Resisting Elephants Lurking in the Music Education Classroom
Music education has many 'elephants' in its classrooms: obvious major problems that go unmentioned and suffered silently. Two of the larger, more problematic 'elephants' are identified, analyzed, and critiqued: (1) the hegemony of university schools of music on school music and t...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Music educators journal 2014-06, Vol.100 (4), p.77-86 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Music education has many 'elephants' in its classrooms: obvious major problems that go unmentioned and suffered silently. Two of the larger, more problematic 'elephants' are identified, analyzed, and critiqued: (1) the hegemony of university schools of music on school music and the resulting focus in school music on "presentational" music (i.e., concert performance), with a corresponding lack of "participatory" music in schools; and (2) an increasingly problematic 'anything goes' anarchy of teaching methods (methodolatry)—this condition being worsened by the absence of shared curricular ideals for guiding the field towards the status of a true helping profession. The ethical premises such professionalism are explored (duty ethics, consequentialism, and virtue ethics) and a professional ethic for teaching music is proposed. |
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ISSN: | 0027-4321 1945-0087 |
DOI: | 10.1177/0027432114531798 |