2 May 2025

National Webinar Series: Prof Kate Williams

Written by: sueroberts

ASME is excited to continue our 2025 national webinar series. The online series aims to serve our entire membership, especially those in regional and remote communities. Each term, we will feature an outstanding presenter who will inspire our national community. The details of our second webinar are below.

Title: The rhythm of life: Beat, movement, and synchrony for development and wellbeing

Presenter: Professor Kate Williams

Date: 29 May 2025

Times: 6pm AEST (NSW, ACT, Vic, Qld, Tas) | 5:30pm ACST (SA, NT) | 4pm AWST (WA)

Registration: https://www.trybooking.com/events/landing/1395910

Cost: $10 for ASME members. Non-members can join using our website. 

To be human is to be rhythmic. The first sense of sound we experience is our mothers’ rhythmic heartbeat, and at the end of life, as our other senses fade, our hearing is the one that remains – our own heartbeat perhaps soothing us with its slowing rhythm. Across the lifespan, beat and rhythm play an incredibly important role in brain, motor, and social-emotional development, and social cohesion. In this keynote, Professor Kate Williams will provide an overview of how the human brain and body perceive rhythm, and the intersection between beat, movement, and development. Kate will argue that rhythmic movement is an untapped resource for supporting learning and wellbeing. She will use a range of examples of how we might understand and utilise rhythm in different settings, including her own program of work, Rhythm and Movement for Self-Regulation (RAMSR). Primary music educators are in a unique position to use their skills and their own research, to unlock a window to brain functioning with wide implications for assessment, treatment, screening, education, and wellbeing more broadly. The future of research and practice in this area is exciting with many avenues yet to be understood and explored.

Our webinar series is for all ASME members. Colleagues and friends can easily join ASME using our website. A reminder that student membership is free.

ASME recognises Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as the first musicians, storytellers and educators of this land. We pay our respects to Elders past and present, acknowledging their ongoing connection to land, sky and waterways