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The Science of Song

What the CoComelon and UCLA partnership reveals about music and early learning

Long before children can read a sentence or count past ten, most of them can follow a melody, anticipate a chorus, and mimic a rhythm. This is not a coincidence. The neurological infrastructure that processes music comes online early in human development, well ahead of many of the cognitive skills parents tend to focus on. Researchers have known for decades that music is among the most effective vehicles for early language acquisition, memory formation, and routine-building; yet, children's media has not always been designed with that knowledge at its center.

Moonbug Entertainment's partnership with the Center for Scholars & Storytellers (CSS) at UCLA, announced in April 2026, represents a formal effort to close that distance between research and production. The collaboration embeds academic child development expertise directly into the creative process for Moonbug's flagship programming, including CoComelon. Examining why that matters requires understanding what the science of music and early learning actually says,  and what it means for a franchise whose entire identity is built around song.

Why Music Works on the Young Brain

The connection between music and early cognitive development is not a soft claim. A substantial body of research across neuroscience, developmental psychology, and linguistics points to music as a particularly potent learning medium during the first five years of life, when the brain's architecture for language, memory, and emotional regulation is being actively constructed.

Rhythm and repetition are two of the most studied mechanisms. Rhythmic structures help children anticipate what comes next, which trains pattern recognition, a foundational cognitive skill with applications across mathematics, reading, and logical reasoning. Repetition, meanwhile, is how the young brain consolidates new information. When a child hears the same melody paired with the same words across multiple viewings, vocabulary retention improves, and neural pathways associated with those words and concepts strengthen. This is the same mechanism that makes nursery rhymes an enduring educational tool across cultures and centuries: the combination of melody, rhyme, and repetition creates conditions where new material sticks faster than prose alone can achieve.

Music also engages multiple brain regions simultaneously in ways that spoken language does not. The processing of rhythm, melody, and lyrical content draws on networks associated with motor function, memory, emotion, and language in parallel. Singing along to a song, for instance, activates motor planning and vocalization in addition to the auditory and language processing that listening alone requires. When young children participate physically, clapping, moving, mimicking gestures, the learning reinforcement compounds further.

Edugist's coverage of nursery rhymes in early childhood education noted that rhymes also build phonemic awareness, the ability to recognize and manipulate individual sounds within words, which is a documented predictor of future reading success. Children who engage regularly with rhyming content are, in effect, practicing a pre-literacy skill without any formal instruction taking place.

What CoComelon Was Already Doing With These Mechanisms

CoComelon has always been a music-first franchise. The show's original premise was nursery rhymes and children's songs, simple, melodic, repetitive content built around familiar tunes and relatable everyday scenarios. As the franchise grew, music remained the structural core: every significant life skill or daily routine the show addresses is delivered through song rather than narrated explanation.

The results, measured in viewership, suggest the approach resonates with families in ways that feel functional rather than merely entertaining. The "Potty Training Song" has surpassed 424 million views on YouTube, making it the most-watched potty training video on the platform. "Yes Yes Bedtime Song" has crossed 1.7 billion views, and "Yes Yes Vegetables" has exceeded 3.3 billion. These are not passive consumption numbers. Parents report using these songs as active tools — playing them at transition moments, during resistant mealtimes, at bathtime — because the familiar melody cues a response in their children that spoken requests do not reliably produce.

Marketing Dive's coverage of the "CoComelon Can Help" campaign noted that the brand surveyed 1,000 parents to identify the daily challenges where its content was most useful. Potty training, bedtime, and mealtime rose to the top, precisely the high-friction routine moments where the predictability of a familiar song can shift a child's behavior more effectively than parental prompting alone. The viewership data reflects actual utility: families watching those songs are not browsing; they are problem-solving.

What the UCLA partnership formalizes is the developmental framework that should underpin why these musical tools work, ensuring they are constructed with consistent research-backed intention rather than intuition and trial and error.

How the CSS Framework Changes the Production Process

Before the formal collaboration with CSS, CoComelon worked with learning consultants on a show-by-show and season-by-season basis. Dr. Natascha Crandall has served as a consultant on the show's development; her work, alongside colleagues consulting on other Moonbug titles, informed decisions about pacing, subject matter, and social-emotional themes. That work was consequential, but it operated without a shared, systematized framework guiding all of Moonbug's preschool productions.

