The headline refers to a Coppell Student Media piece (Apr 22 2025) claiming that “studying with song” boosts learning, and it cites a Times report on an NYU experiment where people listening to “groovy” instrumental tracks finished a reaction-time task 7 % faster without losing accuracy. The underlying research is a 280-person randomized study published in PLOS One that played four 10-minute audio backdrops (office noise, pop hits, ‘deep-focus’ ambient, or a purpose-built “Work Flow” track). Only the rhythmic Work Flow music improved both mood and processing speed. MusicRadarPLOS
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0316047
However, the PLOS One trial tested a brief flanker task, not real study or memory work, and it did not measure long-term learning. Its authors caution that “further research is needed to confirm effects on academic performance.”
A much-cited Frontiers in Psychology experiment (Lehmann & Seufert 2017) shows why background music helps some learners and hurts others. Eighty-one college students read a science text either in silence or while two pop songs played. Comprehension scores rose with music only for students who scored high on working-memory capacity; those with lower capacity did better in silence. The authors conclude that background music is a “seductive detail” that competes with the text for cognitive resources unless the learner has spare working-memory bandwidth. Frontiers
Overall, controlled evidence suggests that certain types of instrumental, rhythmic (“groove”) music can lift mood and speed up simple cognitive processing, which may support light, routine homework. But for tasks that tax verbal working memory—reading dense material, solving math proofs, writing essays—music (especially with lyrics) often impairs comprehension or slows performance, and individual differences (working-memory span, musical preference, ADHD traits) moderate the effect.
Music can help some learners under specific conditions (instrumental, moderately fast, enjoyable tracks; low-language tasks; high-capacity listeners), but it can just as easily distract others. The blanket claim that “music helps you learn” is misleading—students should experiment to see whether the right playlist aids their particular study task or whether silence is smarter.