{"title":"“通过音乐了解你。”音乐治疗师“了解”客户的独特方式,以及我们表达隐性知识的集体责任","authors":"Orii McDermott","doi":"10.1080/08098131.2022.2152238","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"“How do you get to know your client’s inner-world so well?” I am often amazed by the depth of insight music therapy colleagues share about their clients during clinical peersupervision. Of course, colleagues from other disciplines I closely work with (e.g. clinical psychologists, nurses, activity co-ordinators) also share clinical insights that are extremely valuable in our review meetings. However, music therapists seem to develop unique insights into their clients’ individual characters and personal strengths beyond symptoms and challenging conditions. I approached Rosslyn Bender, an experienced music therapy clinician working in the national health service for mental health care of adults and older adults in London, UK, and asked her why she thinks music therapists may get to know their clients in such a unique way. She wrote back to explain: “(I think it’s) because the music between a client and a therapist is constantly in motion, therapists have to ‘go with the flow’ without reliance on a clear structure or frame for the interaction. This means we are constantly listening and paying attention to not only what is expressed in space and time but also holding an awareness of what has preceded the moment as well as what may still be possible. In addition, the therapist’s embodied experience of these musical interactions seems to help them to develop a unique sense of and thus deeper understanding of their clients”. Exploring why and how such in-depth “knowing” may happen through collaborative music making is beyond the scope of this Editorial. Nevertheless, this provides me with an opportunity to encourage music therapists to share their in-depth clinical knowledge through publication. During the long-awaited in-person 12th European Music Therapy Conference in Edinburgh in June 2022, the NJMT Editorial Team held a workshop on peer-reviewed publications (McDermott et al., 2022). Our motivations to run this workshop were to encourage new or less-experienced writers to submit articles to NJMT, and to increase the transparency of the publication process. We were particularly keen to encourage music therapists to consider sharing their insights by writing Perspectives on Practice articles. The current instruction for authors related to this genre can be found on the NJMT website (https://www.tandfonline.com/action/authorSubmission?show= instructions&journalCode=rnjm20). I would particularly like to highlight that Perspectives on Practice articles do not have to be presented as research or theoretical papers. Rather, authors are strongly encouraged to critically reflect on their work, contextualise their reflections, and make appropriate links to theoretical approaches or frameworks. Perspectives on Practice authors do not need to have formal ethical approval if their work was undertaken as part of their usual practice, but appropriate ethical consideration needs to be provided. After discussing with the NJMT Editors, NORDIC JOURNAL OF MUSIC THERAPY 2023, VOL. 32, NO. 1, 1–3 https://doi.org/10.1080/08098131.2022.2152238","PeriodicalId":51826,"journal":{"name":"Nordic Journal of Music Therapy","volume":"32 1","pages":"1 - 3"},"PeriodicalIF":1.6000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"‘Getting to know you through music.’ Music therapists’ unique ways of ‘knowing’ their clients and our collective responsibilities to articulate our implicit knowledge\",\"authors\":\"Orii McDermott\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/08098131.2022.2152238\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"“How do you get to know your client’s inner-world so well?” I am often amazed by the depth of insight music therapy colleagues share about their clients during clinical peersupervision. Of course, colleagues from other disciplines I closely work with (e.g. clinical psychologists, nurses, activity co-ordinators) also share clinical insights that are extremely valuable in our review meetings. However, music therapists seem to develop unique insights into their clients’ individual characters and personal strengths beyond symptoms and challenging conditions. I approached Rosslyn Bender, an experienced music therapy clinician working in the national health service for mental health care of adults and older adults in London, UK, and asked her why she thinks music therapists may get to know their clients in such a unique way. She wrote back to explain: “(I think it’s) because the music between a client and a therapist is constantly in motion, therapists have to ‘go with the flow’ without reliance on a clear structure or frame for the interaction. This means we are constantly listening and paying attention to not only what is expressed in space and time but also holding an awareness of what has preceded the moment as well as what may still be possible. In addition, the therapist’s embodied experience of these musical interactions seems to help them to develop a unique sense of and thus deeper understanding of their clients”. Exploring why and how such in-depth “knowing” may happen through collaborative music making is beyond the scope of this Editorial. Nevertheless, this provides me with an opportunity to encourage music therapists to share their in-depth clinical knowledge through publication. During the long-awaited in-person 12th European Music Therapy Conference in Edinburgh in June 2022, the NJMT Editorial Team held a workshop on peer-reviewed publications (McDermott et al., 2022). Our motivations to run this workshop were to encourage new or less-experienced writers to submit articles to NJMT, and to increase the transparency of the publication process. We were particularly keen to encourage music therapists to consider sharing their insights by writing Perspectives on Practice articles. The current instruction for authors related to this genre can be found on the NJMT website (https://www.tandfonline.com/action/authorSubmission?show= instructions&journalCode=rnjm20). I would particularly like to highlight that Perspectives on Practice articles do not have to be presented as research or theoretical papers. Rather, authors are strongly encouraged to critically reflect on their work, contextualise their reflections, and make appropriate links to theoretical approaches or frameworks. Perspectives on Practice authors do not need to have formal ethical approval if their work was undertaken as part of their usual practice, but appropriate ethical consideration needs to be provided. 