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Impact of studying practical instrumental music on the psychological well-being of disadvantaged university students Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-11-28 Karendra Devroop
The impact of practical instrumental music instruction on students’ psychological and sociological well-being is well documented in research literature. The extent to which these findings hold true for disadvantaged populations is unknown. Previous studies focused on young students with little to no research on disadvantaged young adults at university level. This study investigated the impact of group
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The musical lives of young children in Aotearoa New Zealand Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-11-25 Rebecca Jane Evans, Bronya Dean, Fergus Byett
Despite a global interest in the musical experiences of young children, the everyday musical lives of young New Zealanders remain unexamined. Using data collected through the Growing Up in New Zealand longitudinal study, we explore the early musical experiences of approximately 6,800 infants and toddlers. Data collected from the primary caregivers and their partners pre-birth, when the children were
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Babysong revisited: communication with babies through song Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-11-25 Vanessa Young, Kathleen Goouch, Sacha Powell
The Babysong Project arose out of the Baby Room Project and its aims included supporting baby room practitioners to develop ‘communicative musicality’ (Malloch & Trevarthen 2009), extending research knowledge about baby room practices and helping practitioners to explore opportunities to question and adapt their own ways of working with babies in their care. Six years on, we reflect on the project
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Songs that live in the bones Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-11-25 Rina Vergano, Roxana Vilk
In conversation with playwright and theatre journalist Rina Vergano, multidisciplinary artist and musician Roxana Vilk unpicks her own experience of diaspora and the ways in which her cultural, familial and political roots have informed her artistic practice and inspired her current project about the power of lullabies.
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How a young child sings a well-known song before she can speak Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-11-25 Stefanie Stadler Elmer
Through micro-genetic analysis of early singing, I describe and explain the complexity of song as an elementary cultural expression. For educators, it is important to understand the key role of song with and by young children as a means to convey feelings and musico-linguistic rules. Song consists of melody and lyrics, both of which are connected by metrical rules to form a Gestalt. A song sung by
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Working musically with care-experienced children and their families in the early years Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-11-25 Ryan David Humphrey
Living within state care can have detrimental effects on children’s development, as substantial research has proposed. Recognising how music-making may support children’s social, emotional and personal development, many cultural organisations have begun developing music projects that work specifically with care-experienced children. Although evaluation has detailed the various benefits these projects
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Signs of the times: the Canterbury children’s operas of Alan Ridout Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-11-09 Nicholas Bannan
This article places in historical context the three operas written by Alan Ridout for the choir of Canterbury Cathedral during the 1960s. Analysis of these works and their gestation is presented as a microcosm representing wider developments in music education since then. The analysis weaves together personal recollections, authenticated through correspondence with teachers and other alumni involved
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Developing teacher curriculum design expertise: using the CDC Model in the music classroom Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-11-07 Graham McPhail, Sally Tibbles, Mary Cornish
The purpose of this paper is to discuss the impact of the Curriculum Design Coherence Model (CDC Model – Rata, 2019) on the design practice of two music teachers in a middle school music class in New Zealand. The CDC Model proposes that deep learning first requires deep design coherence. This coherence is generated by three interrelated design dimensions: (i) the ‘surfacing’ of epistemic structure
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The role of negative emotions in learning music: qualitative understanding of Australian undergraduate students’ listening experience of unfamiliar music Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-09-14 Koji Matsunobu, Robert Davidson, Khin Yee Lo
This paper examines the experience and role of negative emotions in facilitating university students’ learning in world music courses. Based on a review of literature in music psychology and music education, we posit that negative emotions can engender a meaningful learning context. In this project conducted in an Australian university, we created a condition in which students were engaged in repeated
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‘Because I’m not musical’: A critical case study of music education training for pre-service generalist primary teachers in Australia Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-09-12 Christine Carroll, Joanne Harris
The literature concerning pre-service training in music education for generalist primary or elementary school teachers reveals a long-standing problem for teacher educators: low or poor self-efficacy concerning the teaching of classroom music. Concurrently, a critical examination of training programmes has less often featured, with only limited discussion of digital approaches to classroom music-making
