The Instrumental Music Teacher: Autonomy, Identity and the Portfolio Career in Music by Kerry Boyle . International Society for Music Education (ISME) Global Perspectives in Music Education. Abingdon: Routledge, 2021

IF 1 3区 教育学 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH British Journal of Music Education Pub Date : 2022-06-29 DOI:10.1017/s0265051722000183
L. Shaw
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

In a publication that explores the intriguing nature of conflicting professional identities in music, freelance singing teacher and choral director, Kerry Boyle, enables the voices of over 300 instrumental teachers working in a variety of educational contexts in the UK to come to the fore via a national survey and 18 case study interviews. In the book description, Boyle highlights ‘a lack of regulation and curriculum’ where ‘individuals can teach with no training or qualification’. This seemingly negative assertion is juxtaposed with the notion, expressed positively for the most part, that instrumental teachers enjoy ‘high levels of personal and professional autonomy’ (p. 1). The majority of participants in Boyle’s study identify as musicians as opposed to teachers, a phenomenon the author can relate to from an autoethnographic stance. Ambiguously, multiple-choice options vary across Survey questions 2: ‘Which of the following most accurately describes your main professional occupation?’ and 18: ‘Which of the following terms would you suggest is most appropriate in describing your professional identity?’ (see Appendix 1). Given the classroom-based practice associated with the word ‘teacher’, it is potentially problematic that it was not possible for participants to select ‘instrumental teacher’ in response to the latter question. This may have been intentional, however, to highlight the notion that instrumental teachers are ‘unable to claim the status of teacher attributed to professionals working as qualified classroom teachers’ (p. 92). Set against a wider research context where instrumental teaching is surprisingly perceived as ‘non-musical or non-creative activity’ (p. 102), participants’ teaching is evidently informed by a portfolio of broader musical activity. Despite this, much compartmentalised thinking is prevalent amongst participants, many of whom seem to view performing and teaching as separate entities involving the switching of roles. There is scope to tease out the interrelated and complementary nature of these activities a little more, especially in response to a conservatoire tutor’s suggestion that three years of performance training had been ‘wasted’ (p. 68) following their student’s decision to undertake a music-focused Postgraduate General Certificate in Education (PGCE) in lieu of a final year of specialist performance training. Indeed, Boyle suggests that ‘musician first then teacher’ models (p. 6, resonating with Huhtanen, 2008) emphasise hierarchical roles in music where musicians who choose to train as music educators are perceived as inferior to those who sustain a performance career alongside teaching. The striking statistic that over 50% of participants in this study had never received any ‘organised training or guidance’ (p. 20) before they began teaching suggests that they only had their own previous teacher(s)’methods as a foundation for their own practice. It is interesting therefore that participants perceived that training in the master-apprentice model of teaching would be the most beneficial for their needs. Debatably, this view adds another dimension to Boyle’s ‘hierarchy of roles’ thread, implying that certain ‘types’ of teaching and/or teachers are ‘better’ than others. As Boyle suggests, it has long been argued that the master-apprentice model, prevalent in private teaching and the ‘performer-teacher’ culture of university and conservatoire education, serves to perpetuate existing teaching practices. In addition, I question whether a perception that instrumental teachers should have significant performance experience may in fact be harmful in deterring numerous teachers from pursuing training. Crucially, it appears that at present, many
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Kerry Boyle的《器乐教师:音乐中的自主性、身份和组合生涯》。国际音乐教育学会(ISME)全球音乐教育展望。阿宾顿:劳特利奇,2021
在一份探讨音乐中相互冲突的职业身份的有趣本质的出版物中,自由歌唱教师兼合唱指挥克里·博伊尔通过一项全国调查和18个案例研究访谈,使300多名在英国各种教育背景下工作的器乐教师的声音脱颖而出。在书的描述中,博伊尔强调了“缺乏监管和课程”,“个人可以在没有培训或资格的情况下教书”。这个看似消极的断言与大多数积极表达的概念并在一起,即器乐教师享有“高度的个人和职业自主权”(第1页)。Boyle研究中的大多数参与者都认为自己是音乐家,而不是教师,这一现象可以从自我民族志的立场上与作者联系起来。模棱两可的是,多项选择选项在调查问题2中有所不同:“以下哪项最准确地描述了你的主要职业?”第18题:“你认为下面哪个词最适合描述你的职业身份?”(见附录1)。考虑到与“教师”一词相关的课堂实践,参与者不可能选择“工具性教师”来回答后一个问题,这是一个潜在的问题。然而,这可能是有意为之,以强调器乐教师“无法主张作为合格课堂教师的专业教师的教师地位”(第92页)。在更广泛的研究背景下,乐器教学令人惊讶地被视为“非音乐或非创造性活动”(第102页),参与者的教学显然受到更广泛的音乐活动组合的影响。尽管如此,参与者中仍然普遍存在着划分思维,他们中的许多人似乎将表演和教学视为涉及角色转换的独立实体。我们有更多的空间来分析这些活动的相互关联和互补性质,特别是在回应一位音乐学院导师的建议,即在他们的学生决定接受以音乐为重点的研究生普通教育证书(PGCE)而不是最后一年的专业表演培训之后,三年的表演培训被“浪费”了(第68页)。事实上,Boyle认为“先音乐家后教师”的模式(第6页,与Huhtanen, 2008年产生共鸣)强调了音乐中的等级角色,选择作为音乐教育家接受培训的音乐家被认为不如那些在教学的同时维持表演生涯的人。令人震惊的统计数据显示,在这项研究中,超过50%的参与者在开始教学之前从未接受过任何“有组织的培训或指导”(第20页),这表明他们只有自己以前老师的方法作为自己实践的基础。因此,有趣的是,参与者认为师徒制教学模式的培训对他们的需求是最有益的。有争议的是,这种观点为博伊尔的“角色层次”思路增加了另一个维度,暗示某些“类型”的教学和/或教师比其他“更好”。正如博伊尔所指出的,长期以来,人们一直认为,在私人教学和大学和音乐学院教育的“表演者-教师”文化中盛行的师徒模式,有助于延续现有的教学实践。此外,我质疑认为器乐教师应该有丰富的演奏经验的看法是否会阻碍许多教师追求培训。关键是,目前看来,许多
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CiteScore
2.40
自引率
10.00%
发文量
37
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