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The CSS collaboration changes that by embedding a set of research-informed learning principles that apply consistently across development. To build those principles, CSS conducted a comprehensive review of peer-reviewed research on early childhood learning, analyzed Moonbug's existing programming and creative process, and collaborated with an advisory council of academic and industry experts. The resulting framework is now used by learning consultants embedded in production, who work with creative teams to define developmental goals for each season, shape episode themes around those goals, and review scripts and early cuts before they are finalized.

In practical terms, this means the musical content that has always sat at the center of the show's identity is now developed within a structure that asks explicit developmental questions at the earliest stages of production: What is this song designed to help children understand or practice? How does the melodic structure support the learning goal? Is the repetition calibrated to reinforce rather than simply recycle? These are not questions that get asked after the fact — they are built into the workflow.

"To make great content for young kids, you have to start with how they learn," said Rich Hickey, Chief Creative Officer at Moonbug Entertainment. "Our teams are already thinking about how toddlers experience music, stories, and everyday moments. This partnership with CSS renews that commitment and helps us be even more intentional in how we tell those stories."

The Question Parents Are Actually Asking

Much of the public debate about CoComelon among parents and pediatric professionals centers on screen time volume and pacing. Those are legitimate considerations. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends no more than one hour of high-quality screen time daily for children aged two to five, viewed with parental participation. Today's Parent's coverage of the show noted that child development professionals consistently emphasize co-viewing and active engagement as the factors that determine whether screen time produces learning outcomes, regardless of which program a family chooses.

The more substantive question embedded in the screen-time conversation, though, is not how much time a child spends with any given program, but whether that program was designed with their development in mind at all. A child who watches one hour of content constructed around genuine developmental goals is in a different position than a child who watches one hour of content optimized purely for engagement retention. The CSS partnership is Moonbug's institutional answer to that distinction: a commitment that the musical content at the core of CoComelon will be guided by the former standard, not the latter.

Dr. Yalda T. Uhls, Founder and CEO of CSS, framed the challenge this way in the partnership announcement: "Research shows children can learn from content, but only when it's designed with how they develop in mind. Our work with Moonbug is about bringing research and storytelling closer together, strengthening what's already working in their shows while offering clearer guidance for families and creators."

Music as a Routine-Building Tool

One dimension of CoComelon's musical approach that the research literature strongly supports is its utility in establishing and maintaining predictable daily routines. Toddlers and preschoolers are in the process of developing self-regulation; the capacity to manage transitions, tolerate frustration, and follow through on tasks that are not intrinsically rewarding. Predictable routines support self-regulation development by reducing the cognitive and emotional work of anticipating what comes next.

Music-anchored routines function as reliable cues within that structure. When a child associates a specific song with a specific activity, the song itself becomes a signal that lowers resistance to the transition. The melody carries emotional associations built through repetition; it is familiar, comforting, and known. Research on children's language and oral development, including a qualitative study published in Argopuro examining CoComelon's effects specifically, found that the show's structured musical repetition supported vocabulary acquisition and an interest in speaking and singing — outcomes that grew stronger when parents engaged actively alongside their children rather than using the content as background.

The implication for families is practical. Music from CoComelon is most effective as a developmental tool when it is used with intention, queued at transition moments, accompanied by a caregiver's engagement, and followed with real-world activity that connects the screen content to lived experience. A song about brushing teeth works best when a child actually brushes their teeth afterward, with a parent present who extends the conversation.

Building on What the Research Supports

The Moonbug-CSS partnership arrives at a moment when parents and creators alike are looking for clearer standards. The children's media landscape on digital platforms is more crowded than it has ever been, and the question of what constitutes quality content for toddlers and preschoolers has few institutional answers. A comprehensive look at CoComelon's educational architecture noted that the show spans developmental stages from basic nursery rhymes for infants to more complex narratives for preschoolers — a range that requires explicit developmental thinking at the design stage if content at each level is to serve the audience for whom it was made.

The UCLA collaboration formalizes exactly that thinking. The learning principles being developed through the partnership are intended not just as an internal production guide, but as a resource other creators in the digital preschool space can adopt. If it is taken up broadly, it could offer the first systematic research-backed standard for digital-first children's content that carries the credibility of academic expertise rather than self-certification.

For CoComelon and the millions of families who have made its songs part of their daily life, the immediate significance is more personal. The franchise's musical identity, the reason a two-year-old can sing along to the "Bath Song" or settle into the bedtime routine when they hear the first notes of a familiar lullaby, now has an institutional commitment behind it. The songs that parents have been using as practical tools for years are being built, increasingly, on the same foundation that produced those tools in the first place.