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Investigating the impact of volunteering with Melody Music Birmingham on the professional development and career pathways of Royal Birmingham Conservatoire students Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-09-12 Beth Pickard, Rosie Rushton
This article evaluates the impact of volunteering with a music education project for children and adults with learning disabilities on the professional development and career trajectory of music students at a Conservatoire in the United Kingdom. A mixed-methods online questionnaire captured the impact of volunteering with Melody Music Birmingham. Findings suggest that volunteering was a powerful aspect
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Exploring issues in categorisation of higher music education courses through FOI surveys of gender demographics in UK higher education institutions Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-09-07 Stephen Tatlow
A common conclusion drawn from publicly available Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA) data releases is that Higher Music Education (HME) courses have a predominantly male population. However, HESA data has key issues when examining HME courses: which courses are reported as ‘music’ courses to HESA; how do universities decide which courses are ‘music’ courses; how many different topics are contained
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Is music on the wane? A small mixed methods study exploring musical learning in the school reception class in the East of England Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-09-06 Julie Digby
This small-scale mixed methods study sought to explore the nature of the musical learning in the Reception year. Research data from the questionnaires (n = 39) provide some evidence that little has changed over the last two decades in some aspects of the music provision for children aged 4 and 5 years. However, interviews with eight Reception teachers revealed some unexpected findings on account of
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How do teachers of primary school approach the music assessment in Chile? Differences and similarities between professors’ experience and ministerial guidelines Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-05-16 Andrea Sepúlveda-Ortega, David Magnitzky-Vargas
This research reflects the considerations of music teachers when assessing their students, the tools used and their consistency with guidelines issued by the Chilean Ministry of Education, along with theoretical approaches to assessment. In this way, we have analysed the theoretical contribution of renowned scholars such as Pujol, Santos Guerra, Chacón, and Fautley, as well as the music curricula of
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Investigating how composing teaching and assessment in English secondary school classrooms reinforce myths about composers and their creative practices Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-05-16 Kirsty Devaney
Although composing has been a significant part of formal classroom music education in England for over 30 years, there still remains uncertainty about how to teach and assess composing in secondary schools. This research investigates the under-researched area of teaching and learning of composing in upper secondary schools in England whereby students (aged 14–18) may opt to study music for a national
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Time for change? Recurrent barriers to music education Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-05-02 Jennie Henley, David Barton
This article reports findings from a study that sought to identify barriers to music and music education in the UK. Emerging from empirical research involving n = 723 participants and clarified by an evidence base of over 10,000 research participants, the key findings presented in this paper relate to pupil and participant voice and involvement, location as a sub-theme of diversity and inclusion, collaboration
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Evaluation of the Early Childhood Music Education project’s influence on the development of 3- to 5-year-old children in Andalusia, Spain Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-04-21 Joseph Thapa, José A. Rodríguez-Quiles
In 2005, the Barenboim-Said Foundation launched the Early Childhood Music Education project in Andalusia (Spain) to promote music education for young children. Ten years later, an initial study was performed to evaluate the influence of the project on the development of the participating children. The results of this study form part of a broader ongoing research project, in collaboration with the University
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Teacher perspective on music performance anxiety: an exploration of coping strategies used by music teachers Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-04-12 Erin MacAfee, Gilles Comeau
The purpose of this study was to explore music performance anxiety (MPA) from music teachers’ perspectives by identifying and describing common coping strategies teachers use to support students with MPA. A quantitative content analysis of scientific and non-scientific MPA literature identified preparation, open communication, realistic expectations, exposure therapy and deep breathing as the five
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Examining a collaborative community amongst music student teachers in Korea Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-04-11 Jihae Shin
Teacher collaboration has been recognised as one of the most influential factors positively affecting school teaching practice. To add to the literature in this area, I investigated a collaborative community of Korean preservice music teachers. The results showed that the collaborative community was a place where these preservice music teachers were able to share their thoughts about their passion
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Making sense of democratisation: a case study about extracurricular music workshops in France Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-04-11 Joris Cintéro
