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Showing 1 to 15 of 27 results Save | Export
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Scott Gray Douglass – International Journal of Music Education, 2024
What might pre-service music teachers learn by stepping outside the formal curriculum? In between semesters student teaching in New York City, I investigated music education practices in the Vezo fishing village of Andavadoaka, Madagascar. By investigating how this community practices advanced musicianship learned primarily outside the classroom,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Music Education, Community Education, Music
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Tabi, Emmanuel – Comparative Education Review, 2023
This article draws on data from a larger project that is founded on four narrative case studies that examine the ways in which Black activists in Toronto mobilize their cultural production--namely, spoken word poetry and rapping--in support of their activism, community education, and community organizing work. This particular article is founded on…
Descriptors: Blacks, Activism, Foreign Countries, Poetry
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Sylvia Bruinders – British Journal of Music Education, 2024
This article critically engages with the discipline of African musics in the academy. It examines the process of curriculum transformation of the African music section at the South African College of Music, University of Cape Town since 2005 as an emergent curriculum model for an integrated approach to the teaching of African musics at…
Descriptors: Music, Music Education, African Culture, Educational Change
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Dernikos, Bessie P.; Nightengale-Lee, Bianca; Thiel, Jaye Johnson; Lenters, Kimberly; Bailey, Erin – Journal of Literacy Research, 2023
In this theoretical and conceptual article, we consider how meaning-making, literacies, identities, power, privilege, and in/equities are entangled with/in non/human sociomaterial force relations. Inspired by Rose, we build theoretically on the philosophical principles of hip-hop--flow, rupture, layering, and sampling. Conceptually, we invite…
Descriptors: Music, Philosophy, African Americans, Racism
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David Rousell – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
This article develops the concept of "low-end phonographic pedagogies" through a life-long engagement with vinyl records and the Afro-diasporic music practices of reggae, dub, and dancehall. Approaching my record collection as a counter-archive of vibrational feeling and learning, I explore everyday practices of playing and listening to…
Descriptors: Audio Equipment, Afrocentrism, African Culture, Music Activities
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H. Samy Alim – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2023
This article theorizes Hip Hop as Black liberatory practice by explicating the links between Hip Hop knowledges, pedagogies, and futures. I draw on multiple research and classroom experiences, including co-teaching a course with pioneering Hip Hop artist Chuck D of Public Enemy. The course examined Hip Hop culture as an extension of Black freedom…
Descriptors: Interviews, African American Culture, Music, Poetry
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Arugha A. Ogisi – Journal of Historical Research in Music Education, 2024
Nigeria's triple music heritage of traditional, Islamic and Western music should have informed her formal music education curriculum. Instead, western music was used by the early Christian missionaries that it became difficult to integrate indigenous music traditions into the curriculum that music could not gain traction as a school subject across…
Descriptors: Music Education, Educational History, Barriers, Foreign Countries
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Jenkins, Toby S.; Boutte, Gloria; Wynter-Hoyte, Kamania – Journal of Effective Teaching in Higher Education, 2021
In this essay, we center hip-hop culture and Black cultural legacies. We envision and offer a two-fold framework which illuminates the intersection between the two. We explore ways that the Black cultural experience (or better yet Black cultural praxis) has always brilliantly and organically demonstrated the shape and form of a scholarship of…
Descriptors: African American Culture, Popular Culture, Freedom, African Culture
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Ranniery, Thiago; Macedo, Elizabeth – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2021
This article relies on events interpreted within an ethnographic study of school parties in Aracaju, Brazilian Northeast, in which students embody drag-queens inspired by videoclips of international pop singers. Conceptual resonances from queer black esthetics and neomaterial feminist perspectives will be irregularly mixed with "divas'"…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Popular Culture, LGBTQ People, Music
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Le, Xinyue – Journal of General Music Education, 2022
In world music ensembles such as African and African Caribbean percussion ensembles, the Gamelan ensemble, and the Latin marimba ensemble, members may sing a song, play instruments, and dance simultaneously. This practice is known as music multitasking. For musicians in Western art music traditions, music multitasking can be a challenge. This…
Descriptors: Music Education, Aesthetics, Music, Musicians
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Tabi, Emmanuel – Peabody Journal of Education, 2021
The narratives presented in this article speak to the lived experiences of an Afrodiasporic activist: an educator and spoken word poet named Efe. Efe mobilized his talents to support racialized youths as they navigated the complex and often difficult social context of Toronto, Canada. Efe also used his cultural production to speak to his own…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Blacks, Racial Bias, Activism
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Marcella dos Santos Abreu; Cláudia Hilsdorf Rocha – Critical Inquiry in Language Studies, 2024
This article revisits the "jongo" activity 'Pisei na Pedra' (2014) integrated into the "Nossa Casinha" guide (Martins & Sala, 2022) for teaching Portuguese to migrant children. "Jongo" is seen as an Afro-Brazilian form of expression, encompassing chants, drumming, collective dance, and spirituality (Rufino, 2014,…
Descriptors: Portuguese, Transformative Learning, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
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Cruz Banks, Ojeya – Journal of Dance Education, 2021
Rhythmic virtuosity or moving with "percussive attack" is an ultimate performance quality for Black/African dance. The practice of musicality is a window into a dynamic system of intersubjective communal creativity. Drumming, for example, provides percussive sensorial information that directs a dancer's somatic and choreographic…
Descriptors: African Culture, Music, Dance Education, Dance
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Adeogun, Adebowale Oluranti – Music Education Research, 2021
This article argues that coloniality is an ongoing feature of university music education in Nigeria. It uses a multiple colonialisms framework in exploring Nigerian higher music education systems as historical and contemporary sites of colonialism within which Nigerian universities engage in music knowledge generation to reach this conclusion. It…
Descriptors: Music Education, Educational Change, Higher Education, Foreign Countries
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Varga, Bretton A.; Ender, Tommy – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2023
The work in this article (re)traces the nuances embedded within the aesthetics of the Wu-Tang Clan to draw attention to two theoretical, Wu-based concepts: "Shaolin" and "swarming." This article leans into fugivity and critical race theory (CRT) to demonstrate how hip-hop music can be a capacious avenue for theorizing alternate…
Descriptors: African American Culture, Popular Culture, Music, Teaching Methods
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