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Cram, David D. – Music Educators Journal, 1971
Descriptors: Attitudes, Cognitive Objectives, Music Appreciation, Music Education

Euba, Akin – Social Education, 1971
Discusses categories of music, interaction of musical styles, status of musicians, and the roles of African music scholars and teachers. (Reprinted from African Report.) (DB)
Descriptors: African Culture, Music, Music Appreciation, Music Education
Thresher, Janice M. – Except Children, 1970
Descriptors: Mental Retardation, Music Appreciation, Music Education, Program Evaluation
Ferraro, Louis; Adams, Sam – Peabody J Educ, 1969
Descriptors: Listening Comprehension, Listening Skills, Music, Music Appreciation

Freeman, Robert – Music Educators Journal, 1983
Music in America has an elitist history. While music colleges stress the development of performers, there is no comparable education for the audience which must support them. Music appreciation should emphasize aural memory, so that audiences can understand the basic materials which lead to musical coherence. (CS)
Descriptors: Aural Learning, Educational Needs, Higher Education, Listening Comprehension

Lowe, Donald R. – Journal of Research in Music Education, 1983
As a teacher, conductor, adjudicator, and composer, the Danish immigrant Carl Reinhardt Busch educated the citizens of Kansas City and other cities to a higher level of music comprehension and appreciation. He contributed significantly to the development of music education and should be recognized in its history. (SR)
Descriptors: Educational History, Higher Education, Music Appreciation, Music Education

Coolen, Michael T. – Music Educators Journal, 1982
Discusses some of the factors such as cultural attitudes, student expectations, and teaching methods that affect and impede the teaching of college-level courses in music appreciation. An alternative teaching approach, which presents ways composers have portrayed events in the human life cycle, is described. (AM)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Music Appreciation, Music Education, Public Opinion

Le Blanc, Albert – Music Educators Journal, 1983
A model of music preference theory suggests ways that teachers can broaden their students' musical preferences. Teachers can change preferences by changing something in the listener, the social environment, the music, or the ways that the listener processes information. (AM)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Models, Music Appreciation, Music Education

Watanabe, Mamoru – International Social Science Journal, 1982
European music is more relevant to contemporary Japanese life than Japanese classical music is. The sociocultural and economic reasons for the Japanese fondness for European culture and their active participation in European musical life are discussed. (AM)
Descriptors: Cultural Exchange, Cultural Influences, Foreign Countries, Music Appreciation

Baker, Dawn S. – Journal of Research in Music Education, 1980
Performance preferences and students' ideas of "correct" performance were affected by appropriate and inappropriate models. There was a slight difference between boys and girls and an overall preference for fast/loud music over slow/soft music. Correlations between verbal and behavioral preference indications were low but positive. (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Modeling (Psychology), Music Appreciation, Music Education

Boaz, Mildred Meyer – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 1979
This paper argues that, although T. S. Eliot's "Four Quartets" provoke comparisons with the late quartets of Beethoven, an analysis of Four Quartets and Bela Bartok's Fourth and Fifth String Quartets produces a clearer understanding of the formal structures in the poetry and music. Symmetries offset asymmetries. (Author/KC)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Literary Criticism, Literary Styles, Music

Panzarella, Robert – Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 1980
Descriptions of music and visual art peak experiences obtained from persons were content analyzed and factor analyzed. The peak experience accounts for mirrored conflicts in aesthetic norms and suggests a greater role for individual differences in aesthetic theories. (Author)
Descriptors: Adults, Aesthetic Education, Art Appreciation, Humanism

Winking, John T. – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 1980
The author presents a brief discussion of the uses of aesthetic theory in aesthetic education, followed by the explication of one subsidiary aspect (regional qualities) of Monroe Beardsley's theory, and by a demonstration of how that aspect can be applied in musical analysis and in teaching for perceptive music listening. (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Content Analysis, Emotional Experience, Listening Skills

Wilson, Sarah J.; And Others – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1997
Examined 80 children in second and fourth grades on melodic and rhythmic discrimination and classification tasks. Found evidence to support the existence of internal representations of tonality and meter in both groups, as well as evidence of a developmental effect for the classification task. (EAJ)
Descriptors: Children, Classification, Cognitive Development, Foreign Countries

Madsen, Clifford K.; Geringer, John M. – Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education, 1990
Reports a study designed to investigate patterns of music listening among music and nonmusic majors regarding four primary constituent elements of music--rhythm, dynamics, timbre, and melody. Finds that musicians do attend to listening in a significantly different manner than nonmusicians do. (DB)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Educational Research, Higher Education, Music