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Elkins, Jennifer; Miller, Shari; Briggs, Harold; Skinner, Sara – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2015
This article describes a collaborative and emergent approach utilizing Tupac Shakur's "Brenda's Got a Baby" to leverage theory education. This song/video uses a fictionalized account of a pregnant 12-year-old African American girl to chronicle the ecological realities of life in the inner city (e.g., teen pregnancy, drug addiction and…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Grounded Theory, Social Work, Educational Theories
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Enz, Nicholas J. – Update: Applications of Research in Music Education, 2013
Students pursuing college degrees in fields other than music must often take a music or arts course. Teaching these non-majors has been a traditional responsibility of college and university music departments. While experts agree that a single, widely accepted approach to teaching the non-major is unavailable, many experts concur that developing…
Descriptors: Nonmajors, Music Education, Literature Reviews, College Students
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Palmer, Anthony J. – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2010
Spirituality and religion are not synonymous and, in fact, require not only different definitions but also appropriate vocabulary. A deeper discussion of the issues concerning spirituality ensues in several sections: 1) fundamental differences between spirituality and religion; 2) brain operations relative to transcendent states; 3) a definition…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Religion, Religious Factors
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Bogdan, Deanne – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2010
This article offers one approach to exploring the question of in what sense music educators can speak of music and its moving power as spiritual by inquiring into what might count as a "musical spiritual experience" in emotional terms. The essay's analytic framework employs the distinction between two related concepts which I call the "shiver" and…
Descriptors: Music, Popular Culture, Religious Factors, Music Teachers
Lee, Ling-Yu Liza – Online Submission, 2009
The purpose of the study is to teach urban young children music concepts and English by composing creative music and songs with contrast elements. The subjects were seven urban young children aged from three to four in a Taiwan kindergarten. The duration was twenty-four weeks, with two sessions per week. The teaching contents included Hello Song,…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Music Education, Singing, Oral Language
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Bowman, Wayne – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2005
This essay explores the contingency of music's value, and the significant ways that contingency qualifies (or should qualify) our understandings of the utility of instructional method. More specifically, it raises the possibility that the altruistic pursuit of methodological purity may serve ends dramatically different than those espoused by…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Teaching Methods, Music Appreciation
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Woody, Robert H. – General Music Today, 2004
Music teachers who strive to provide a broad range of experiences for their students are usually careful to include music listening among them. Although students have many opportunities to hear music in their everyday lives, most teachers agree that music listening involves skills that must be taught to children. Some might even argue that…
Descriptors: Music Teachers, Music Education, Listening Skills, Aesthetic Education