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Didactical perspectives of aural trainingHerbst, Anna Catharina 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PhD) -- Stellenbosch University, 1993. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The purpose of this research endeavour is to develop an understanding of the general state of Aural Training as presented
in Aural Training literature and at a tertiary level. Based on this understanding, recommendations for a theory
towards Aural Training are furthermore made.
The investigation consists of three main parts. In the first two parts, an in-depth theoretical study, exploring aspects
such as the rationale behind Aural Training, teaching ideologies, contents and target group and methodological
approaches found in published and unpublished sources, as well as a practical questionnaire-based survey,
investigating selected Aural Training aspects as presented on a tertiary level in the Republic of South Africa (RSA),
the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG), and the United States of America (USA) are presented. A model of an
integrated Aural Training approach for children is proposed in the third part.
Results from both the theoretical and practical surveys indicate that: (a) the rationale behind Aural Training has not
been thoroughly thought through; (b) Aural Training lecturers with sound pedagogical credentials are needed; (c)
prospective students are not prepared for their tertiary Aural Training courses; (d) the Aural Training curricula at
most tertiary music institutions do not meet lecturers' expectations; (e) more instruction time is needed for classes
scheduled in both individual and group tuition; (f) Aural Training literature and teaching methods are still influenced
by the Behaviouristic school of psychological thinking, with its emphasis on drill and practice; (g) methods such as
Sight Singing and Dictation are more frequently applied than others, possibly because they are readily quantifiable;
(h) most emphasis is placed on tonal music; (i) research results in which holistic approaches to Aural Training have
been recommended since the early 1980s are not reflected in the majority of Aural Training work-/textbooks and
teaching methods; (j) commercially available software is often chosen because of its availability and not because of
being based on sound pedagogical principles; (k) there is a growing interest amongst lecturers to re-examine the goals
of Aural Training and to apply music psychological principles.
Because of the already mentioned problem of improperly prepared prospective music students" and the scarcity of
Aural Training approaches to develop children's musical consciousnesses, a model for integrating' Aural Training into
the instrumental/vocal music lesson through composition is proposed. This model is based entirely on (a) the
conviction that most effective learning takes place through active involvement and creation, and (b) music psychological
principles such as Gestalt perception, the developmental theories of Piaget, Gardner and Swanwick-Tillman,
and the musical thinking process theories of Prince and Webster. Through the application of this model, Aural
Training can be approached by dealing with wholes within a musical context. Structural and perceptual thinking, as
well as the mental principles of exploring, applying, problem-solving and critical reasoning can also be developed. It
offers a comprehensive approach to learning written theory skills, and the opportunity to apply all other Aural
Training methods. Examples of children's compositions are presented to support this model.
It is finally recommended that: (a) Aural Training lecturers should constantly re-examine their objectives, contents,
teaching philosophies and methods applied; (b) advanced courses in Aural Training should be offered at all tertiary
music institutions in order to meet the need for adequately trained lecturers; (c) a compulsory course on the didactics of Aural Training should be offered for all music students; (d) more instruction time should be made available for
Aural Training; (e) Aural Training should be treated in its own right in grading policies; (f) holistic approaches to
both classroom-based and programmed Aural Training should replace drill and practice; (g) music from all style
periods should be included; (h) a wide spectrum of Aural Training methods should be incorporated and not mainly
Sight Singing and Dictation; (i) lecturers should inform themselves about recent research results and try to
incorporate these into their Aural Training curricula and syllabi; g) Work-/textbooks and computer software based on
holistic and comprehensive approaches to Aural Training should be released; (k) Aural Training should be
incorporated from the very first instrumental/vocal lesson by applying an integrated, holistic approach through
composition. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die doel van hierdie navorsing is om 'n ondersoek te loods na die algemene stand van gehooropleiding soos daargestel
in musiekliteratuur, en soos aangebied aan tersiere musiekinstansies: 'n Model vir gelntegreerde gehooropleiding
word ten slotte voorgestel aan hand van hierdie inligting.
Die inhoud van die ondersoek is in drie hoofdele georganiseer. In die eerste deel word In teoretiese ondersoek
geloods na die redes vir, en doelstellings van gehooropleiding, onderrigfilosojiee, inhoud en teikengroep, en
metodiese benaderingswyses. Die mate waarin hierdie aspekte, soos gevind in gepubliseerde en ongepubliseerde
bronne, neerslag gevind het in tersiere gehooropleidingsprogramme in die Republiek van Suid-Afrika, die Federale
Republiek van Duitsland en die Verenigde State van Amerika, vorm die kern van die vraelys-gebaseerde tweede deel.
