.” says Michael De Georgia, director of the Center for Music and Medicine at Case Western Reserve University’s University Hospitals Case Medical Center in Cleveland.

5. Keeping a healthy Heart

Not the kind caused by rejection, but the kind caused by a heart attack. Music can help patients who are recovering from heart attacks and heart surgery by lowering blood pressure, slowing the heart rate and reducing anxiety. As a preventative, try listening to “joyful” music, or songs that make you feel good. Research says listening to songs that evoke a sense of joy causes increased circulation and expanded blood vessels, which encourages good vascular health.

6.  moral values of a kid

In a 2008 study, researcher Tobias Greitemeyer wanted to study how lyrics impacted teenagers’ attitudes and behavior. To do so, he exposed one group of teens to “socially conscious” songs with a positive message, like Michael Jackson’s “Heal the World.” Another other group listened to songs with a “neutral” message. The researchers then “accidentally” knocked over a cup of pencils. The group listening to positive songs not only rushed to help more quickly, but picked up five times as many pencils as the other group.