Music Informal Learning And The School A New Classroom Pedagogy

Download Music Informal Learning And The School A New Classroom Pedagogy PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Music Informal Learning And The School A New Classroom Pedagogy book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.
Music, Informal Learning and the School

The aim of this book is to present a detailed and theoretical analysis of what went on during a research-and-development project which introduced and evaluated new pedagogical methods in the music classroom. The book looks at how things occurred, why and what benefits and challanges the project seemed to offer to music education.
How Popular Musicians Learn

Author: Professor Lucy Green
language: en
Publisher: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.
Release Date: 2013-01-28
Popular musicians acquire some or all of their skills and knowledge informally, outside school or university, and with little help from trained instrumental teachers. How do they go about this process? Despite the fact that popular music has recently entered formal music education, we have as yet a limited understanding of the learning practices adopted by its musicians. Nor do we know why so many popular musicians in the past turned away from music education, or how young popular musicians today are responding to it. Drawing on a series of interviews with musicians aged between fifteen and fifty, Lucy Green explores the nature of pop musicians' informal learning practices, attitudes and values, the extent to which these altered over the last forty years, and the experiences of the musicians in formal music education. Through a comparison of the characteristics of informal pop music learning with those of more formal music education, the book offers insights into how we might re-invigorate the musical involvement of the population.
Learning, Teaching, and Musical Identity

Author: Lucy Green
language: en
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Release Date: 2011-03-30
Musical identity raises complex, multifarious, and fascinating questions. Discussions in this new study consider how individuals construct their musical identities in relation to their experiences of formal and informal music teaching and learning. Each chapter features a different case study situated in a specific national or local socio-musical context, spanning 20 regions across the world. Subjects range from Ghanaian or Balinese villagers, festival-goers in Lapland, and children in a South African township to North American and British students, adults and children in a Cretan brass band, and Gujerati barbers in the Indian diaspora.