Since the early 2000s, education policy in France has strongly encouraged publicly funded conservatoires and music schools to forge partnerships with various stakeholders in sectors outside of specialised music education. This change in the objectives traditionally assigned to music schools and conservatoires has given rise to new ‘pedagogical projects’, among which extracurricular music workshops
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Creating a musical for pre-schoolers in South Africa as pedagogical praxis for a tertiary music education module Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-04-06 Mignon van Vreden
Abstract Despite a renewed interest in educational practices to develop future music educators in South Africa for a rapidly changing professional landscape, little is known about the meaning students themselves ascribe to these practices towards their own development as music educators. This instrumental case study investigated the learning experiences of second-year BMus students creating a musical
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Student-centred strategies for higher music education: using peer-to-peer critique and practice as research methodologies to train conservatoire musicians Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-04-06 Jacob Thompson-Bell
Abstract This article presents some arguments in favour of a student-centred learning and teaching approach for higher music education (HME), with specific reference to conservatoire settings in the United Kingdom. In support of student-centred pedagogy, theoretical modelling is undertaken to offer a model of motivation accounting for both individual and group learning environments, thus drawing together
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How can we prepare music students for early career challenges? Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-04-05 Lotte Latukefu, Jessica Pollard
Earning a living via multiple income streams through a portfolio career is the reality for most music graduates. In the last 10–15 years, music conservatoires around the world have begun to recognise and respond to this reality in the way they train and prepare students for life after study (Bennet, 2008; Draper & Cunio, 2014; Rowley et al., 2015; Schippers et al., 2016). Conservatoire curricula is
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The importance of threshold concepts and formative assessment in lower-secondary school group composing Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-04-05 Nikki Booth, Victoria Kinsella
Meyer and Land’s work (among subsequent others) on threshold concepts (TCs) has been influential in numerous subjects, particularly in higher education. However, despite its growing international interest, its application into the domain of music in schools is a highly under-researched area. This article draws on the notion of TCs focusing on the context of lower-secondary school (Key Stage 3: ages
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The sequence of musical development and its place in Swanwick’s meta-theory of music education: a personal response Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Chris Philpott
AbstractIt can be argued that Swanwick’s research and scholarship established the field of music education as an area of interdisciplinary study in the United Kingdom. A significant and seminal publication in this legacy is Swanwick’s work with Tillman on the sequence of musical development based on Tillman’s empirical study of children’s compositions. This paper will aim to place the resulting ‘spiral’
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Reflections on the concept of musical development Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Graham F. Welch
Abstract‘The Sequence of Musical Development’ by Swanwick and Tillman was published in the British Journal of Music Education (BJME) in 1986. This year marks its 35th anniversary and provides an occasion to look back on the article’s content and legacy. It is also an opportunity to reflect on the antecedents for the article’s underlying concepts, as well as how our understanding of children and young
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Reflections on the sequence of musical development Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Keith Swanwick
AbstractThe sequence of musical development is revisited. The origins of the underlying and evolving theory are considered, along with organisation and classification of the data of children’s compositions. The cumulative and recursive nature of the spiral is re-emphasised, and the dynamic relationship between the left and right side is clarified. The essential qualitative nature of the study is asserted
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Practicalities of a spiral-inspired approach Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 James Leveridge
AbstractSwanwick and Tillman set out three levels at which their “Sequence of Musical Development” may implicate music teaching: general curriculum planning, individual development, and the role of theteacher. From the perspective of a practitioner working as a secondary music teacher in England, this article critiques the practicalities of adopting an approach inspired by Swanwick and Tillman’s theory
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Living with the spiral: a duoethnographic perspective Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Lis McCullough,John Finney
AbstractThe authors of this article met on a Master of Arts (MA) music education course a month before the Swanwick Tillman Sequence of Musical Development was published. The course was a portal to an exciting range of literature, with the Swanwick Tillman spiral providing a long-term source of discussion and reflection as our careers have diverged and converged over the intervening years. This paper
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Reflections on New Zealand music education through the lens of Swanwick and Tillman’s model of musical development Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Vicki Thorpe,Graham McPhail
