 |
|
| |
 |
 |
20. For those reasons, John Sloboda hypothesises that classroom
music as currently conceptualised and organised is an inappropriate
vehicle for mass music education. A more effective music education
environment might be found in the free, mixed economy of out-of-school
provision. Using colourful language, he reflects that "such anarchy
may be a crucial breeding ground for the celebration of personal
autonomy and cultural differentiation that is a prerequisite for
a focused and goal-directed musical engagement in a post-modern
society." This would essentially be "an anarchy of social relationships
where boundaries between the teacher and student role are creatively
redrawn."
|
| |
|
| |
 |
| |
|
| |
21.
This is the territory of Youth Music (the NFYM) which through a range
of initiatives is targeting new money into out-of-school music provision.
That is exciting and very welcome. Yet most such initiatives are time
limited. There needs to be a music service which both prepares the
ground and sustains the momentum when the project ends. If John Sloboda
is right, and the Government agrees, then we could find, once again
that music is taken out of the mainstream curriculum, leaving the
LEA music services providing for what in many areas would be mainly
out-of-school provision. |
| |
|
| |
22.
But let us not forget the inspiring reality of what thousands of young
people are doing in school, district and authority-wide groups, bands
and orchestras which emerges directly from the music they make in
school. Ideally, you might say, music services would seek to provide
for music in both contexts. Many do, which is why it is important
music stays in the National Curriculum and that Youth Music continues
to work collaboratively with music services in developing out-of-school
music unconstrained by the requirements of the National Curriculum. |
| |
|
| |
 |
| |
|
| |
23.
All these issues will be thrown into sharp relief when Susan O'Neill's
ESRC-funded research into factors influencing young people's participation
and achievement in music is published in December, 2001 (www.keele.ac.uk/depts/ps/ESRC.htm)
We will be reporting on that work. Meantime, you might be interested
|
| |
|
- |
to look at Sue Hallam's full article and the fascinating research
summaries in www.thepowerofmusic.co.uk
; and |
| -
|
to
let MusicEd have your views on John Sloboda's speculations. |
|
| |
|
| |
IKW/12.7.01
|
| |
|
|
|
next
|
| |
|
| |
You
can also view and print this article in PDF format
(requires Acrobat Reader v4.0 or greater) |