An Ethical Consideration of Assessment in Music Education through the Lens of Levinas

Kathryn Jourdan, J. Finney
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Abstract

This chapter takes as its starting point notions of music making as ethical encounter (Bowman, 2001) and as the exercise of hospitality (Higgins, 2007) in order to explore what ethical practice in music education might look like, through the philosophical writings of Emmanuel Levinas. It puts into question discourses of performativity, which may be understood as constraining and narrowing what we think of as “musical knowing” in the classroom. Thinking tools drawn from Levinas’s first major work, Totality and Infinity (1969), include notions of “practices of facing” and of “putting a world in common.” This conceptual lens enables an investigation of what it might mean for assessment in music education if we embraced Levinas’s radical openness—the breaking in of “infinity” into “totalizing” practices—bringing to light processes of music making, not simply the musical product, as well as the uniqueness of each pupil’s music making in relationship to others and to the Other, and capturing rich learning in the music classroom.
从列维纳斯的视角看音乐教育评价的伦理思考
本章以音乐创作作为伦理相遇(Bowman, 2001)和款待(Higgins, 2007)的概念为起点,通过Emmanuel Levinas的哲学著作,探索音乐教育中的伦理实践可能是什么样子。它对表演性的话语提出了质疑,这可能被理解为限制和缩小了我们在课堂上所认为的“音乐知识”。从列维纳斯的第一部主要作品《整体与无限》(1969)中提取的思维工具包括“面对的实践”和“将一个世界放在一起”的概念。如果我们接受列维纳斯的激进开放——从“无限”突破到“整体”实践——揭示音乐创作的过程,而不仅仅是音乐产品,以及每个学生与他人和他者之间的音乐创作的独特性,并在音乐教室中捕捉丰富的学习,这个概念镜头可以让我们调查它对音乐教育评估的意义。
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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