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Explore the creative ways music educators across the country are
approaching emerging practices in music teaching and learning.
Outlined in twenty-five unique case studies, each program offers a
new perspective on music teaching and learning, often falling
outside the standard music education curriculum. Find innovative
ideas and models of successful practice to incorporate into your
teaching, whether in school, university, or community settings.
Close the gap between music inside and outside the music classroom
and spark student interest. The diversity of these real-world case
studies will inspire questioning and curiosity, stimulate lively
discussion and innovation, and provide much food for thought.
Designed for music teachers, preservice music education students,
and music education faculty, this project was supported by Society
for Music Teacher Education's (SMTE) Areas of Strategic Planning
and Action on Critical Examination of the Curriculum, which will
receive a portion of the proceeds.
This second edition of TIPS: The Child Voice was prepared in
response to demand for an updated and expanded version of the
highly successful 1997 edition. This edition takes into account the
broadening base of information regarding the nature of the singing
voice. Now with strategies for the voice in transition during early
adolescence, as well as strategies, games and activities to nurture
the voice in early childhood, you'll find more suggestions for
selecting materials and more recommended sources and resources.
Also new are sample materials and activities, but you'll still find
TIPS to use in student portfolios. These ideas, culled from
scholars and experienced teachers, should prove useful to not only
music educators, but also early childhood specialists, middle
school teachers, and everyone working with students during those
critical times of development of our natural instrument . . . the
singing voice.
Explore the creative ways music educators across the country are
approaching emerging practices in music teaching and learning.
Outlined in twenty-five unique case studies, each program offers a
new perspective on music teaching and learning, often falling
outside the standard music education curriculum. Find innovative
ideas and models of successful practice to incorporate into your
teaching, whether in school, university, or community settings.
Close the gap between music inside and outside the music classroom
and spark student interest. The diversity of these real-world case
studies will inspire questioning and curiosity, stimulate lively
discussion and innovation, and provide much food for thought.
Designed for music teachers, preservice music education students,
and music education faculty, this project was supported by Society
for Music Teacher Education's (SMTE) Areas of Strategic Planning
and Action on Critical Examination of the Curriculum, which will
receive a portion of the proceeds.
The National Institute of Standards and Technology Special
Publication 800-121 Revision 1, Guide to Bluetooth Security is the
first revision to NIST SP 800-121, Guide to Bluetooth Security.
Bluetooth is an open standard for short-range radio frequency
communication. Bluetooth technology is used primarily to establish
wireless personal area networks. It has been integrated into many
types of business and consumer devices, including cellular phones,
personal digital assistants, laptops, automobiles, printers, and
headsets. This publication provides information on the security
capabilities of Bluetooth and gives recommendations to
organizations employing Bluetooth technologies on securing them
effectively. Updates in this revision include the latest
vulnerability mitigation information for Secure Simple Pairing,
introduced in Bluetooth v2.1 + Enhanced Data Rate (EDR), as well as
an introduction to and discussion of Bluetooth v3.0 + High Speed
and Bluetooth v4.0 security mechanisms and recommendations.
Re-Orienting China challenges the notion of the travel writer as
imperialistic, while exploring the binary opposition of self/other.
Featuring analyses of rarely studied writers on post-1949 China,
including Jan Wong, Jock T. Wilson, Peter Hessler, Leslie T. Chang,
Hill Gates, and Yi-Fu Tuan, Re-Orienting China demonstrates the
transformative power of travel, as it changes our preconceived
notions of home and abroad. Drawing on her own experience as a
Chinese expat living in Canada, Leilei Chen embraces the
possibility of productive cross-border relationships that are
critical in today's globalized world. "An intriguing contribution
to research. Postcolonial studies is in the process of exploring
ways to get past the binary opposition of self/other, and books
like Re-Orienting China are an important part of this project."
Pamela McCallum, Cultural Memories and Imagined Futures "Chen
brings an intimate awareness of the internal diversity within China
which is too often downplayed or ignored by foreign observers."
Stephen Clark, Asian Crossings: Travel Writing on China, Japan and
Southeast Asia
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