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A caring perspective on collaborative teaching in music educationBingham, Heidi Harrison 19 September 2023 (has links)
Collaborative teaching may provide classroom support, professional development, and mentoring for teachers (Gallo-Fox & Scantlebury, 2016; Guise et al., 2017; Friend et al., 2015; Rytivaara et al., 2019). Recent scholarship in music education has indicated that collaborative teaching may also provide a more holistic approach to student teacher preparation (Kim, 2020; Palmer, 2018; Vanderwerff, 2019). Yet, research has shown that strong teacher-to-teacher relationships are essential for collaborative teaching to benefit teachers (Pratt, 2014; Guise et al., 2017), and that a purposeful study and enactment of care may aid in the development of these positive relationships (Rabin, 2020). Nevertheless, collaborative teaching in music education has generally focused on collaborative teaching in higher education, or as an exploratory, temporary practice (Bartleet & Hultgren, 2008; Clauhs & Newell, 2013; Freer & Barker, 2008), making it difficult to determine how teachers may develop and maintain strong, caring relationships that foster collaboration.
The aim of this research was to examine long-term collaborative teaching to understand what attributes contribute to successful collaborative teaching partnerships among secondary instrumental music educators. In this ethnographic study, I examined the collaborative teaching experiences and social practices of four secondary instrumental music educators over an eight-month period through the lens of Noddings’s (2005, 2012, 2013) educational care theory. I used multiple methods of data collection such as interviews, observations, surveys, and artifacts to understand the context, attitudes, and approach these teachers used in working together. I utilized Gee’s (2014) approach to discourse analysis to deeply explore the data and understand care across teachers’ relationships.
Collaborative teaching provided these four secondary instrumental educators with consistent support and professional learning. The teachers’ collaboration thrived as they developed strong, caring relationships. Despite heavy teaching burdens, teachers felt less overwhelmed and isolated than in their previous teaching positions. Instead, the teachers expressed a sense of belonging and fulfillment from working collaboratively. Teachers’ attitudes rather than their skills, experience, or specialty played a primary role in the development of their caring teacher-to-teacher relationships. These teachers were committed to working together, to helping one another in the classroom, and to maintaining and developing caring relationships.
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The music conservatory in AmericaFitzPatrick, Edward John, Jr. January 1963 (has links)
Thesis (D.M.A.)--Boston University
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Music enrichment for gifted children in the first gradeGreen, Diane H., Nathan, Jean F., Weisbach, Elise I. January 1959 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston University
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Pray, play, teach: conversations with three Jewish Israeli music educatorsEhrlich, Amira 22 February 2018 (has links)
The current study focuses on what, how, and why music is being taught in the
practices of three Jewish Israeli music educators. Participants included three high school
music directors working in three main Jewish subsectors that constitute the main streams
of public education in contemporary Israeli society: secular, ultraorthodox, and national
religious. In contemporary Israeli society, these subsectors of Judaism are organized into
communities differing in nuanced religious affiliations, geographic locations, and
socioeconomic backgrounds. The subtle differences between these communities
constitute practical and philosophical conceptualizations of being Jewish in the
contemporary State of Israel. The government-mandated education system in Israel
recognizes these subsectors as separate and segregated streams of education, organized
into separate institutions, inspectorates, and curriculum. Music education in Israel,
however, is mandated through a single national curriculum for all socioreligious sectors.
The interest of this study is in the ways this single curriculum is enacted by various
sociocultural nuances of Judaism in contemporary Israeli society.
The research design was based on Scollon and Scollon’s 12-month framework of
nexus analysis, developed for explorations of cultural implications underlying everyday
actions. The study included three phases: (a) engagement—acclimation in practice sites
and contexts; (b) navigation—discovering the key elements and moving between the
individual and the social constructs that each practice entails; and (c) change—analysis
that challenges the existing practices and inspires transformation. Data accrued through
observation, interviews, and one focus-group session. The final stage focused on
participant involvement in data analysis and representation. Findings are presented
through a series of narrative texts: portraits of each participant, followed by scenes of
practice, annotated with narrative testimonials designed from the words of participants.
Introductory chapters address the main constructs upon which these narratives rest and
fuel the interpretations that follow each of the narratives.
Findings reveal interrelationships between music education and Jewish-Israeli
intrareligious tensions. Conclusions call for further attention to the cultural implications
of music educators’ situated work, in Israel and abroad.
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A History of Three African-American Women Who Made Important Contributions to Music Education Between 1903 and 1960Patterson, DeAnna Rose 25 June 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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The Effect of Instruction on Eighth Grade Band Students’ Understanding of PracticeKolthammer, Stacey C. 11 May 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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An Investigation of Musical Styles and Applications in Select High School Choral MusicCannon, Robert S. 15 May 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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THE PROCESS OF TEACHING VOCAL TECHNIQUES IN THE CHORAL REHEARSALBanta, Courtney M. 15 May 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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Children and Music: An Exploration of the Impact of Music on Children's LivesMead, Robin S. 24 April 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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The Elephant In The Concert Hall; Searching for the Postmodern in Music Criticism from 1965 to the PresentRyan-Hirst, Thomas F. 17 September 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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