scholarly journals Music teachers’ perspectives on their chances to disrupt cultural and social reproduction in the Swedish Community Schools of Music and Arts

2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 58-80
Author(s):  
Cecilia Jeppsson

This study sheds light on music teachers’ perspectives on their chances to disrupt cultural and social reproduction in music education in the Swedish Community Schools of Music and Arts (kulturskolor, sing. kulturskola). Focus group conversations were carried out involving 18 teachers at five such schools. As a point of departure, the analysis of the conversations applied the theoretical perspective of Bourdieu with an emphasis on the concepts explicit versus implicit pedagogy and Bernstein’s corresponding concepts visible and invisible pedagogy. The analysis discusses explicit versus implicit assumptions interwoven in the teachers’ accounts of their efforts. The teachers describe it as difficult to challenge social structures. Based on marketing efforts vis-á-vis families from immigrant backgrounds, the teachers point to differing understandings of the significance of participation in the programmes. The teachers’ descriptions point to opportunities that stem from efforts to facilitate children taking part in music education in cooperation with compulsory schools, teaching practice habits and more general behaviours, and initiatives to reach parents and children from immigrant backgrounds with information. The descriptions show explicit as well as implicit components, often in terms of implicit assumptions embedded in an explicit framing. Reflection upon implicit assumptions is suggested as a means to develop more radical strategies to disrupt cultural and social reproduction in the Swedish kulturskolor.

2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (25) ◽  
pp. 49
Author(s):  
Marta Alonso Vera ◽  
Gregorio Vicente Nicolás

El objetivo principal de este estudio es conocer la percepción de los docentes de música de Educación Secundaria acerca del uso del libro de texto. A tal fin, se ha optado por una metodología de estudio de caso, cuya muestra está formada por cinco profesores de diferentes centros educativos de la Región de Murcia. Para la recogida de datos se ha diseñado una entrevista estructurada en cuatro secciones que aporta información sobre los datos personales, aspectos organizativo-didácticos, práctica docente e ideología. Tras la realización de un análisis descriptivo de los datos, los resultados revelan que la búsqueda de orientación y recursos es una de las principales razones por las que el profesorado opta por el uso del libro de texto. Por el contrario, la flexibilidad y la libertad de planificación son los argumentos esgrimidos por los docentes que no utilizan este recurso. Todos los profesores participantes consideran que las editoriales cuando diseñan sus materiales anteponen criterios de facturación a criterios pedagógicos. Asimismo, coinciden en que el futuro del libro de texto es incierto y auguran su desaparición a medio plazo.AbstractThis study main purpose is to know the music secondary teacher’s perception about using or not a textbook. With this goal a methodology of study cases is used, the sample is taken from five music teachers of different schools from Murcia. To recover database, a four-part interview was designed, providing some information about personal subjects, didactics organization, teaching practice, thinking and context. After analysing the database recollected, the evidence is searching orientation and didactic resources is the primary reason for textbook teacher’s user. On the other hand, non-user textbook teachers consider flexibility and freedom of planning as an advantage. All participant teachers take into account that publishing houses are more concerned about billing criteria than pedagogical aspects. Therefore, textbook’s future is uncertain, teachers even forecast its extinction.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1321103X2097480
Author(s):  
Melissa Bremmer ◽  
Carolien Hermans ◽  
Vincent Lamers

This multiple-case-studies research explored a multimodal approach to teaching music to pupils (from 4 to 18 years old) with severe or multiple disabilities. By combining music with, for example, tactile stimulation, movement, or visuals, meaning-making processes in music of these pupils was stimulated, helping them to understand the internal structures and expressive qualities of music. Three music teachers and a social worker participated in this study. Individual and collective video reflections and microanalysis were applied to gather data about their multimodal teaching practice. The data were analyzed through Schmid’s framework (2015) of “multimodal dimensions of children’s music experiences,” developed for general music education. This framework consists of four dimensions: narrativity, sociality, materiality, and embodiment. Based on the findings, Schmid’s framework could be revised for special education, thus providing music teachers with a tool for designing multimodal music lessons for pupils with severe or multiple disabilities.


Author(s):  
Julie Myung Ok Song

The purpose of this literature review was to analyze and synthesize pedagogical approaches related to developing music education philosophy for preservice music teachers. The literature that I identified covered procedures and strategies that preservice music teachers could apply to their teaching practice. On my analysis of the existing literature, I categorized the development of a philosophy into a four-stage process of (1) discovery, (2) articulation, (3) application, and (4) reflection and revision. Results found in the literature included clear expectations and practical tools for each stage, such as dialogues, reading, writing, and constructive feedback, providing a critical view of music education philosophy and guidelines for effective teaching. Understanding the four-stage process may help preservice music teachers and music teacher educators to establish a concrete plan for the development of music education philosophy, allowing preservice music teachers to acquire more confidence in their transition to inservice teaching.


2020 ◽  
pp. 030573562096825
Author(s):  
Tuba Yokuş

This study aims to determine the effect of metacognitive strategies-based teaching practice in guitar education on preservice music teachers’ performance achievement. Preservice music teachers ( n = 20) who were enrolled in and in the process of attending the School Instruments III-Guitar course offered by the Department of Music Education, under the school of Fine Arts Education within the Educational Faculty of Muğla Sıtkı Koçman University in Turkey during the 2018–2019 academic year constituted the sample group of the study. The study was designed as an experimental study that included a randomized pretest–posttest control group. The results revealed that both the control group students with traditional current-based education and the experimental group students with metacognitive strategies-based teaching achieved improvement in their guitar performance. However, no significant difference was found between the teaching methods used because the study was carried out with a small group and therefore has a weak statistical power to detect an effect. The results further indicated that the metacognitive strategies-based teaching practice in guitar education, as an effective alternative to the traditional curriculum-based method, can be used to achieve improvement in preservice music teachers’ guitar performance.


2019 ◽  
pp. 153660061987856
Author(s):  
Frances Elliott ◽  
Jane Southcott

Studio music teachers are the backbone of musical communities but their efforts are often overlooked and unsung. We explore one facet of the life of studio music teachers in Australia 1890–1920, graded music examinations conducted by two well-reputed British music education organizations: Trinity College of Music and the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music. For teachers, acquiring high-level qualifications from these bodies offered teaching credentials. For students, examinations were a feature of their routine studies. Teachers could advertise their abilities via the publication of examination results. We chronicle the introduction of these examinations to Australia and their impact on the lives of studio music teachers.


1986 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 181-184
Author(s):  
Ellen McCullough

Children, who otherwise would not have had music teachers, experienced music though ‘Project Experience’, a co-operative music education laboratory designed by the University of New Mexico Department of Music and the Albuquerque, New Mexico, Public School District. ‘Project Experience’ provided university music students with the opportunity to teach music to children prior to student teaching practice; raised the consciousness of parents, teachers, and students about the importance of music in the schools; and assisted in easing the pinch upon a school district forced to tighten its financial belt.


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