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Kruse, Adam J. – International Journal of Music Education, 2016
Music education scholarship in the areas of popular, vernacular, and participatory musicianship has grown in the past decades; however, music education research concerned specifically with hip-hop has been relatively scarce. Because hip-hop music can differ tremendously from the traditional western genres with which many music educators are most…
Descriptors: Music Education, Popular Culture, Teaching Methods, Classification
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Kruse, Adam J. – Music Education Research, 2018
With the aim of diversifying popular music education scholarship, this article explores the phenomenon of hip-hop musical learning as experienced by eight American hip-hop musicians who describe how as well as with whom they learned to create and perform. The study explores issues related to learning processes, social relationships, and the role…
Descriptors: Music Education, Popular Culture, Musicians, Learning Processes
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Kruse, Adam J. – International Journal of Music Education, 2020
In this article, I share findings from a research study about a high school Hip-Hop course in the United States and offer considerations toward informing culturally responsive teaching and decentering Whiteness in music education. I explored the experiences and perceptions of majority students of color in a Hip-Hop course taught by a White music…
Descriptors: White Teachers, High School Teachers, High School Students, Culturally Relevant Education
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Kruse, Adam J. – General Music Today, 2016
In this article, I offer four principles relevant to hip-hop cultures (keep it real, flip the script, make some noise, and stay fresh) and explore how these principles might affect music classrooms. I argue that a music classroom that works to keep it real, flip the script, make some noise, and stay fresh might go beyond teaching hip-hop skills…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Educational Principles, Educational Practices, Classroom Techniques
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Kruse, Adam J. – Music Educators Journal, 2016
This article offers considerations for music teachers interested in including hip-hop music in their classrooms but who might feel concerned with or overwhelmed by issues of appropriateness. Two concerns related to hip-hop music are examined: language and negative social themes. Commercial interests in hip-hop music have created a simulacrum (or…
Descriptors: Music, Music Education, Music Teachers, Language Usage
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Kruse, Adam J. – Music Education Research, 2016
This article focuses on a hip-hop perspective of school, schooling, and school music. The study involves applications of ethnographic (including autoethnographic) techniques within the framework of a holistic multiple case study. One case is an adult amateur hip-hop musician named Terrence (pseudonym), and the other is myself (a traditionally…
Descriptors: Music, Musicians, Music Education, Ethnography