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Parental perspectives of homeschooling music education curricula

The purpose of this study was to document parental views of the homeschool music curriculum in the state of Arkansas and assess how it affects the teaching and learning of music. I focused on homeschooling families before the beginning of the pandemic, which for the purpose of this dissertation is considered January 1st, 2020. The research questions which guided this dissertation were: 1.) What is the parent’s philosophy on the teaching and learning of music in homeschooling and in what ways do they report it has changed because of COVID-19? 2.) How do the parents describe their homeschool curricula, and how does music factor into the homeschool curriculum? 3.) How do homeschool parents report the difference between the teaching and learning of music and the teaching and learning of other subjects?
Three homeschooling parents who use music in their curriculum were chosen from three distinct regions within the state of Arkansas. The regions were urban, the Coastal Plains, and the Highlands. Lengthy interviews with each family revealed that, dependent upon parental objectives, location, and availability of resources.
Though parents shared many aspects of educational approach, the largest challenge shared by each parent was the lack of music education resources designed for the home. The parents hope to see the development of a comprehensive music education curriculum designed for homeschooling parents. The lack of such a comprehensive curriculum was discouraging to each parent. A review of existing resources confirmed their assessment. Each parent offered creative solutions which provide strategies for other homeschooling parents.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bu.edu/oai:open.bu.edu:2144/46425
Date05 July 2023
CreatorsAnders, Justin Thomas
Contributorsde Quadros, André
Source SetsBoston University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation

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