AbstractIn this paper, we provide a reflection upon the influence of the Swanwick–Tillman (ST) model (1986) from the perspectives of music research in Aotearoa New Zealand. In this paper we take stock of where music education in New Zealand currently sits in relation to the Swanwick Tillman theory of musical development. We examine the strengths and the weakness of the model 35 years on to ask what
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Musical development then and now: in conversation with June Boyce-Tillman Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 June Boyce-Tillman,Anthony Anderson
AbstractJune Boyce-Tillman and Keith Swanwick’s article on musical development is the second most widely cited paper in the history of the British Journal of Music Education. It appears in many discussions of musical development. A selection of the diverse domains where the paper is cited includes: instrumental teaching, Special Education Needs, primary school teaching, the development of learning
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Curriculum considerations in music education in England: spiral thinking, spiral planning and its impact on contemporary thought Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Martin Fautley,Alison Daubney
AbstractThis article considers the impact that the Swanwick-Tillman spiral article (Swanwick & Tillman, 1986) has had on contemporary thinking in music education in England. Building on a discussion concerning the antecedents of the notion of a spiral, the ways in which a generalist music curriculum can be planned and organised are discussed. Drawing on the contemporary example of the Model Music Curriculum
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The significance of formative assessment for pupils’ spiral progression in English lower secondary school group composing Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Nikki Booth
AbstractThe notion of the spiral for progression and development is familiar both in general educational discourse and in the domain of music education. This brief article considers the spiral within the context of lower secondary school group composing in England. Through the use of examples taken from two schools in the English midlands, it argues that formative assessment is a key process for enhancing
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Living the spiral curriculum: using the Swanwick/Tillman sequence of musical development to support music in primary schools in the 1980s Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Maureen Hanke
AbstractThis article aims to capture how the Swanwick and Tillman (1986) spiral model of musical development influenced my work as an Inner London Education Authority (ILEA) music coordinator (advisory teacher). It discusses my professional position in a period of teaching prior to the implementation of the National Curriculum for Music, to illustrate dichotomous pedagogical approaches in a developing
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The Swanwick/Tillman Spiral of Musical Development: impacts and influences – Guest Editorial Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Anthony Anderson
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Musical creativity in the teaching practice in Montenegrin and Slovenian primary schools Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-02-18 Jelena Martinović Bogojević, Branka Rotar Pance
Musical creativity is represented through the activity of “creation” in the curricula for music education in both Montenegrin and Slovenian primary schools. Starting from the assumption that this activity is insufficiently realised, a survey of the teaching practice of the specialist music teachers in the two countries was conducted (N = 154). The obtained results show that creative musical activities
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The influence of discrete versus continuous movements on children’s musical sense-making Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2022-02-17 Sandra Fortuna, Luc Nijs
An increasing amount of research emphasises the influence of body movement on the perception of music. This study contributes to the research by investigating whether varied qualities of body movement, when aligned to music may affect the way children attribute meaning to that music. To address this question, 34 children (aged 9–10) were divided into two groups, each of which engaged in distinct listening
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The Force Field Model applied to a Music Education teacher training framework in a South African context Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2021-08-16 Ronel De Villiers
South African Higher Education Institution (HEI) Music Education (MusEd) lecturers’ perspectives regarding the contextual, institutional, biographical and programmatic forces that stem from the theoretical framework Samuel’s (2008) Force Field Model (FFM) were explored. The study was approached from an interpretivist paradigm and conceptually drew qualitative data generated from eight case studies
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Barriers and enablers to undergraduate music students undertaking a Postgraduate Certificate in Education (PGCE) secondary music programme Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2021-08-09 Thomas Breeze, Gary Beauchamp
In the context of falling recruitment to Initial Teacher Education programmes in the UK, this article focuses on motivators and demotivators affecting undergraduate students’ attitudes towards training as a teacher and considers these under the broad headings of altruistic (such as wanting to share a love of the subject and working with young people) and pragmatic (stable career, regular salary, good
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‘Chasing every mark’. High stakes assessment and curriculum narrowing: the case of disciplinary literacy in the Irish secondary music classroom Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2021-08-09 Jennifer Hennessy, Sinéad Corr
The critical role of disciplinary literacy in enhancing understanding and engagement within arts-based subjects has drawn increased recognition amongst researchers and practitioners alike in recent years. The successful integration of disciplinary literacy into the classroom however has been challenged in equal measures by a prevailing sense of confusion and misunderstanding surrounding the concept