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‘Getting to know you through music.’ Music therapists’ unique ways of ‘knowing’ their clients and our collective responsibilities to articulate our implicit knowledge
“How do you get to know your client’s inner-world so well?” I am often amazed by the depth of insight music therapy colleagues share about their clients during clinical peersupervision. Of course, colleagues from other disciplines I closely work with (e.g. clinical psychologists, nurses, activity co-ordinators) also share clinical insights that are extremely valuable in our review meetings. However, music therapists seem to develop unique insights into their clients’ individual characters and personal strengths beyond symptoms and challenging conditions. I approached Rosslyn Bender, an experienced music therapy clinician working in the national health service for mental health care of adults and older adults in London, UK, and asked her why she thinks music therapists may get to know their clients in such a unique way. She wrote back to explain: “(I think it’s) because the music between a client and a therapist is constantly in motion, therapists have to ‘go with the flow’ without reliance on a clear structure or frame for the interaction. This means we are constantly listening and paying attention to not only what is expressed in space and time but also holding an awareness of what has preceded the moment as well as what may still be possible. In addition, the therapist’s embodied experience of these musical interactions seems to help them to develop a unique sense of and thus deeper understanding of their clients”. Exploring why and how such in-depth “knowing” may happen through collaborative music making is beyond the scope of this Editorial. Nevertheless, this provides me with an opportunity to encourage music therapists to share their in-depth clinical knowledge through publication. During the long-awaited in-person 12th European Music Therapy Conference in Edinburgh in June 2022, the NJMT Editorial Team held a workshop on peer-reviewed publications (McDermott et al., 2022). Our motivations to run this workshop were to encourage new or less-experienced writers to submit articles to NJMT, and to increase the transparency of the publication process. We were particularly keen to encourage music therapists to consider sharing their insights by writing Perspectives on Practice articles. The current instruction for authors related to this genre can be found on the NJMT website (https://www.tandfonline.com/action/authorSubmission?show= instructions&journalCode=rnjm20). I would particularly like to highlight that Perspectives on Practice articles do not have to be presented as research or theoretical papers. Rather, authors are strongly encouraged to critically reflect on their work, contextualise their reflections, and make appropriate links to theoretical approaches or frameworks. Perspectives on Practice authors do not need to have formal ethical approval if their work was undertaken as part of their usual practice, but appropriate ethical consideration needs to be provided. After discussing with the NJMT Editors, NORDIC JOURNAL OF MUSIC THERAPY 2023, VOL. 32, NO. 1, 1–3 https://doi.org/10.1080/08098131.2022.2152238
期刊介绍:
Nordic Journal of Music Therapy (NJMT) is published in collaboration with GAMUT - The Grieg Academy Music Therapy Research Centre (Uni Health and University of Bergen), with financial support from Nordic Board for Periodicals in the Humanities and Social Sciences and in co-operation with university programs and organizations of music therapy in the Nordic and Baltic countries. The Nordic Journal of Music Therapy serves the international community of music therapy by being an avenue for publication of scholarly articles, texts on practice, theory and research, dialogues and discussions, reviews and critique. Publication of the journal is based on the collaboration between the music therapy communities in the five Nordic countries of Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden and the three Baltic Countries of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. This international but still regional foundation offers a platform for development of communication with the broader international community of music therapy. Scholars from all over the world are welcomed to write in the journal. Any kind of scholarly articles related to the field of music therapy are welcomed. All articles are reviewed by two referees and by the editors, to ensure the quality of the journal. Since the field of music therapy is still young, we work hard to make the review process a constructive learning experience for the author. The Nordic Journal of Music Therapy does not step aside from active engagement in the development of the discipline, in order to stimulate multicultural, meta-theoretical and philosophical discussions, and new and diverse forms of inquiry. The journal also stimulates reflections on music as the medium that defines the discipline. Perspectives inspired by musicology and ethnomusicology are therefore welcomed.