Where have I been all these years? A narrative case study on the impact of western (mis)conceptions of musicality on a generalist classroom teacher’s music teacher identity construction

Christiane Nieuwmeijer, Nigel Marshall, B. van Oers
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Abstract

This article reports a narrative case study on Sanne, an experienced 46-year-old early childhood teacher who considered herself unmusical and therefore unable to teach music, caused by (1) few childhood musical experiences, (2) teacher training that focused on musical performance skills and (3) a professional context with minimal music education. These experiences reinforced her belief that musicality equates to musical performance skills, rendering her ‘unmusical’ ‐ a western conception of musicality which had prevented her from teaching music. Participating in a professional development (PD) programme on musical play, however, positively influenced her music teacher identity (MTI), resulting in confidence to teach music. This article explores what factors contributed to this identity shift. The PD programme was set up according to criteria for effective PD as argued by literature, such as collective participation, demand-driven content, long-term duration and a focus on pedagogical content knowledge (PCK). Data were collected by means of surveys, interviews and e-mails containing video images. Assisted by a three-dimensional space narrative structure, text excerpts were selected from the data and ‘re-storied’ into a narrative. Analysis revealed how a combination of newly acquired PCK and existing general play guidance skills enabled Sanne to facilitate musical play successfully, thereby neutralizing the obstacles raised by her self-perceived non-musicality, and positively affecting her MTI. In the discussion, we reflect on how our current western conception of musicality may negatively affect individuals’ musical identity and provide some further thoughts on the implications of our findings for music educational practice.
这些年我都去哪儿了?西方(错误)音乐性观念对通才型课堂教师音乐教师身份建构影响的叙事个案研究
本文报告了一个关于Sanne的叙述性案例研究,Sanne是一位经验丰富的46岁幼儿教师,她认为自己没有音乐能力,因此无法教音乐,这是由于(1)很少的童年音乐经验,(2)教师培训侧重于音乐表演技巧,(3)专业背景和很少的音乐教育。这些经历强化了她的信念,即音乐性等同于音乐表演技能,使她“不懂音乐”——一种西方的音乐性概念,这阻碍了她教授音乐。然而,参加音乐戏剧专业发展(PD)课程对她的音乐教师身份(MTI)产生了积极的影响,使她有信心教音乐。本文探讨了导致这种身份转变的因素。PD计划是根据文献中提出的有效PD标准建立的,如集体参与、需求驱动的内容、长期持续时间和对教学内容知识(PCK)的关注。通过调查、访谈和包含视频图像的电子邮件收集数据。在三维空间叙事结构的辅助下,从数据中选择文本摘录并“重新叙述”成一篇叙事。分析揭示了新获得的PCK和现有的一般游戏指导技能的结合如何使Sanne能够成功地促进音乐游戏,从而消除了她自我感知的非音乐性所带来的障碍,并积极影响了她的MTI。在讨论中,我们反思了当前西方的音乐性概念如何对个人的音乐认同产生负面影响,并就我们的研究结果对音乐教育实践的影响提供了一些进一步的思考。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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