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Music achievements of being an English chorister Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2021-08-09 Lan Dong, Dimitra Kokotsaki
This study aims to highlight the uniqueness of the English choristers’ education, what special musical skills it passes on to youngsters and how these may help them in later life. It investigates the perceptions of 30 ex-choristers who attended a broad selection of English choir schools between 1940 and 2010 using semi-structured interviews. The findings showed that music training of choristers forms
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Understanding curriculum design in the perceptions and practices of classroom music teachers in the lower secondary school in England Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2021-08-05 Anthony Anderson
Curriculum design is a domain that infrequently forms a discrete element of initial teacher training, or continuing professional development for music teachers in English secondary schools. Classroom music teachers, teaching Key Stage 3 (KS3) learners (11–14-year olds), are, however, required to design their own curriculum. Teachers are accountable to school leaders for curricula they implement, and
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Class, Control, & Classical Music by Anna Bull. Oxford University Press, 2019. 264 pp., hardback, £47.99. ISBN: 9780190844356 Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2021-06-14 Kristen Horner
Class, Control, & Classical Music was born from Anna Bull’s formative experiences of classical music-making as a promising young cellist in her native New Zealand. Whilst this inhabited classical music ‘scene’ engendered an enduring love for ensemble performance and a strong sense of social identity and belonging for Bull, it left her questioning and battling with perceived problematic practices and
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Opera in primary education for the development of social and emotional skills: a case study from Mexico City Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2021-05-11 Rosa Soliveres, Andrea Giráldez-Hayes, Jose Luis Parejo
The study examines the impacts of a project-based learning (PBL) methodology on the development of emotional skills involved in the learner’s individual and social well-being. This paper summarises the preliminary results of the case study in which the project ‘Opera as a Vehicle for Learning’ (LOVA) was implemented with a key stage 2 group in Mexico City. This project fostered the development of the
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Common musical mistakes in Early Childhood Education textbooks Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2021-05-04 Judith Sánchez-Marroquí, Gregorio Vicente-Nicolás
The aim of this study is to detect and analyse mistakes in musical activities included in Early Childhood Education textbooks from a musical and didactic viewpoint. The sample comprised 2,200 activities corresponding to the textbooks of four leading publishers in Spain. An instrument designed ad hoc for collection of information was developed, proposing a taxonomy of mistakes in three categories: musical
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Teaching repertoires and pedagogical improvisation in music teacher practices Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2021-03-09 Åsmund Espeland, Brynjulf Stige
In this article, we describe the characteristics of repertoires in music teaching and discuss how these repertoires are related to pedagogical improvisation. The empirical background for the article is classroom observations and interviews with two experienced music teachers. Video-taped examples of teacher repertoires and improvisational teaching practices are included in the article, where we argue
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U-turns in the fog: the unfolding story of the impact of COVID-19 on music education in England and the UK Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2021-02-15 Alison Daubney,Martin Fautley
A global literature review produced by the Incorporated Society of Musicians (ISM) (Williams & Underhill, 2020a) brought together international research on important considerations such as COVID-19 transmission in performance and education spaces when those in different age groups engaged in a wide range of musical activities, risk management, instrument hygiene and how to mitigate the risks
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The confident choir: A handbook for leaders of group singing by Michael Bonshor. Rowman & Littlefield, 2017, 212pp, hardback. £73. ISBN: 978-1-5381-0278-7 Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2021-02-15 Anne-Marie Czajkowski
If, as a choral conductor, you have ever wondered what your amateur choristers were really thinking and how you can improve your choir’s confidence both musically and socially, then this book is for you. It provides an insightful view into the subjective perceptions and emotional experiences of amateur choral singers written with a view to empowering established, and aspiring, conductors with practical
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Creativities in Arts Education, Research and Practice: International perspectives for the Future of Learning and Teaching. Series: Critical Issues in the Future of Learning and Teaching, Volume 15, by Leon de Bruin, Pamela Burnard and Susan Davis. Brill Sense, 2018. 240pp, hbk, £88, ISBN: 978-90-04-36958-0 Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2021-02-15 Kate Cameron
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Processes of academisation in higher music education: The case of Sweden – CORRIGENDUM Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2021-02-11 K. Johansson,E. Georgii-Hemming
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Time for practice: implications of undergraduate pianists’ choices of repertoire Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2021-02-03 Katie Zhukov, Jane Ginsborg
