Music Educators as DJs: Remixing Teaching With Hip-Hop
To investigate how music educators engage their students with Hip-Hop, we adopted a “research remix” approach, combining elements of case study and constructivist grounded theory. This approach allowed us to privilege Hip-Hop culture and to construct new understandings about Hip-Hop teaching and lea...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of research in music education 2024-07, Vol.72 (2), p.139-159 |
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description | To investigate how music educators engage their students with Hip-Hop, we adopted a “research remix” approach, combining elements of case study and constructivist grounded theory. This approach allowed us to privilege Hip-Hop culture and to construct new understandings about Hip-Hop teaching and learning. Six elementary and middle school music teachers implemented Hip-Hop-focused instruction in their classrooms while also attending professional development workshops. Data included videos of classroom instruction, participant interviews, and videos of the workshops with co-facilitation from Hip-Hop artists and the researchers. Educators encountered tensions and challenges related to a perceived Hip-Hop “realness” and a lack of musical and pedagogical skills. To address these challenges, participants remixed their approaches by blending elements of Hip-Hop music and culture with their established teaching strategies. Teachers’ dispositions and feedback from students and colleagues engendered critical reflections about their positionalities in relation to Hip-Hop. We constructed a visual model of a DJ as a metaphor to describe participants’ approaches to remixing their teaching with Hip-Hop within their contexts. Implications include a need for increased emphasis on Hip-Hop in U.S. music teacher education programs and institutional pathways for Hip-Hop musicians to become music educators. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1177/00224294231181509 |
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We constructed a visual model of a DJ as a metaphor to describe participants’ approaches to remixing their teaching with Hip-Hop within their contexts. 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subjects | Case studies Cultural instruction Disc jockeys Educational Strategies Feedback Grounded Theory Hip hop culture Hip hop music Middle Schools Music education Music teachers Student teacher relationship Teacher education Teacher Education Programs Teacher Improvement Teachers Teaching Teaching Methods |
title | Music Educators as DJs: Remixing Teaching With Hip-Hop |
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