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Isbell, Daniel S. – Music Educators Journal, 2023
Much like an effective speaker, a flexible musician is competent across multiple settings. The sociolinguistic theory of code-switching can be a useful tool to better understand how musicians acquire a set of skills and knowledge to support music-making in a range of activities in and outside of school and throughout society. In this article,…
Descriptors: Music Education, Code Switching (Language), Music, Musical Composition
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Clauhs, Matthew – Music Educators Journal, 2018
Approaches to teaching music notation and instrumental technique have been standardized and codified in the United States with great success in beginning instrumental programs. While these skills are important, we do a disservice to students if we do not equally develop comprehensive musicianship and creative thinking at a young age. Creating…
Descriptors: Music, Music Education, Music Teachers, Musical Instruments
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Larson, Robert – Music Educators Journal, 2015
Performing jazz offers students the opportunity to participate in a unique group activity where notated passages are blended with exciting moments of improvisation. Expectations have risen over the years as middle and high school jazz ensembles have proved that they can perform at a very high level. This expectation however, has led to the…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music Activities, Creative Activities, Musical Composition
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Gilbert, Danni – Music Educators Journal, 2016
This article explores a comprehensive, student-centered alternative to traditional ensemble instruction with the goal of promoting better opportunities for musical independence and lifelong musicianship. Developed by Caron Collins from the Crane School of Music at the State University of New York-Potsdam, the Curious, Collaborative, Creativity…
Descriptors: Creativity, Music, Music Education, Musicians
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Baxter, Marsha; Santantasio, Christopher – Music Educators Journal, 2012
In this article, narratives of a salsa concert and a lesson with a Native American flute performer provide openings for exploring grooves and their application in the music classroom. The term "groove" is examined, along with some non-Western ideas about time as represented in the music of the West African Kpelle people. A sixth-grade…
Descriptors: Music Activities, Music, Music Education, Grade 6
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Sindberg, Laura K. – Music Educators Journal, 2016
This article describes a collaborative clinical field experience initiative conceived to provide meaningful fieldwork for preservice music educators, musically engage underserved students in a high-poverty school, and include instruction on composition and improvisation. The author chronicles the planning, implementation, and subsequent revisions…
Descriptors: Musicians, Music, Music Teachers, Musical Composition
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Woody, Robert H. – Music Educators Journal, 2012
Many people divide musicians into two types: those who can read music and those who play by ear. Formal music education tends to place great emphasis on producing musically literate performers but devotes much less attention to teaching students to make music without notation. Some would suggest that playing by ear is a specialized skill that is…
Descriptors: Music Education, Human Body, Music, Musicians
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Thomsen, Kathy M. – Music Educators Journal, 2011
Dalcroze solfege engages the ear and the mind in chords, functional harmony, and key relationships, in addition to scales, intervals, and melodies. This article provides an overview of Dalcroze solfege by describing its methodology and by offering sample exercises for beginners as well as advanced students. (Contains 15 figures and 5 notes.)
Descriptors: Intervals, Teaching Methods, Human Body, Music