There is an on-going debate as to the skills needed for 21st century careers in classical music and how undergraduate students should learn them. Many graduate pianists report being under-prepared for the music profession, lacking sight-reading skills in particular. While research-evidenced pedagogy for improving sight-reading skills has been developed, little is known regarding what impact enhancing
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The branded product and the funded project: the impact of economic rationality on the practices and pedagogy of music education in the early childhood sector Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2021-01-18 Susan Young
In this article, I explore how neoliberal economic discourses and techniques have profoundly influenced the way that music education in early childhood has developed in recent years in the UK. I focus on two dominant models of practice that have been shaped by market thinking; the private music session (the ‘branded product’) and short term, stand-alone projects funded by charitable organisations (the
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Teacher perceptions of A-level music: tension, dilemmas and decline Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2021-01-14 Adam Whittaker
A-level music, a qualification taken most often in English and Welsh school contexts around the age of 18, has been a long-standing feature of the musical training of many musicians. Historically bound up with Western European Art Music, the qualification has somewhat broadened its horizons in recent times, though with mixed success in opening up new ways of thinking about music. Recent research has
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An investigation into the status of Thailand’s music education systems and organisation Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2020-12-23 Vitchatalum Laovanich, Yootthana Chuppunnarat, Monsikarn Laovanich, Skowrung Saibunmi
The purpose of this exploratory sequential mixed methods research is to (1) analyse research on the problems in music education management in Thailand in the past 5–10 years and (2) explore the current resources of music education in Thai institutions under the Office of The Basic Education Commission (OBEC). The study found that (1) the problems regarding music education in Thailand were lack of experts
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Processes of academisation in higher music education: the case of Sweden Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2020-12-21 Karin Johansson, Eva Georgii-Hemming
Higher music education (HME) in Europe is multifaceted due to the great variety of legal frameworks, conservatory histories and practices. However, following the Bologna declaration in 1999, traditional conservatories are gradually transforming into research-based institutions, which means combining advanced performer training with artistic research. After a background on academisation in the higher
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Authentic learning in senior secondary music pedagogy: an examination of teaching practice in high-achieving school music programmes Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2020-12-17 Rachel White
Authentic learning approaches are designed to immerse students in contexts that promote real-life applications of knowledge, and provide meaningful learning experiences beyond the abstract instruction of the classroom. In a grounded theory study of music teaching practice in high-achieving schools, 50 teachers from 23 schools across New South Wales (NSW), Australia, were asked to describe how they
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Perceptions of the informal learning branch of Musical Futures Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2020-12-17 Anna Mariguddi
This article will explore how Professor Lucy Green’s model of informal learning, as advocated by Musical Futures, is perceived by those lying close to the phenomenon. Qualitative research was conducted and data collection involved semi-structured interviews with three key figures relating to the phenomenon. Case studies were then conducted in four English secondary schools, involving teachers and students
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Where’s the body? Reconsidering the concept of pedagogical content knowledge through research in music education with Dutch specialist preschool music teachers Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2020-12-14 Melissa Bremmer
This article reports an investigation into the pedagogical content knowledge (PCK) of Dutch specialist preschool music teachers with regard to teaching and learning rhythm skills from an embodied cognition perspective. An embodied cognition perspective stresses the intimate relationship between body, mind and environment. Through stimulated recall interviews, video analysis tasks, notebooks and semi-structured
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From student to professional: recent conservatoire graduates’ experiences of instrumental teaching Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2020-09-14 Luan Shaw
This research, carried out across 2017–2018, investigated Royal Birmingham Conservatoire (RBC) graduates’ experiences of working as instrumental teachers. A total of 31 participants (who graduated across 2012–2016 and studied an optional ‘Further Pedagogy’ module in their final year) responded to a questionnaire, and two were observed whilst teaching, and subsequently interviewed (2018). Results indicate
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Informal learning of popular music: gender monoglossia and heteroglossia Br. J. Music Educ. (IF 1.179) Pub Date : 2020-09-14 Alison Butler, Kelly Bylica, Ruth Wright
This paper reports on a small-scale study in an elementary school in Southern Ontario, Canada. The study investigated relationships between students’ perceptions and practices of gender in popular music education with particular attention given to communication, instruments and technology and development of freedoms and constraints. The findings present a more opaque picture than previous research