'n Model vir gelntegreerde gehooropleiding met kinders word in die derde deel voorgestel.
Resultate van beide die teoretiese en praktiese ondersoeke toon dat: (a) die redes vir, en doelstellings van gehooropleiding
nog nie goed deurdink is nie; (b) spesiaal geskoolde gehooropleidingsdosente benodig word; (c)
voornemende musiekstudente nie voorbereid vir tersiere gehooropleidingskursusse is nie; (d) die
gehooropleidingskurrikula nie aandie vereistes van die meeste gehooropleidingsdosente voldoen nie; (e) meer
onderrigtyd benodig word vir gehooropleiding, wat in beide individuele en groepsonderrig plaas behoort te vind; (f)
gehooropleidingsmetodes steeds sterk belnvloed word deur die Behavioristiese skool van musiekpsigologiese denke
waarin dril en herhaling beklemtoon word; (g) bladsang en diktee voorkeur geniet bo ander metodes, waarskynlik as
gevolg van die feit dat studente se antwoorde makliker gekwantifiseer kan word as in ander metodes; (h) tonale
musiek meestal beklemtoon word; (i) navorsingresultate waarin holistiese benaderingswyses tot gehooropleiding
sedert die begin van die 1980's aanbeveel word, min tot geen invloed op die meerderheid gehooropleidingsteksboeke
en -metodes gehad het; g) kommersieel beskikbare rekenaarprogramme dikwels gekies word op grond van
beskikbaarheid en nie op grond van pedagogiese doelstellings nie; (k) daar 'n toenemende geinteresseerdheid onder
dosente is om die doelstelling van gehooropleiding te re-evaIueer, en om musiekpsigologiese beginsels in
gehooropleiding te inkorporeer.
Vanwee die reeds genoemde probleemvan onvoorbereide voornemende musiekstudente wat gehooropleiding betref
en die skaarsheid aan gehooropleidingsprogramme vir kinders, is 'n model vir die integrering van gehooropleiding
deur middel van komposisie in die instrumentale en/of sangles voorgestel. Hierdie model is gebaseer op (a) die
oortuiging dat die mees effektiewe vorm van leer plaasvind d.m. v. aktiewe betrokkenheid en skepping; en (b) die
musiekpsigologiese beginsels van Gestalt-waameming, die ontwikkelingsteoriee van Piaget, Gardner en Swanwick-
Tillman, en musikale denkprosesteoriee van Prince en Webster. Deur middel van hierdie model kan gehooropleiding
benader word vanuit 'n holistiese oogpunt deurdat gehele binne 'n musikale konteks behandel word. Daardeur word
nie net strukturele en persepsuele denke ontwikkel nie, maar ook verstandelike denkprosesse soos ontdekking,
aanwending, probleemoplossing en kritiese denke. Dit bied ook die geleentheid vir 'n geheelbenadering tot die
aanleer van musiekteoretiese kennis en skryfvaardighede, en die inkorporering van aIle ander gehooropleidingsmetodes.
Voorbeelde van kinders se komposisies is ingesluit as bewys daarvoor dat dit weI in die praktyk toepasbaar
is.
Ten slotte word aanbeveel dat: (a) gehooropleidingsdosente hulle doelstellings, onderrigfilosofiee en -metodes voortdurend
krities moet betrag en ondersoek; (b) gevorderde kursusse in gehooropleiding aan alle tersiere musiekinstansies
aangebied behoort te word om sodoende te voorsien in die nood van onvoldoende geskoolde,dosente; (c) alle studente
verplig moet word om 'n kursus in gehooropleidingsdidaktiek te volg; (d) meer onderrrigtyd ingeruim behoort
te word vir gehooropleiding; (e) gehooropleiding as 'n vak in eie reg behandel moet word by puntetoekennings; (t)
metodes van 001 en herhaling met holistiese benaderingswyses tot gehooropleiding in beide klaskamergebaseerde en
geprogrammeerde onderrig vervang moet word; (g) musiek van alle stylperiodes ingesluit behoort te word; (h) 'n
wye spektrum van gehooropleidingsmetodes aangewend moet word en me slegs bladsang en diktee me; (i) gehooropleidingsdosente
hulself voortdurend op hoogte van die nuutste navorsingsresul-tate behoort'te hou en moet poog
om hierdie resultate in hulle gehooropleidingsprogramme te integreer; g) gehooropleidingsboeke en rekenaarprogramme
wat op holistiese en kontekstuele benaderings tot gehooropleiding gebaseer is, gepubliseer moet word; (k)
gehooropleiding vanaf die eerste instrumentale en/of sangles gei'ntegreer behoort te word deurdat die voorgestelde
model van 'n holistiese benaderingswyse d.m. v. komposisie aangewend word.
