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The Musical Experience proposes a new concept - musical experience - as the most effective framework for navigating the shifting terrain of educational policy as it is applied to music education. Other books that deal with music education reform often concentrate on non-musical topics at the expense of music listening, performance, and composition, or concentrate on only one of these at the expense of the others. This book, however, works with musical experience as a comprehensive framework for all aspects of music education. The editors and their contributors define musical experience as being characterized by the depth of affective and emotional responses that music engenders, and illustrate that its breadth is embodied in the infinite variety of meanings - both personal and communal - that music evokes. The essays map out the primary forms of musical engagement (performing, listening, improvising, composing, etc.) as activities which play a key role in classroom teaching. The chapters also address the cultural dimensions of musical experience, which call for consideration of time, place, beliefs, and values placed upon musical activities, works, and genres. The book discusses how music teachers can most effectively rely on means of musical communication to lead students toward the development and refinement of musical skills, understandings, and expression in educational settings. As a whole, the book expands upon the dimensions of musical experience and provides, from the forefront of the field, an integrated yet panoramic view of the educational processes involved in music teaching and learning.
The MENC Handbook of Research on Music Learning, Volume 1:
Strategies brings together the best and most current research on
methods for music learning, focusing squarely on the profession's
empirical and conceptual knowledge of how students gain competence
in music at various ages and in different contexts. The collection
of chapters, written by the foremost figures active in the field,
takes a broad theoretical perspective on current, critical areas of
research, including music development, music listening and reading,
motivation and self-regulated learning in music, music perception,
and movement. The book's companion volume, Applications, builds an
extensive and solid position of practice upon the frameworks and
research presented here.
The Musical Experience proposes a new concept - musical experience - as the most effective framework for navigating the shifting terrain of educational policy as it is applied to music education. Other books that deal with music education reform often concentrate on non-musical topics at the expense of music listening, performance, and composition, or concentrate on only one of these at the expense of the others. This book, however, works with musical experience as a comprehensive framework for all aspects of music education. The editors and their contributors define musical experience as being characterized by the depth of affective and emotional responses that music engenders, and illustrate that its breadth is embodied in the infinite variety of meanings - both personal and communal - that music evokes. The essays map out the primary forms of musical engagement (performing, listening, improvising, composing, etc.) as activities which play a key role in classroom teaching. The chapters also address the cultural dimensions of musical experience, which call for consideration of time, place, beliefs, and values placed upon musical activities, works, and genres. The book discusses how music teachers can most effectively rely on means of musical communication to lead students toward the development and refinement of musical skills, understandings, and expression in educational settings. As a whole, the book expands upon the dimensions of musical experience and provides, from the forefront of the field, an integrated yet panoramic view of the educational processes involved in music teaching and learning.
The MENC Handbook of Research on Music Learning, Volume 1:
Strategies brings together the best and most current research on
methods for music learning, focusing squarely on the profession's
empirical and conceptual knowledge of how students gain competence
in music at various ages and in different contexts. The collection
of chapters, written by the foremost figures active in the field,
takes a broad theoretical perspective on current, critical areas of
research, including music development, music listening and reading,
motivation and self-regulated learning in music, music perception,
and movement. The book's companion volume, Applications, builds an
extensive and solid position of practice upon the frameworks and
research presented here.
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