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Long before children can read a sentence or count past ten, most of them can follow a melody, anticipate a chorus, and mimic a rhythm. This is not a coincidence. The neurological infrastructure that processes music comes online early in human development, well ahead of many of the cognitive skills parents tend to focus on. Researchers have known for decades that music is among the most effective vehicles for early language acquisition, memory formation, and routine-building; yet, children's media has not always been designed with that knowledge at its center.

Moonbug Entertainment's partnership with the Center for Scholars & Storytellers (CSS) at UCLA, announced in April 2026, represents a formal effort to close that distance between research and production. The collaboration embeds academic child development expertise directly into the creative process for Moonbug's flagship programming, including CoComelon. Examining why that matters requires understanding what the science of music and early learning actually says,  and what it means for a franchise whose entire identity is built around song.

Why Music Works on the Young Brain

The connection between music and early cognitive development is not a soft claim. A substantial body of research across neuroscience, developmental psychology, and linguistics points to music as a particularly potent learning medium during the first five years of life, when the brain's architecture for language, memory, and emotional regulation is being actively constructed.

Rhythm and repetition are two of the most studied mechanisms. Rhythmic structures help children anticipate what comes next, which trains pattern recognition, a foundational cognitive skill with applications across mathematics, reading, and logical reasoning. Repetition, meanwhile, is how the young brain consolidates new information. When a child hears the same melody paired with the same words across multiple viewings, vocabulary retention improves, and neural pathways associated with those words and concepts strengthen. This is the same mechanism that makes nursery rhymes an enduring educational tool across cultures and centuries: the combination of melody, rhyme, and repetition creates conditions where new material sticks faster than prose alone can achieve.

Music also engages multiple brain regions simultaneously in ways that spoken language does not. The processing of rhythm, melody, and lyrical content draws on networks associated with motor function, memory, emotion, and language in parallel. Singing along to a song, for instance, activates motor planning and vocalization in addition to the auditory and language processing that listening alone requires. When young children participate physically, clapping, moving, mimicking gestures, the learning reinforcement compounds further.

Edugist's coverage of nursery rhymes in early childhood education noted that rhymes also build phonemic awareness, the ability to recognize and manipulate individual sounds within words, which is a documented predictor of future reading success. Children who engage regularly with rhyming content are, in effect, practicing a pre-literacy skill without any formal instruction taking place.

What CoComelon Was Already Doing With These Mechanisms

CoComelon has always been a music-first franchise. The show's original premise was nursery rhymes and children's songs, simple, melodic, repetitive content built around familiar tunes and relatable everyday scenarios. As the franchise grew, music remained the structural core: every significant life skill or daily routine the show addresses is delivered through song rather than narrated explanation.

The results, measured in viewership, suggest the approach resonates with families in ways that feel functional rather than merely entertaining. The "Potty Training Song" has surpassed 424 million views on YouTube, making it the most-watched potty training video on the platform. "Yes Yes Bedtime Song" has crossed 1.7 billion views, and "Yes Yes Vegetables" has exceeded 3.3 billion. These are not passive consumption numbers. Parents report using these songs as active tools — playing them at transition moments, during resistant mealtimes, at bathtime — because the familiar melody cues a response in their children that spoken requests do not reliably produce.

Marketing Dive's coverage of the "CoComelon Can Help" campaign noted that the brand surveyed 1,000 parents to identify the daily challenges where its content was most useful. Potty training, bedtime, and mealtime rose to the top, precisely the high-friction routine moments where the predictability of a familiar song can shift a child's behavior more effectively than parental prompting alone. The viewership data reflects actual utility: families watching those songs are not browsing; they are problem-solving.

What the UCLA partnership formalizes is the developmental framework that should underpin why these musical tools work, ensuring they are constructed with consistent research-backed intention rather than intuition and trial and error.

How the CSS Framework Changes the Production Process

Before the formal collaboration with CSS, CoComelon worked with learning consultants on a show-by-show and season-by-season basis. Dr. Natascha Crandall has served as a consultant on the show's development; her work, alongside colleagues consulting on other Moonbug titles, informed decisions about pacing, subject matter, and social-emotional themes. That work was consequential, but it operated without a shared, systematized framework guiding all of Moonbug's preschool productions.