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Estelle Liebling: An exploration of her pedagogical principles as an extension and elaboration of the Marchesi method, including a survey of her music and editing for coloratura soprano and other voices.Fowler, Alandra Dean. January 1994 (has links)
Estelle Liebling (1880-1970) was a phenomenally successful voice teacher who occupies a place in the chain of succession of voice teachers devoted to the ideals of the bel canto. Turning out over seventy-five Metropolitan Opera stars over the fifty-plus year span of her teaching career, she was regarded during her lifetime as one of the most distinguished voice teachers in America. Her editions, compositions, and pedagogical writings exerted an influence on the world far exceeding the boundaries of the New York professional musical sphere in which she operated. Despite this, almost nothing has been written to date that documents her contribution to the world of singing. Much of Liebling's pedagogical outlook was derived from that of her immediate predecessor, Mathilde Marchesi, and direct comparison of Liebling's Vocal Course to Marchesi's Theoretical and Practical Vocal Method shows this relationship. Liebling herself acknowledged Marchesi's influence, but the pedagogy she espoused was by no means a carbon copy of that of Marchesi. Important differences exist, distinguishing Liebling's pedagogy as separate and individualized, a legitimate successor to the Marchesi Method. Liebling's legacy consists not only of her teaching and pedagogical writings, however. The tremendous body of vocal literature which she edited, arranged, and composed, mostly for coloratura soprano, is enough in of itself to justify her place in music history. Additionally, her catalogue work of cadenzas and ornamentation for coloratura soprano literature still stands today as the monumental work on the subject.
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A comprehensive curriculum for drum set in the college percussion studio.Martin, Susan Marie. January 1994 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to develop a comprehensive curriculum for drum set in the college percussion studio. The main emphasis of the paper is to provide information addressing the needs of the percussion student over a four-year course of drum set study. In addition, I will show how these needs can best be met through the use of both existing instructional materials and original supplemental materials written by the author. The need for a drum set curriculum is defined and an in-depth review made of selected extant materials. After defining the general guidelines for the curriculum, a limited number of instructional materials were chosen from the extant materials which could adequately and affordably fulfill these guidelines. Recommended studies for the freshman through senior years are outlined and instructional objectives defined.
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CORRELATIONS BETWEEN READING MUSIC AND READING LANGUAGE, WITH IMPLICATIONS FOR MUSIC INSTRUCTION (NOTATION).HAHN, LOIS BLACKBURN. January 1985 (has links)
There is evidence that the strategies used by fluent readers of written language and by fluent "sight-readers" of musical notation are much the same. Both require a background in the modality represented by the written symbols. Both require context for construction of meaning through sampling and prediction. In this study, a method of elementary music-reading instruction was developed in which musical notation is introduced in the context of musical patterns familiar to the students through earlier musical experiences. The focus is on melodic contour and rhythmic units, initially with no emphasis on exact pitch. An experimental study was conducted to compare the effectiveness of this method with a more traditional one in which the elements of notation are first introduced in isolation. Subjects for the study were two beginning string classes (fourth- through sixth-grade students) in geographically contiguous schools in a large school district in a southwestern city. There were two 30-minute classes per week. During the first two months, both groups were given identical pre-reading experiences, including rote playing, by the regular music teachers. Instruction in music reading, begun in the third month, consisted of eleven lessons administered to each group by the investigator. The testing instrument, designed by the investigator and used as pretest and posttest, consisted of initial measures of five children's songs, four of which were familiar to the children through rote experiences. While all of the subjects received zero on the pretest, posttest scores for both groups indicated growth in music reading. A t-test on the data permitted rejection of the null hypothesis and acceptance of the alternate hypothesis that the investigator-designed method was more effective than the traditional one in both the music-reading task and the sight-reading task.
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Music, movement and drama in the center of the elementary curriculumWachsman, Frances, 1942- January 1989 (has links)
The purpose of this project is to develop a research-founded semiotically-based, holistic philosophy for utilizing quality, child-tested music, movement and drama resources in an integrated learning format and to provide workable activities within an accessible, understandable structure for use by the teacher in kindergarten through third grade classroom situations. Since children are "meaning makers," it is logical to create an approach for classroom teachers to use which builds on what children need most to help them make learning connections: an integrated format which helps children understand how learning fits together or makes sense. This project organizes music, movement and drama activities thematically in content areas which are ordered from simple to complex to accommodate the age range to which the project is directed.
