Quantifying first-year student musicians’ ‘calling’: Initial implications for professional preparation curriculum design

Diana Tolmie
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Abstract

Over the last decade, vocation preparation formal and informal education has been included in higher music education programs with the purpose to responsibly supplement students’ technical performance skills and graduate sustainable musicians. Such curriculum reform is continually met with mixed responses by students and faculty despite the increased precarity of the music profession within the current global context. This study evolved from one music vocational preparation educator’s observation that student resistance is potentially based in one’s passion for music, capacity for resilience and self-discipline, and perceived calling to pursue a music profession. From 2018 to 2022, first-year music students of an Australian metropolitan conservatoire enrolled in a vocation preparation unit were invited to participate in an online survey answering open and closed questions related to their professional activity and outlook, and personal perceptions of calling, passion, resilience, and discipline. Statistical and thematic analysis of the results were compared with a similarly designed prior study of professional Australian musicians and found that more than two-thirds of first-year student musicians were professionally active. All yearly cohorts consistently strongly agreed they were passionate about music, and agreed they possessed high and calling resilience. The year 2020 demonstrated insight to pandemic impact with more students viewing their professional future with trepidation, yet demonstrated the highest results for passion and resilience. Calling, passion, and resilience literature further served to interpret the data and subsequently suggested higher music education reform their curriculum and pedagogies by adopting a whole-of-program approach enabled by the contagion effect of calling, and alignment with students’ passion, values, and music identities.
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量化一年级学生音乐家的“召唤”:对专业准备课程设计的初步影响
在过去的十年中,职业准备正式和非正式教育已被纳入高等音乐教育课程,目的是负责任地补充学生的技术表演技能,培养可持续的音乐家。尽管音乐专业在当前的全球背景下越来越不稳定,但这种课程改革不断受到学生和教师的不同反应。这项研究源于一位音乐职业准备教育者的观察,即学生的抗拒可能基于一个人对音乐的热情、适应能力和自律能力,以及追求音乐职业的感知召唤。从2018年到2022年,澳大利亚一所城市音乐学院的一年级音乐学生被邀请参加一项在线调查,回答与他们的专业活动和前景有关的开放式和封闭式问题,以及个人对召唤、激情、适应力和纪律的看法。对结果的统计和主题分析与先前对澳大利亚专业音乐家进行的类似设计的研究进行了比较,发现超过三分之二的一年级学生音乐家在专业上很活跃。所有年度调查对象一致认为他们对音乐充满热情,并认为他们具有很高的适应力。2020年体现了对流行病影响的洞察力,更多的学生对自己的职业未来感到不安,但在热情和适应能力方面取得了最高成绩。召唤、激情和弹性文献进一步解释了这些数据,并随后建议高等音乐教育通过采用召唤传染效应的整体方案来改革他们的课程和教学法,并与学生的激情、价值观和音乐身份保持一致。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
37.50%
发文量
37
期刊介绍: Research Studies in Music Education is an internationally peer-reviewed journal that promotes the dissemination and discussion of high quality research in music and music education. The journal encourages the interrogation and development of a range of research methodologies and their application to diverse topics in music education theory and practice. The journal covers a wide range of topics across all areas of music education, and a separate "Perspectives in Music Education Research" section provides a forum for researchers to discuss topics of special interest and to debate key issues in the profession.
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