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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
81

Music Literacy and Sight-Singing Techniques Used by Elementary and Middle School Music Teachers

Conrad, Wendie Joyce 27 December 2007 (has links)
No description available.
82

Music teachers' attitudes, classroom environments, and music activities in multicultural music education /

Young, Sharon M. January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
83

Vocal competencies desirable for public school music teaching and their relation to class voice instruction in teacher education /

Hinton, William G. January 1960 (has links)
No description available.
84

A survey and evaluation of music teacher education program in selected, accredited black private colleges and universities in the United States /

Lacy, Lucile Christine January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
85

Modification of the observational system for instructional analysis focusing on appraisal behaviors of music teachers in small performance classes /

Reynolds, Kay January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
86

Independent Piano Teachers: An Investigation of Their Attitudes toward Selected Attributes of Profession

Crane, Joyce L. (Joyce Lydia) 05 1900 (has links)
The purpose of the study was to investigate independent piano teachers' view of themselves in the light of selected attributes found in sociological writings on the professions. The research problems were: (a) to determine the attitudes which independent piano teachers held toward selected professional attributes; (b) to determine the relationship between the attitudes toward the professional attributes and selected background variables; and (c) to determine the degree of association between these attributes. The problems were addressed by a questionnaire directed to independent piano teachers active in the area of Dallas-Ft. Worth, Texas. Thirty teachers were also interviewed to determine consistency of response and to explore issues which the questionnaire had raised. Reliability and validity were established at acceptable levels. Techniques of statistical analysis included Pearson's product-moment correlation, multiple regression, chi-square in conjunction with Cramer's V_, and factor analysis. The strongest attitudes expressed by the teachers in the study concerned professional self-image, altruism, client orientation, commitment to work, and independence. The most important background variables were age, years of experience, number of students, certification by a professional association, and college degree in music. A multiple regression analysis tested each variable against the dependent variable professional self-image; recognition by others, commitment to work, client orientation, and qualification were found to account for 25% of the common variance. A factor analysis was also conducted to seek out patterns of attitudes among the attributes being studied; seven factors were identified among the subjects' belief systems as Professional Actions, Satisfaction, Quality Control, Professionalism, Compliance, Autonomy, and Focus on Student. These factors accounted for almost half of the total variance in the data. The study concluded that: (a) independent piano teaching was a female-dominated, subsidized occupation, and (b) the piano teachers' professional self-image seemed to be an evaluation of themselves and their work, rather than the use of profession as a definable goal for which to strive.
87

The Development of Occupational Identity in Undergraduate Music Education Majors

L'Roy, DiAnn 08 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to investigate the development of occupational identity in undergraduate music education majors using a Symbolic Interactionist theoretical framework. Three research problems were formulated: (1) The identification of occupational norms and values of undergraduate music education majors; (2) The determination of the commitment of under graduate music education majors to specific skills and knowledge of music education; (3) The determination of career commitment to music education by undergraduate majors. The sample consisted of undergraduate music education majors enrolled in North Texas State University; Denton, Texas, during 1981 and 1982. A questionnaire and interview schedule, which had been developed in a pilot study, were used to gather data. Questionnaire responses from 165 students were analyzed by comparing selected variables by area and by class year. These data were further clarified by information from thirty-eight interviews conducted by this researcher.
88

An Investigation of Music Teacher Preparation in Selected United Negro College Fund Colleges and Universities

Claybon, Sibyl Elaine Carr 12 1900 (has links)
The problem of this study was to determine the perceptions of music educators at selected United Negro College Fund colleges and universities concerning the importance of music teaching competencies and courses for prospective public school music teachers, it was further designed to (a) determine if the music educators were in agreement with the published competency recommendations of the National Association of Schools of Music and the Music Educators National Conference for preparing prospective public school music teachers and (b) to discover if there were significant differences in UNCF music educators' perceptions across selected independent variables concerning the importance of those competencies and courses.
89

Growth Mindset in the Elementary Music Classroom

Hare, Jill Perkins January 2024 (has links)
Each music teacher steps into their classroom as an educator shaped by their unique life experiences. Former music teachers, ensemble participation, culture, media, teacher education, and family dynamics are just a few of the influences that make each music teacher unique. Acknowledged or not, these factors shape the verbal messages of music teachers in the classroom. This study explored how elementary music teachers explicitly share what they believe about the potential of their students’ musical ability through verbal messages during instruction. Symbolic interactionism was used as the theoretical framework for this study because it helps explain how people attach meaning to language through social interactions. Carol Dwek’s growth mindset research was the lens for the theoretical framework. The growth mindset framework of Dweck was adapted for music in this study to help teachers identify and reflect on their mindset and explore how applicable it might be as a framework for music educators to foster growth in developing musicians. This intervention study recruited four elementary music teachers. Interviews, classroom observations, a Likert scale survey, open-ended questions, and reflection prompts were used to collect data. Each instrument's design was built on Dweck’s research regarding mindset identification but adapted for musical ability. The four research questions sought to capture the experiences of participants from their existing knowledge of growth mindset practices to observable changes after the growth mindset intervention. The data were analyzed and coded to find evidence of fixed and growth mindsets explicitly in elementary music instruction before and after the growth mindset was used as an intervention. This study showed that a growth mindset framework can only be observed through verbal messages when opportunities for skill development are authentically facilitated. The bulk of verbal examples presented in this study indicate that a growth mindset is embedded in the scaffolding of effective teaching strategies. Triggers of a fixed mindset with verbal examples are presented with implications for practice and suggestions for future research.
90

Differences in intentions, beliefs, and feelings of two groups of elementary education majors concerning music education in the classroom.

Loring, Lauralee Rose. January 1996 (has links)
The purpose of this quasi-experimental study was to identify the changes which occur for elementary education majors as they proceed through a course in music fundamentals for classroom teachers and a course which presents methods of teaching music. The subjects responded to several measuring instruments on the first day of classes in the music fundamentals course (the pretreatment group, five classes, N = 103) or on the last day of classes in the methods course (the posttreatment group, five classes, N = 93, all of whom had completed the prior fundamentals course). The study addressed one main question: Are there significant differences between the responses of the pretreatment and posttreatment groups to questions which consider intentions, beliefs, and feelings about the teaching of music? The analysis of data first considered several items bearing on the extent to which the two groups were a representative sample of the population of students enrolling in such classes during a three-year period and to what extent the two groups could be considered equivalent. The lack of significant differences in grade-point average, grade in school, and declared major suggested that the two groups could be considered quasi-random samples from the population of students enrolling in such classes. No significant differences were found between the two test groups in terms of GPA, age gender, and several items related to music background. Regarding the research question, the analysis of data identified significant differences between groups in three areas. Subjects in the posttreatment group: (1) intend to use more musical activities more frequently in their classrooms than those in the pretreatment group, (2) have more positive beliefs about their musical skills/knowledge and fewer negative ones than those in the pretreatment group, (3) have more positive feelings about their ability to provide music in the classroom than those in the pretreatment group.

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