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Showing 31 to 45 of 167 results
Allsup, Randall Everett – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2011
This essay interview with Joan Tower is a meditation on the importance of composing, understood as a process larger than the making of new sound combinations or musical scores, suggesting that the compositional act is self-educative and self-forming. Tower's musical life, one of teaching and learning, one of composing and self-composing, is an…
Descriptors: Musical Composition, Musicians, Interviews, Music Education
Schwartz, Elliott – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2011
This essay explores the role of music composition within the curriculum of a typical small liberal arts college and the faculty composer's role(s) in facilitating the study of composition. The relationship between composition and campus performance is discussed, particularly in light of the increased emphasis on performance in formerly all-male…
Descriptors: Music, Liberal Arts, Teaching Methods, Colleges
Strand, Katherine; Larsen, Libby – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2011
This article represents conversations with the American composer Libby Larsen in which she described her beliefs about music, music education, and the dilemmas that our current system faces as we seek to provide relevant and meaningful music education to our students. Our conversation explores such topics as cognitive psychology, music theory,…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Cognitive Psychology, Music Theory
Freund, Don – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2011
Composition is learned by discovering that musical ideas can be experienced in a variety of ways, and that new musical ideas can be created by reconfiguring learned materials in new contexts. The act of imagining, defining, and communicating unique musical ideas awakens in young people a dormant part of their brains, unlocking an awareness of the…
Descriptors: Music Teachers, Musical Composition, Music Education, Brain
Kanellopoulos, Panagiotis A. – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2011
This paper aims to examine how specific aspects of Bakhtin's theoretical perspective might inform our understanding of improvisation. Moreover, it outlines the possible educational implications of such a perspective. Specifically, a sketch of a Bakhtinian conception of improvisation is proposed, a sketch which emphasizes the cultivation of an…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Creative Activities, Musicians
Hendricks, Karin S. – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2011
This article attempts to bridge the philosophical gap between Western music education philosophers and practicing Suzuki music teachers. Specifically addressed is Estelle Jorgensen's critique of Suzuki-trained educators who may rely too heavily on rote pedagogical methods without careful reflection of the philosophical principles underlying their…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Educational Philosophy, Aesthetic Education
Jorgensen, Estelle R. – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2011
This essay examines Alfred North Whitehead's claim that education should be construed as religious, and by extension, that music education should be religious. The analysis of questions relating to Whitehead's understanding of the notion of "religious," the defensibility of his claim, and its implications for notions of spirituality and music…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Religious Factors, Religion
Freer, Patrick K. – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2011
Choral music teachers simultaneously work toward two potentially competing goals: the quality of the musical performance and the quality of the education they provide for students. Is either goal preeminent, or can both exist in an ever-shifting balance? This paper highlights how this conundrum has existed since the emergence of North American…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Singing, Music Teachers
Jenkins, Phil – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2011
Informal instructional approaches have long been an important component of a complete education in general and of music education in particular. But informal approaches have often been subject to bandwagon over-enthusiasm, with proponents inflating their virtues beyond what the concept appears to warrant. In this paper I will, first, examine the…
Descriptors: Music Education, Informal Education, Teaching Methods, Educational Practices
Bogdan, Deanne – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2010
This article offers one approach to exploring the question of in what sense music educators can speak of music and its moving power as spiritual by inquiring into what might count as a "musical spiritual experience" in emotional terms. The essay's analytic framework employs the distinction between two related concepts which I call the "shiver" and…
Descriptors: Music, Popular Culture, Religious Factors, Music Teachers
Carr, David – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2010
Moral significance has been attributed to music from antiquity: for example, both Plato and Aristotle made much of the power of music to influence and shape moral character. However, it would also seem often assumed that music and musical experience have some kind of spiritual significance or value for human development. The present paper sets out…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Spiritual Development, Moral Values
Yob, Iris M. – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2010
The basic thesis explored in this paper is that rather than seeing spirituality as a byproduct of music, the other arts, and religion, music, the other arts, and religion might be seen as a byproduct of spirituality--hence, the proposition that music is a language of spirituality. If that is the case, there are twin dangers: talk of "wholism" can…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Music Education, Music, Religion
Palmer, Anthony J. – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2010
Spirituality and religion are not synonymous and, in fact, require not only different definitions but also appropriate vocabulary. A deeper discussion of the issues concerning spirituality ensues in several sections: 1) fundamental differences between spirituality and religion; 2) brain operations relative to transcendent states; 3) a definition…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Religion, Religious Factors
Alperson, Philip – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2010
In this paper I retrace the line of thought that led me to the position of a praxial philosophy of music education, from a perspective 20 years after the inaugural meeting of the International Society for the Philosophy of Music Education. I discuss how I conceive of the general project of the philosophy of music education and recapitulate some of…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music Appreciation, Aesthetics, Educational Philosophy
Koza, Julia Eklund – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2010
In the final installment of her two-part essay, Julia Eklund Koza analyzes prevalent control and management discourse in education, specifically, music education. Arguing that dominant understandings are hierarchical, gendered, illusory, and integrally related to projects and practices largely unrelated to schooling, she invites teachers and…
Descriptors: Music Education, Educational Objectives, Outcomes of Education, Teacher Educators

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