Threading the Concept: Powerful Learning for the Music Classroom

Debra Gordon Hedden
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Threading the Concept: Powerful Learning for the Music Classroom

Debra Gordon Hedden
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Trouvé dans : Music & Performing Arts, Theory & Instruments

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186 PAGESANGLAIS

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  • Date de publication : Oct 16, 2010
  • Langue : anglais
  • Nombre de pages : 186
  • Éditeur : Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN : 9781607094418
  • Dimensions : 6.08" W x 0.42" L x 9.2" H
Debra Gordon Heddenis an associate professor of music education at the University of Kansas in Lawrence. She founded the University of Kansas Youth Chorus (KUYC). Hedden served as past chair of MENC's Society for General Music, as a member of the Ad Hoc Committee on Undergraduate Curriculum Reform for the Orff-Schulwerk Association, and as a member of the editorial boards for theBulletin of the Council for Research in Music Educationand theJournal of Music Teacher Education.
Beginning in the early 1960s, music education practice was developed through two distinct but by no means mutually exclusive means. One approach focused upon developing conceptual understanding of music (e.g., rhythm, melody, and harmony) through performance, description, and creation. The other approach, mostly culled from European approaches to music instruction, emphasized the development of instrumental and singing skills through performance. Threading the Concept is a synthesis of these approaches. Hedden (Univ. of Kansas) utilizes the best of both approaches by developing the notion of threading. Threading occurs when a student is immersed in a musical concept through a variety of different musical experiences. Thus, a child may sing or play an instrument, move, listen, improvise, or create, read, and write about a musical concept. Musical development is supported by continued refinement and immersion throughout a child's formal education. The book contains four chapters. The first three chapters discuss aspects of curricular theory, foundations upon which the notion of threading is developed, and a detailed explanation of threading. The fourth chapter provides numerous lesson plans, each structured using the concept of threading. This is a valuable resource for preservice and practicing teachers. Recommended. General readers, undergraduate students, and professionals.

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