Teaching Music in the Twenty-First Century / Edition 2

Teaching Music in the Twenty-First Century / Edition 2

ISBN-10:
0130280275
ISBN-13:
9780130280275
Pub. Date:
08/02/2000
Publisher:
Pearson Education
ISBN-10:
0130280275
ISBN-13:
9780130280275
Pub. Date:
08/02/2000
Publisher:
Pearson Education
Teaching Music in the Twenty-First Century / Edition 2

Teaching Music in the Twenty-First Century / Edition 2

$219.99
Current price is , Original price is $219.99. You
$137.67 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Not Eligible for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores
$51.58 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Please check back later for updated availability.

    • Condition: Good
    Note: Access code and/or supplemental material are not guaranteed to be included with used textbook.

Overview

Today's music teachers are in a position to make advances that were not dreamed of in the mid-twentieth century by Jacques-Dalcroze, Carl Orff, Zoltan Kodaly, or those who developed Comprehensive Musicianship. Yet the principles espoused by these innovators offer a vision of music education that the world is only beginning to realize. The MENC National Standards include aspects of music literacy and personal fulfillment these methodologies have advocated for many years: music for all, singing as a basis for musicianship, moving to music, instrumental experience, analytical thinking, listening to music, improvising and composing. The authors have designed this book to help teachers promote musical learning in these areas by making knowledgeable curricular choices among methods.

Special features set this book apart:

  • 1. Goals and Objectives and suggested skill hierarchies are given for each approach in four levels—early elementary, upper elementary, middle school-high school, and university.
  • 2. Detailed teaching techniques show how to use each method at each level.
  • 3. Sample lesson plans include numerous musical examples.
  • 4. National Standards are described and discussed.
  • 5. Suggestions are given for appropriate use of technology in the study of music.
  • 6. The four methods are compared in their approach to creating, moving, singing and playing, musical reading and writing, and performing and listening.
  • 7. A brief history of music education in North America relates the acceptance and spread of these four approaches.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780130280275
Publisher: Pearson Education
Publication date: 08/02/2000
Edition description: REV
Pages: 360
Product dimensions: 7.20(w) x 9.40(h) x 1.00(d)

Read an Excerpt

Preface

I originally chose to write this book in order to provide an authoritative comparison among the four most commonly practiced methods found in music classrooms. The concept was that such a book could not be written by one author, but must be written by a group, each with impeccable credentials in the method about which he or she was writing. I chose for my co-authors three music educators, each an authority in the approach about which he was to write.

Robert Abramson, then professor of Music at the Manhattan School of Music, and now at the Julliard School of Music was an obvious choice for the Jaques-Dalcroze chapters. Abramson spent two years at the Jaques-Dalcroze Institute in Geneva, where he obtained the highest level of certification possible in the field, and he has practiced Jaques-Dalcroze techniques successfully in the United States for many years.

Avon Gillespie, then Associate Professor of Music at North Texas State University, formerly taught at the Orff Institute in Salzburg. In many conversations with him over the years he displayed a remarkably clear vision of the Orff Approach. When I asked him to contribute to the book, he wrote to me "... there is a real need for this philosophy to be elusive and abstract ...." Fortunately I was able to convince him that his writing would not be molded into any "pattern" and he agreed to write the Orff chapters. His untimely death prevented him from contributing to this second edition. When I consulted with our co-authors as to whether I should invite another Orff practitioner to contribute, or to retain the original Orff chapters, they unanimously opted to retain the original chapters. We believe thatGillespie's exposition of Orff to be a model of clarity. He presents the Orff Approach in both an uncompromised and uncompromising way.

My choice for the Comprehensive Musicianship sections was a long time friend, David Woods, who has been involved with this approach since its earliest days. Dr. Woods is presently Dean of the School of Music, Indiana University and was formerly Dean of the School of Music, Oklahoma University.

With my background of study in Hungary and publication of several books on the Kodaly Method, I was in a position to write the Kodaly chapters as well as to coordinate the whole project.

The assembling of the project was not easy. The first edition was five years in the making. Each of us had a natural bias for his or her own way of teaching, and to describe that way without expressing a bias was difficult. However, we believe that we succeeded in doing so.

When the first edition appeared we thought it unlikely that it would ever require revision. After all, the philosophies and practices associated with Jaques-Dalcroze, Kodaly, Orff, and Comprehensive Musicianship were immutable. Superficial techniques might change but the principles would remain unchanged. However, two factors have made this second edition advisable.

First, the exponential development of technology is changing forever the ways in which knowledge is acquired and disseminated. In the face of the increasing use of technology in music education, it became imperative to examine just what it could offer and how it could be used appropriately to enhance musical learning. For the new sections on technology in this book we were joined by Frank York of James Cook University in Townsville, Australia. York is involved in Distance Education and has made extensive use of technology in his teacher education programs.