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Symbolism and Chinese culture : conceptual and practical resources in the composition of electroacoustic musicWeng, Chih-Hung January 2007 (has links)
This thesis accompanies the five electroacoustic compositions of the Bardo series and presents a discussion of symbolism within contexts of Chinese culture and the electroacoustic medium. The work develops a view of interaction between cultures of East and West, considering issues raised in terms of philosophical research and as a substantial creative resource for composers and listeners.
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Examining the Canadian Opera Company's role in opera education in Ontario schools, 1950-1990Smith, Donnalee. 10 April 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Innovations in the Usage of the Damper PedalRichards, Ruby Juliet 06 1900 (has links)
The piano first came into existence about 1709, but until the 1770's it was probably used most successfully as an accompanying instrument because of the small volume of tone it could produce. In its earlier stages the piano was not capable of producing even as big a tone as a large. sized harpsichord, During these seventy years piano builders experimented a great deal with the piano and its mechanisms, As with any instrument, some ideas were kept and improved, and others were tried and then discarded.
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Perceptions of Success Among Music ProfessionalsColes, Drew Xavier January 2019 (has links)
The primary purpose of this study was to investigate the subjective and objective career success perceptions of music school graduates who now identify as professional musicians. This study approached that purpose in four ways. First, the study examined how musicians conceptualized success compared to the literature. Second, the study investigated how musicians conceptualize how success is shown in themselves relative to how it appears in others. Third, the study examined if and how musicians attribute the success that they have achieved in their careers to the institutional preparation they received at academic institutions. Fourth, the study investigated the possibility that geography may play a role in sculpting the perceptual values and qualifiers of success in musicians.
This study was informed by the literature surrounding the area of careers, career success, career development as it pertains to musicians, and career success as it pertains to musicians. A survey was the research tool utilized for this descriptive study, and the survey was constructed and facilitated via Qualtrics Software. The survey included 26 Likert-type questions and seven open-ended questions. The sample population used for this study was 326 participants from the New York City Chapter of the American Federation of Musicians Union. The data that was collected from the survey was organized, analyzed, and synthesized to discover emerging themes and answers to the guiding research questions.
The findings of this study suggest that musicians understand and value the points of the comparison that those outside of the field of music may use to value and evaluate their own careers. The findings of this study also suggest that musicians may perceive some of the underlying components that make up career success differently in themselves that they do in others. Further, support is provided in this dissertation for the understanding that objective career success and subjective career success are linked in a way that is underrepresented in the literature, and thus is underrepresented in the discussion of the two concepts.
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The use of computers in music education in South West AfricaZolkov, Ashley Mark 18 August 2014 (has links)
THE USE OF COMPUTERS IN MUSIC EDUCATION IN SOUTH WEST
AFRICA
ZOHOVj Ashley Mark, M. Mus. University of the Witwatersrand,
Johannesburg, 1986.
This study compared CAT with conventional group-class Instruction to
determine the degree of skill proficiency in interval and rhythm
dictation obtained by students exposed to the alternate forms of instruction.
Forty-three students attending the Windhoek Conservatoire,
aged between eleven and fifteen years, volunteered to participate,
A modified pre-test/post-test control group design was used. A
researcher-built pre-test was administered and students were matched
according to interval scores and grade level. Each pair was then
randomly assigned to either the experimental (GAI) or the control
(teacher) group: Intervals. An inverse assignment of these intact
groups was made. The control group now became an experimental group
(CAT: Rhythms), while the pre-defined experimental group was treated
as its control (teacher: Rhythms), Each student received CAT and
group-class instruction for two half-hour sessions per week for six
months (14-18 hours of instruction), GAI was administered using the
Micro GUIDO Ear Training System, specially adapted by the researcher
to suit study at a grade level.
Results of the non-parametric tests indicated no difference between
E and G groups (p » ,05). Results favouring the E group in interval
recognition were obtained (p = ,10). Further, the C group showed a
greater proficiency in ability to notate rhythms correctly (p - , 10).
No differences were observed in a comparison of sex, age and degree
of theory knowledge among students receiving GAI (p " >05), A positive
response by students to GAI was Indicated in an attitudinal
questionnaire,
It was concluded that CAI served as a feasible alternative to conventional
instruction but that optimum benefits would be derived if
used as an adjunct to conventional instruction.
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