Sponsored
Sponsored

The CSS collaboration changes that by embedding a set of research-informed learning principles that apply consistently across development. To build those principles, CSS conducted a comprehensive review of peer-reviewed research on early childhood learning, analyzed Moonbug's existing programming and creative process, and collaborated with an advisory council of academic and industry experts. The resulting framework is now used by learning consultants embedded in production, who work with creative teams to define developmental goals for each season, shape episode themes around those goals, and review scripts and early cuts before they are finalized.

In practical terms, this means the musical content that has always sat at the center of the show's identity is now developed within a structure that asks explicit developmental questions at the earliest stages of production: What is this song designed to help children understand or practice? How does the melodic structure support the learning goal? Is the repetition calibrated to reinforce rather than simply recycle? These are not questions that get asked after the fact — they are built into the workflow.

"To make great content for young kids, you have to start with how they learn," said Rich Hickey, Chief Creative Officer at Moonbug Entertainment. "Our teams are already thinking about how toddlers experience music, stories, and everyday moments. This partnership with CSS renews that commitment and helps us be even more intentional in how we tell those stories."

The Question Parents Are Actually Asking

Much of the public debate about CoComelon among parents and pediatric professionals centers on screen time volume and pacing. Those are legitimate considerations. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends no more than one hour of high-quality screen time daily for children aged two to five, viewed with parental participation. Today's Parent's coverage of the show noted that child development professionals consistently emphasize co-viewing and active engagement as the factors that determine whether screen time produces learning outcomes, regardless of which program a family chooses.

The more substantive question embedded in the screen-time conversation, though, is not how much time a child spends with any given program, but whether that program was designed with their development in mind at all. A child who watches one hour of content constructed around genuine developmental goals is in a different position than a child who watches one hour of content optimized purely for engagement retention. The CSS partnership is Moonbug's institutional answer to that distinction: a commitment that the musical content at the core of CoComelon will be guided by the former standard, not the latter.

Dr. Yalda T. Uhls, Founder and CEO of CSS, framed the challenge this way in the partnership announcement: "Research shows children can learn from content, but only when it's designed with how they develop in mind. Our work with Moonbug is about bringing research and storytelling closer together, strengthening what's already working in their shows while offering clearer guidance for families and creators."

Music as a Routine-Building Tool

One dimension of CoComelon's musical approach that the research literature strongly supports is its utility in establishing and maintaining predictable daily routines. Toddlers and preschoolers are in the process of developing self-regulation; the capacity to manage transitions, tolerate frustration, and follow through on tasks that are not intrinsically rewarding. Predictable routines support self-regulation development by reducing the cognitive and emotional work of anticipating what comes next.

Music-anchored routines function as reliable cues within that structure. When a child associates a specific song with a specific activity, the song itself becomes a signal that lowers resistance to the transition. The melody carries emotional associations built through repetition; it is familiar, comforting, and known. Research on children's language and oral development, including a qualitative study published in Argopuro examining CoComelon's effects specifically, found that the show's structured musical repetition supported vocabulary acquisition and an interest in speaking and singing — outcomes that grew stronger when parents engaged actively alongside their children rather than using the content as background.

The implication for families is practical. Music from CoComelon is most effective as a developmental tool when it is used with intention, queued at transition moments, accompanied by a caregiver's engagement, and followed with real-world activity that connects the screen content to lived experience. A song about brushing teeth works best when a child actually brushes their teeth afterward, with a parent present who extends the conversation.

Building on What the Research Supports

The Moonbug-CSS partnership arrives at a moment when parents and creators alike are looking for clearer standards. The children's media landscape on digital platforms is more crowded than it has ever been, and the question of what constitutes quality content for toddlers and preschoolers has few institutional answers. A comprehensive look at CoComelon's educational architecture noted that the show spans developmental stages from basic nursery rhymes for infants to more complex narratives for preschoolers — a range that requires explicit developmental thinking at the design stage if content at each level is to serve the audience for whom it was made.

The UCLA collaboration formalizes exactly that thinking. The learning principles being developed through the partnership are intended not just as an internal production guide, but as a resource other creators in the digital preschool space can adopt. If it is taken up broadly, it could offer the first systematic research-backed standard for digital-first children's content that carries the credibility of academic expertise rather than self-certification.

For CoComelon and the millions of families who have made its songs part of their daily life, the immediate significance is more personal. The franchise's musical identity, the reason a two-year-old can sing along to the "Bath Song" or settle into the bedtime routine when they hear the first notes of a familiar lullaby, now has an institutional commitment behind it. The songs that parents have been using as practical tools for years are being built, increasingly, on the same foundation that produced those tools in the first place.

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