Second, the Music Education National Conference (MENC) has brought forward a definitive set of National Standards for the Arts in Education, and particularly for the teaching and leaning of music in the schools. These excellent guidelines, the culmination of years of work, have, to an extent never realized before, established Music Education as a legitimate subject for serious study—a subject in which there are academic and performance expectations and defined levels of achievement.

To a remarkable extent, these standards reflect the goals and objectives of the four methods explored in this book. The graded achievement standards listed in the National Standards are, at many points, a mirror of the expected outcomes of Jaques-Dalcroze, Kodaly, Orff, and Comprehensive Musicianship. For that reason it seemed important to bring the new National Standards into the framework of this book. We hope that what we have written will help teachers make intelligent and knowledgeable curricular choices.

Lois Choksy,
Professor Emeritus of Music
University of Calgary

Table of Contents

1. Method in North American Music Teaching: The Beginnings.


2. Influences on Methods, Approaches, and Philosophies of Teaching Music.


3. Technology and Music Education.


4. The Approach of Emile Jacques-Dalcroze.


5. The Kodály Method.


6. The Orff Approach.


7. Comprehensive Musicianship: An American Technique and Philosophy for Teaching Music.


8. Achieving Goals and Objectives in School Music Programs via the Principles of Jacques-Dalcroze, Kodály, Orff, and Comprehensive Musicianship.


9. Grades K-1-2.


10. Grades 3-4-5.


11. Grades 6-7-8.


12. Method in Music for Older Students.


13. Which Method?

Preface

Preface

I originally chose to write this book in order to provide an authoritative comparison among the four most commonly practiced methods found in music classrooms. The concept was that such a book could not be written by one author, but must be written by a group, each with impeccable credentials in the method about which he or she was writing. I chose for my co-authors three music educators, each an authority in the approach about which he was to write.

Robert Abramson, then professor of Music at the Manhattan School of Music, and now at the Julliard School of Music was an obvious choice for the Jaques-Dalcroze chapters. Abramson spent two years at the Jaques-Dalcroze Institute in Geneva, where he obtained the highest level of certification possible in the field, and he has practiced Jaques-Dalcroze techniques successfully in the United States for many years.

Avon Gillespie, then Associate Professor of Music at North Texas State University, formerly taught at the Orff Institute in Salzburg. In many conversations with him over the years he displayed a remarkably clear vision of the Orff Approach. When I asked him to contribute to the book, he wrote to me '... there is a real need for this philosophy to be elusive and abstract ....' Fortunately I was able to convince him that his writing would not be molded into any 'pattern' and he agreed to write the Orff chapters. His untimely death prevented him from contributing to this second edition. When I consulted with our co-authors as to whether I should invite another Orff practitioner to contribute, or to retain the original Orff chapters, they unanimously opted to retain the original chapters. We believe that Gillespie's exposition of Orff to be a model of clarity. He presents the Orff Approach in both an uncompromised and uncompromising way.

My choice for the Comprehensive Musicianship sections was a long time friend, David Woods, who has been involved with this approach since its earliest days. Dr. Woods is presently Dean of the School of Music, Indiana University and was formerly Dean of the School of Music, Oklahoma University.

With my background of study in Hungary and publication of several books on the Kodaly Method, I was in a position to write the Kodaly chapters as well as to coordinate the whole project.

The assembling of the project was not easy. The first edition was five years in the making. Each of us had a natural bias for his or her own way of teaching, and to describe that way without expressing a bias was difficult. However, we believe that we succeeded in doing so.

When the first edition appeared we thought it unlikely that it would ever require revision. After all, the philosophies and practices associated with Jaques-Dalcroze, Kodaly, Orff, and Comprehensive Musicianship were immutable. Superficial techniques might change but the principles would remain unchanged. However, two factors have made this second edition advisable.

First, the exponential development of technology is changing forever the ways in which knowledge is acquired and disseminated. In the face of the increasing use of technology in music education, it became imperative to examine just what it could offer and how it could be used appropriately to enhance musical learning. For the new sections on technology in this book we were joined by Frank York of James Cook University in Townsville, Australia. York is involved in Distance Education and has made extensive use of technology in his teacher education programs.

Second, the Music Education National Conference (MENC) has brought forward a definitive set of National Standards for the Arts in Education, and particularly for the teaching and leaning of music in the schools. These excellent guidelines, the culmination of years of work, have, to an extent never realized before, established Music Education as a legitimate subject for serious study—a subject in which there are academic and performance expectations and defined levels of achievement.

To a remarkable extent, these standards reflect the goals and objectives of the four methods explored in this book. The graded achievement standards listed in the National Standards are, at many points, a mirror of the expected outcomes of Jaques-Dalcroze, Kodaly, Orff, and Comprehensive Musicianship. For that reason it seemed important to bring the new National Standards into the framework of this book. We hope that what we have written will help teachers make intelligent and knowledgeable curricular choices.

Lois Choksy,
Professor Emeritus of Music
University of Calgary

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews