{"title":"高等音乐教育中的技能与知识差距:探索性实证研究","authors":"Ben Toscher","doi":"10.26209/IJEA21N10","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Research claims that entrepreneurial skills and knowledge are important for the careers of musicians (Bennett, 2016; Breivik, Selvik, Bakke, Welde & Jermstad, 2015; Coulson, 2012). Alumni of higher music education (HME) report “a gap between the perceived importance of such [entrepreneurial] skills and their acquisition” (Miller, Dumford & Johnson 2017, p. 11). As a response, institutes of HME have integrated arts entrepreneurship education to help music students acquire these skills and knowledge to a greater extent (Beckman, 2005, 2007). Yet, specifically which entrepreneurial skills and knowledge (Lackeus, 2015) arts entrepreneurship education helps students acquire lacks empirical support and articulation. In this exploratory pilot study, I create, disseminate and use exploratory data analysis (Tukey, 1977) to understand the descriptive statistics of survey IJEA Vol. 21 No. 10 http://www.ijea.org/v21n10/ 2 responses from teachers and students of HME in Norway. Respondents rated the perceived importance and acquisition of a variety of skills and knowledge while considering students’ future careers. Students also reported to what extent they felt they learned entrepreneurship through their current study program. Consistent with previous research, the findings show a “gap between the perceived acquisition of skills and the importance of such skills” (Miller et al., 2017, p. 11) in HME. The largest gaps in this study are for the following specific skills and knowledge: sales/marketing, market/industry, financial, social media, and business planning. Additionally, as students report they felt they learned entrepreneurship to increasingly larger extents, this gap is closed and narrowed. This shared tendency between the increased extent of entrepreneurship learned by music students and the perceived increase in the acquisition of various skills and knowledge is new insight for the field. Implications for arts entrepreneurship practitioners are discussed in addition to some ideas for future in-depth research. Music Careers and Enforced Entrepreneurship Students in the performing arts will often have “portfolio” careers which consist of a neverending, self-managed series of simultaneous and overlapping employment engagements (Cawsey, 1995; Teague & Smith, 2015). These engagements vary according to the spectrum and diversity of employers, but also to the type of work undertaken. Musicians, for example, often maintain portfolio careers as music teachers, freelancers, and performers, in which they depend on a set of entrepreneurial skills to network, recognize opportunities, and maintain a livelihood (Bennett, 2016; Breivik et al., 2015; Coulson, 2012). Over 42 percent of surveyed musicians in Germany claim their career is made possible through self-employment (Dangel & Piorkowsky, 2006); musicians in Australia on average held more than one music industry role and often “don ́t know any musicians who do only one thing” (Bennett, 2007); over 90 percent of the studied UK musicians hold a secondary occupation; and in Denmark, 6 percent of music graduates worked solely in performance, with half of them working in both performance and teaching (Traasdahl, 1996). Being selfemployed and generating their own work means that individuals have to use various skills beyond the scope of the “conservatory model” in higher music education (HME), where the main focus of training has been teaching “music through instrumental skills” (Orning, 2017, p. 3). This model is “narrow and extremely focused on the skills of performing.” (Cutietta, 2010, p. 13). This may be considered a problem if music graduates often maintain portfolio careers consisting of a patchwork of professional roles and become “enforced entrepreneurs” upon graduation (Bennett & Bridgstock, 2015, p. 263). Toscher: The Skills and Knowledge Gap 3 Arts Entrepreneurship Education Since “most artists find themselves entrepreneurs by default immediately [when] they begin searching for work” (Bennett, 2009, p. 323), it may be understandable why the “increasing importance of professional development is one of the most dynamic trends emerging in the arts within higher education. Publicly funded institutions in particular are increasingly relying on entrepreneurship as a means to prepare students for musical careers” (Beckman, 2005, p. 13). Beckman first wrote about this trend in 2005 and later conducted a study which mapped at least 37 U.S. higher education institutions offering arts entrepreneurship education (Beckman, 2007). Integration of arts entrepreneurship in the U.S. has increased since then: In 2016, Essig and Guevara (2016) mapped 372 offerings by 168 institutions in the U.S. Arts entrepreneurship education is also offered in countries outside of the U.S., such as Australia, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, and the UK (Brandenburg, Roosen & Veenstra, 2016; Pollard & Wilson, 2013; Thom, 2017; Toscher & Bjørnø, 2019; Watne & Nymoen, 2017). Despite this, there is no consensus on what an arts entrepreneurship offering is and which specific knowledge and skills it teaches. In 2005, Beckman studied musical entrepreneurship in HME and wrote that they could not find “consensus on how to approach entrepreneurship curricula this environment” (p. 13). Eight years later, White (2013) noted there were still “no formally recognized outcomes for arts entrepreneurship by an accreditation organization” in the U.S. (p. 35). This could be because it is a “transdiscipline,” as Essig and Guevara (2016) describe it; or it could be, because arts entrepreneurship has been specific to the economic, cultural, and educational contexts in which it is taught, a contextual approach which has been advocated for by Beckman (2007). In either case, it may appear that educational institutions have implemented arts entrepreneurship education in response to their interpretation that some general level of entrepreneurial skills are needed for their students ́ careers, yet what these specific entrepreneurial skills are is the subject of continuous inquiry. Even in the broader field of entrepreneurship education there are a variety of curricular offerings with “shifting definition, pedagogical approaches and varying emphasis on theory over practice” (p. 8, Lackeus, 2015). In their paper Entrepreneurship in Education: What, Why, When, How, Lackeus defined entrepreneurial competencies as “knowledge, skills and attitudes that affect the willingness and ability to perform the entrepreneurial job of new value creation” (p. 12). The main goal of most such education is for students to develop a level of these knowledge, skills, and/or attitudes, whether in an offering which is “about, for, or through entrepreneurship” (p. 10). Lackeus then theoretically articulated these specific skills and knowledge and how they relate to a more generalized notion of entrepreneurial skills and knowledge, but empirical data supporting this relation is lacking. IJEA Vol. 21 No. 10 http://www.ijea.org/v21n10/ 4 Empirical research has contextualized and further defined these entrepreneurial skills and knowledge alongside the educational and cultural contexts in which arts entrepreneurship is being offered. In the Netherlands, Brandenburg et al. (2016) determined the “six most essential entrepreneurial skills for Art & Technology students” (p. 25) and evaluated a selection of business modeling methods based on the extent to which they contributed to mastering these skills. Thom (2016) surveyed 208 lecturers of the fine arts (who were also working artists) from 89 higher education institutions in the UK and Germany to rank the 16 most “crucial skills for the entrepreneurial success” (p. 3) of artists. Miller et al. (2017) published a study in the International Journal of Education & the Arts in which 16,317 music performance, music theory, and music education alumni from U.S. higher education institutions rated the perceived professional importance for 16 different categories of skills and knowledge and their perceptions of their acquisition of these skills and knowledge during their music education. They found that: ...the average ratings of importance for business and entrepreneurial skills are quite high across all three majors, with music performance majors rating them significantly higher. This gap between the perceived acquisition of skills and the importance of such skills in the workplace should be a concern for music faculty and administrators. Music students of all major types need increased exposure to business and entrepreneurial skills to be better prepared for the logistic and practical components of work in their field. Trends in the arts economy suggest that since many artists are selfemployed, they need direct instruction in entrepreneurial experiences such as marketing, budgeting, taxes, and strategic planning (Haase & Lautenschläger, 2011). Since we also see that music performance majors are more likely to be self-employed, this is a place where more curriculum reform might aid in the development of music professionals. (p. 11) In a similar study, Skaggs, Frenette, Gaskill & Miller (2017) found music alumni perceived their acquisition of skills were significantly lower than their importance in a similar fashion to Miller et al. (2017), with the biggest gaps being for business and financial skills (-58%) and entrepreneurial skills (-43%). The Need for Further Study While these studies individually inquire into how various entrepreneurial skills are viewed as “essential” (Brandenburg et al., 2016), “crucial” (Thom, 2016), or “important” for artists (Miller et al., 2017) in different cultural, educational, and artistic contexts, they fall short of their potential to provide a more thorough, contextualized exploration of these skills, how they relate to a more generalized notion of entrepreneurial skills, and how arts entrepreneurship Toscher: The Skills and Knowledge Gap 5 education is related to their acquisition. How","PeriodicalId":44257,"journal":{"name":"International Journal of Education and the Arts","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.7000,"publicationDate":"2020-02-26","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"6","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Skills and Knowledge Gap in Higher Music Education: An Exploratory Empirical Study\",\"authors\":\"Ben Toscher\",\"doi\":\"10.26209/IJEA21N10\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Research claims that entrepreneurial skills and knowledge are important for the careers of musicians (Bennett, 2016; Breivik, Selvik, Bakke, Welde & Jermstad, 2015; Coulson, 2012). Alumni of higher music education (HME) report “a gap between the perceived importance of such [entrepreneurial] skills and their acquisition” (Miller, Dumford & Johnson 2017, p. 11). As a response, institutes of HME have integrated arts entrepreneurship education to help music students acquire these skills and knowledge to a greater extent (Beckman, 2005, 2007). Yet, specifically which entrepreneurial skills and knowledge (Lackeus, 2015) arts entrepreneurship education helps students acquire lacks empirical support and articulation. In this exploratory pilot study, I create, disseminate and use exploratory data analysis (Tukey, 1977) to understand the descriptive statistics of survey IJEA Vol. 21 No. 10 http://www.ijea.org/v21n10/ 2 responses from teachers and students of HME in Norway. Respondents rated the perceived importance and acquisition of a variety of skills and knowledge while considering students’ future careers. Students also reported to what extent they felt they learned entrepreneurship through their current study program. Consistent with previous research, the findings show a “gap between the perceived acquisition of skills and the importance of such skills” (Miller et al., 2017, p. 11) in HME. The largest gaps in this study are for the following specific skills and knowledge: sales/marketing, market/industry, financial, social media, and business planning. Additionally, as students report they felt they learned entrepreneurship to increasingly larger extents, this gap is closed and narrowed. This shared tendency between the increased extent of entrepreneurship learned by music students and the perceived increase in the acquisition of various skills and knowledge is new insight for the field. Implications for arts entrepreneurship practitioners are discussed in addition to some ideas for future in-depth research. Music Careers and Enforced Entrepreneurship Students in the performing arts will often have “portfolio” careers which consist of a neverending, self-managed series of simultaneous and overlapping employment engagements (Cawsey, 1995; Teague & Smith, 2015). These engagements vary according to the spectrum and diversity of employers, but also to the type of work undertaken. Musicians, for example, often maintain portfolio careers as music teachers, freelancers, and performers, in which they depend on a set of entrepreneurial skills to network, recognize opportunities, and maintain a livelihood (Bennett, 2016; Breivik et al., 2015; Coulson, 2012). Over 42 percent of surveyed musicians in Germany claim their career is made possible through self-employment (Dangel & Piorkowsky, 2006); musicians in Australia on average held more than one music industry role and often “don ́t know any musicians who do only one thing” (Bennett, 2007); over 90 percent of the studied UK musicians hold a secondary occupation; and in Denmark, 6 percent of music graduates worked solely in performance, with half of them working in both performance and teaching (Traasdahl, 1996). Being selfemployed and generating their own work means that individuals have to use various skills beyond the scope of the “conservatory model” in higher music education (HME), where the main focus of training has been teaching “music through instrumental skills” (Orning, 2017, p. 3). This model is “narrow and extremely focused on the skills of performing.” (Cutietta, 2010, p. 13). This may be considered a problem if music graduates often maintain portfolio careers consisting of a patchwork of professional roles and become “enforced entrepreneurs” upon graduation (Bennett & Bridgstock, 2015, p. 263). Toscher: The Skills and Knowledge Gap 3 Arts Entrepreneurship Education Since “most artists find themselves entrepreneurs by default immediately [when] they begin searching for work” (Bennett, 2009, p. 323), it may be understandable why the “increasing importance of professional development is one of the most dynamic trends emerging in the arts within higher education. Publicly funded institutions in particular are increasingly relying on entrepreneurship as a means to prepare students for musical careers” (Beckman, 2005, p. 13). Beckman first wrote about this trend in 2005 and later conducted a study which mapped at least 37 U.S. higher education institutions offering arts entrepreneurship education (Beckman, 2007). Integration of arts entrepreneurship in the U.S. has increased since then: In 2016, Essig and Guevara (2016) mapped 372 offerings by 168 institutions in the U.S. Arts entrepreneurship education is also offered in countries outside of the U.S., such as Australia, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, and the UK (Brandenburg, Roosen & Veenstra, 2016; Pollard & Wilson, 2013; Thom, 2017; Toscher & Bjørnø, 2019; Watne & Nymoen, 2017). Despite this, there is no consensus on what an arts entrepreneurship offering is and which specific knowledge and skills it teaches. In 2005, Beckman studied musical entrepreneurship in HME and wrote that they could not find “consensus on how to approach entrepreneurship curricula this environment” (p. 13). Eight years later, White (2013) noted there were still “no formally recognized outcomes for arts entrepreneurship by an accreditation organization” in the U.S. (p. 35). This could be because it is a “transdiscipline,” as Essig and Guevara (2016) describe it; or it could be, because arts entrepreneurship has been specific to the economic, cultural, and educational contexts in which it is taught, a contextual approach which has been advocated for by Beckman (2007). In either case, it may appear that educational institutions have implemented arts entrepreneurship education in response to their interpretation that some general level of entrepreneurial skills are needed for their students ́ careers, yet what these specific entrepreneurial skills are is the subject of continuous inquiry. Even in the broader field of entrepreneurship education there are a variety of curricular offerings with “shifting definition, pedagogical approaches and varying emphasis on theory over practice” (p. 8, Lackeus, 2015). In their paper Entrepreneurship in Education: What, Why, When, How, Lackeus defined entrepreneurial competencies as “knowledge, skills and attitudes that affect the willingness and ability to perform the entrepreneurial job of new value creation” (p. 12). The main goal of most such education is for students to develop a level of these knowledge, skills, and/or attitudes, whether in an offering which is “about, for, or through entrepreneurship” (p. 10). Lackeus then theoretically articulated these specific skills and knowledge and how they relate to a more generalized notion of entrepreneurial skills and knowledge, but empirical data supporting this relation is lacking. IJEA Vol. 21 No. 10 http://www.ijea.org/v21n10/ 4 Empirical research has contextualized and further defined these entrepreneurial skills and knowledge alongside the educational and cultural contexts in which arts entrepreneurship is being offered. In the Netherlands, Brandenburg et al. (2016) determined the “six most essential entrepreneurial skills for Art & Technology students” (p. 25) and evaluated a selection of business modeling methods based on the extent to which they contributed to mastering these skills. Thom (2016) surveyed 208 lecturers of the fine arts (who were also working artists) from 89 higher education institutions in the UK and Germany to rank the 16 most “crucial skills for the entrepreneurial success” (p. 3) of artists. Miller et al. (2017) published a study in the International Journal of Education & the Arts in which 16,317 music performance, music theory, and music education alumni from U.S. higher education institutions rated the perceived professional importance for 16 different categories of skills and knowledge and their perceptions of their acquisition of these skills and knowledge during their music education. They found that: ...the average ratings of importance for business and entrepreneurial skills are quite high across all three majors, with music performance majors rating them significantly higher. This gap between the perceived acquisition of skills and the importance of such skills in the workplace should be a concern for music faculty and administrators. Music students of all major types need increased exposure to business and entrepreneurial skills to be better prepared for the logistic and practical components of work in their field. Trends in the arts economy suggest that since many artists are selfemployed, they need direct instruction in entrepreneurial experiences such as marketing, budgeting, taxes, and strategic planning (Haase & Lautenschläger, 2011). Since we also see that music performance majors are more likely to be self-employed, this is a place where more curriculum reform might aid in the development of music professionals. (p. 11) In a similar study, Skaggs, Frenette, Gaskill & Miller (2017) found music alumni perceived their acquisition of skills were significantly lower than their importance in a similar fashion to Miller et al. (2017), with the biggest gaps being for business and financial skills (-58%) and entrepreneurial skills (-43%). The Need for Further Study While these studies individually inquire into how various entrepreneurial skills are viewed as “essential” (Brandenburg et al., 2016), “crucial” (Thom, 2016), or “important” for artists (Miller et al., 2017) in different cultural, educational, and artistic contexts, they fall short of their potential to provide a more thorough, contextualized exploration of these skills, how they relate to a more generalized notion of entrepreneurial skills, and how arts entrepreneurship Toscher: The Skills and Knowledge Gap 5 education is related to their acquisition. 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引用次数: 6
摘要
研究表明,创业技能和知识对音乐家的职业生涯很重要(Bennett,2016;Breivik、Selvik、Bakke、Welde和Jermstad,2015;库尔森,2012年)。高等音乐教育校友(HME)报告称,“这种[创业]技能的重要性与他们的习得之间存在差距”(Miller,Dumford&Johnson,2017,第11页)。作为回应,HME的研究所整合了艺术创业教育,以帮助音乐学生在更大程度上获得这些技能和知识(Beckman,20052007)。然而,具体而言,艺术创业教育帮助学生获得哪些创业技能和知识(Lackeus,2015)缺乏实证支持和阐述。在这项探索性试点研究中,我创建、传播并使用探索性数据分析(Tukey,1977)来理解调查IJEA第21卷第10期的描述性统计数据http://www.ijea.org/v21n10/挪威HME教师和学生的2份回复。受访者在考虑学生未来的职业生涯时,对各种技能和知识的重要性和获取进行了评分。学生们还报告了他们觉得自己在多大程度上通过目前的学习项目学会了创业。与之前的研究一致,研究结果显示,在HME中,“感知的技能获取与此类技能的重要性之间存在差距”(Miller等人,2017,第11页)。本研究中最大的差距在于以下特定技能和知识:销售/营销、市场/行业、金融、社交媒体和商业规划。此外,随着学生们报告说,他们觉得自己在越来越大的程度上学会了创业,这一差距已经缩小。音乐专业学生学习的创业程度的提高和对各种技能和知识的获取的感知增加之间的这种共同趋势是该领域的新见解。除了对未来深入研究的一些想法外,还讨论了对艺术创业从业者的启示。音乐职业和强制创业表演艺术领域的学生通常会有“组合”职业,包括一系列无休止的、自我管理的同时和重叠的就业活动(Cawsey,1995;蒂格和史密斯,2015年)。这些工作因雇主的范围和多样性而异,也因所从事的工作类型而异。例如,音乐家通常以音乐教师、自由职业者和表演者的身份维持组合职业,在这些职业中,他们依靠一套创业技能来建立联系、识别机会并维持生计(Bennett,2016;Breivik等人,2015;库尔森,2012)。在德国,超过42%的受访音乐家声称他们的职业生涯是通过自营职业实现的(Dangel&Piorkowsky,2006);澳大利亚的音乐家平均在音乐行业担任不止一个角色,并且经常“不认识任何只做一件事的音乐家”(Bennett,2007);超过90%的英国音乐家从事第二职业;在丹麦,6%的音乐毕业生只从事表演工作,其中一半同时从事表演和教学工作(Traasdahl,1996)。自营职业和创作自己的作品意味着个人必须在高等音乐教育(HME)中使用超出“音乐学院模式”范围的各种技能,在HME中,培训的主要重点是教授“通过器乐技能教授音乐”(Orning,2017,第3页)。这种模式“狭隘且极其注重表演技巧”(Cutietta,2010,第13页)。如果音乐专业毕业生经常维持由拼凑的专业角色组成的组合职业,并在毕业后成为“强制企业家”,这可能会被认为是一个问题(Bennett&Bridgstock,2015,263)。Toscher:The Skills and Knowledge Gap 3 Arts Entrepreneurship Education由于“大多数艺术家在开始寻找工作时都会发现自己是默认的企业家”(Bennett,2009,第323页),可以理解为什么“专业发展的重要性越来越大是高等教育中艺术领域出现的最具活力的趋势之一。尤其是公共资助的机构越来越依赖创业精神,为学生的音乐生涯做准备”(Beckman,2005,第13页)。贝克曼在2005年首次写到这一趋势,后来进行了一项研究,绘制了至少37所提供艺术创业教育的美国高等教育机构的地图(Beckman,2007)。自那以后,美国艺术创业的融合程度有所提高:2016年,Essig和Guevara(2016)绘制了美国168所机构的372个课程图。美国以外的国家也提供艺术创业教育,如澳大利亚、德国、荷兰、挪威、,以及英国(Brandenburg,Roosen和Veenstra,2016;Pollard和Wilson,2013;Thom,2017;Toscher和Bjørnø,2019;Watne和Nymoen,2017)。 尽管如此,对于什么是艺术创业,以及它教授哪些特定的知识和技能,还没有达成共识。2005年,贝克曼在HME学习音乐创业,并写道,他们无法“就如何在这种环境下开设创业课程达成共识”(第13页)。八年后,White(2013)指出,美国仍然“没有认可机构正式认可的艺术创业成果”(第35页)。正如Essig和Guevara(2016)所描述的那样,这可能是因为它是一个“跨学科”;也可能是,因为艺术创业是特定于其所教授的经济、文化和教育背景的,这是Beckman(2007)倡导的一种背景方法。在任何一种情况下,教育机构似乎都实施了艺术创业教育,以回应他们的解释,即学生的职业生涯需要一些一般水平的创业技能,但这些具体的创业技能是什么,这是一个持续不断的问题。即使在更广泛的创业教育领域,也有各种各样的课程,“定义、教学方法不断变化,对理论和实践的重视程度各不相同”(第8页,Lackeus,2015)。在他们的论文《教育中的创业:什么、为什么、何时、如何》中,Lackeus将创业能力定义为“影响从事新价值创造创业工作的意愿和能力的知识、技能和态度”(第12页)。大多数此类教育的主要目标是让学生发展这些知识、技能和/或态度的水平,无论是在“关于创业、为了创业还是通过创业”的课程中(第10页)。然后,拉克乌斯从理论上阐述了这些特定的技能和知识,以及它们如何与更广义的创业技能和知识概念相联系,但缺乏支持这种关系的实证数据。IJEA第21卷第10期http://www.ijea.org/v21n10/4实证研究将这些创业技能和知识与提供艺术创业的教育和文化背景结合起来,并对其进行了进一步定义。在荷兰,Brandenburg等人(2016)确定了“艺术与技术专业学生最重要的六项创业技能”(第25页),并根据他们对掌握这些技能的贡献程度评估了商业建模方法的选择。Thom(2016)调查了来自英国和德国89所高等教育机构的208名美术讲师(他们也是在职艺术家),对艺术家的16项最“创业成功的关键技能”进行了排名(第3页)。Miller等人(2017)在《国际教育与艺术杂志》上发表了一项研究,来自美国高等教育机构的音乐教育校友对16种不同类别的技能和知识的职业重要性以及他们在音乐教育期间对这些技能和知识获得的看法进行了评分。他们发现:。。。这三个专业对商业和创业技能重要性的平均评分都很高,音乐表演专业的评分要高得多。音乐教师和管理人员应该关注技能获得感与这些技能在工作场所的重要性之间的差距。所有专业类型的音乐学生都需要更多地接触商业和创业技能,以便更好地为所在领域的后勤和实践工作做好准备。艺术经济的趋势表明,由于许多艺术家都是自营职业者,他们需要在营销、预算、税收和战略规划等创业经验方面得到直接指导(Haase&Lautenschläger,2011)。由于我们也看到音乐表演专业更有可能是个体经营者,这是一个更多课程改革可能有助于音乐专业发展的地方。(第11页)在一项类似的研究中,Skaggs,Frenette,Gaskill&Miller(2017)发现,音乐校友认为他们获得的技能明显低于他们的重要性,这与Miller等人的情况类似。(2017),最大的差距是商业和财务技能(-58%)和创业技能(-43%)。进一步研究的必要性虽然这些研究单独探讨了各种创业技能如何被视为艺术家的“必要”(Brandenburg et al.,2016)、“关键”(Thom,2016)或“重要”(Miller et al。 ,2017)在不同的文化、教育和艺术背景下,他们没有潜力对这些技能进行更彻底的、情境化的探索,这些技能如何与更普遍的创业技能概念相联系,以及艺术创业Toscher:技能和知识差距5教育如何与他们的获得相关。怎样
The Skills and Knowledge Gap in Higher Music Education: An Exploratory Empirical Study
Research claims that entrepreneurial skills and knowledge are important for the careers of musicians (Bennett, 2016; Breivik, Selvik, Bakke, Welde & Jermstad, 2015; Coulson, 2012). Alumni of higher music education (HME) report “a gap between the perceived importance of such [entrepreneurial] skills and their acquisition” (Miller, Dumford & Johnson 2017, p. 11). As a response, institutes of HME have integrated arts entrepreneurship education to help music students acquire these skills and knowledge to a greater extent (Beckman, 2005, 2007). Yet, specifically which entrepreneurial skills and knowledge (Lackeus, 2015) arts entrepreneurship education helps students acquire lacks empirical support and articulation. In this exploratory pilot study, I create, disseminate and use exploratory data analysis (Tukey, 1977) to understand the descriptive statistics of survey IJEA Vol. 21 No. 10 http://www.ijea.org/v21n10/ 2 responses from teachers and students of HME in Norway. Respondents rated the perceived importance and acquisition of a variety of skills and knowledge while considering students’ future careers. Students also reported to what extent they felt they learned entrepreneurship through their current study program. Consistent with previous research, the findings show a “gap between the perceived acquisition of skills and the importance of such skills” (Miller et al., 2017, p. 11) in HME. The largest gaps in this study are for the following specific skills and knowledge: sales/marketing, market/industry, financial, social media, and business planning. Additionally, as students report they felt they learned entrepreneurship to increasingly larger extents, this gap is closed and narrowed. This shared tendency between the increased extent of entrepreneurship learned by music students and the perceived increase in the acquisition of various skills and knowledge is new insight for the field. Implications for arts entrepreneurship practitioners are discussed in addition to some ideas for future in-depth research. Music Careers and Enforced Entrepreneurship Students in the performing arts will often have “portfolio” careers which consist of a neverending, self-managed series of simultaneous and overlapping employment engagements (Cawsey, 1995; Teague & Smith, 2015). These engagements vary according to the spectrum and diversity of employers, but also to the type of work undertaken. Musicians, for example, often maintain portfolio careers as music teachers, freelancers, and performers, in which they depend on a set of entrepreneurial skills to network, recognize opportunities, and maintain a livelihood (Bennett, 2016; Breivik et al., 2015; Coulson, 2012). Over 42 percent of surveyed musicians in Germany claim their career is made possible through self-employment (Dangel & Piorkowsky, 2006); musicians in Australia on average held more than one music industry role and often “don ́t know any musicians who do only one thing” (Bennett, 2007); over 90 percent of the studied UK musicians hold a secondary occupation; and in Denmark, 6 percent of music graduates worked solely in performance, with half of them working in both performance and teaching (Traasdahl, 1996). Being selfemployed and generating their own work means that individuals have to use various skills beyond the scope of the “conservatory model” in higher music education (HME), where the main focus of training has been teaching “music through instrumental skills” (Orning, 2017, p. 3). This model is “narrow and extremely focused on the skills of performing.” (Cutietta, 2010, p. 13). This may be considered a problem if music graduates often maintain portfolio careers consisting of a patchwork of professional roles and become “enforced entrepreneurs” upon graduation (Bennett & Bridgstock, 2015, p. 263). Toscher: The Skills and Knowledge Gap 3 Arts Entrepreneurship Education Since “most artists find themselves entrepreneurs by default immediately [when] they begin searching for work” (Bennett, 2009, p. 323), it may be understandable why the “increasing importance of professional development is one of the most dynamic trends emerging in the arts within higher education. Publicly funded institutions in particular are increasingly relying on entrepreneurship as a means to prepare students for musical careers” (Beckman, 2005, p. 13). Beckman first wrote about this trend in 2005 and later conducted a study which mapped at least 37 U.S. higher education institutions offering arts entrepreneurship education (Beckman, 2007). Integration of arts entrepreneurship in the U.S. has increased since then: In 2016, Essig and Guevara (2016) mapped 372 offerings by 168 institutions in the U.S. Arts entrepreneurship education is also offered in countries outside of the U.S., such as Australia, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, and the UK (Brandenburg, Roosen & Veenstra, 2016; Pollard & Wilson, 2013; Thom, 2017; Toscher & Bjørnø, 2019; Watne & Nymoen, 2017). Despite this, there is no consensus on what an arts entrepreneurship offering is and which specific knowledge and skills it teaches. In 2005, Beckman studied musical entrepreneurship in HME and wrote that they could not find “consensus on how to approach entrepreneurship curricula this environment” (p. 13). Eight years later, White (2013) noted there were still “no formally recognized outcomes for arts entrepreneurship by an accreditation organization” in the U.S. (p. 35). This could be because it is a “transdiscipline,” as Essig and Guevara (2016) describe it; or it could be, because arts entrepreneurship has been specific to the economic, cultural, and educational contexts in which it is taught, a contextual approach which has been advocated for by Beckman (2007). In either case, it may appear that educational institutions have implemented arts entrepreneurship education in response to their interpretation that some general level of entrepreneurial skills are needed for their students ́ careers, yet what these specific entrepreneurial skills are is the subject of continuous inquiry. Even in the broader field of entrepreneurship education there are a variety of curricular offerings with “shifting definition, pedagogical approaches and varying emphasis on theory over practice” (p. 8, Lackeus, 2015). In their paper Entrepreneurship in Education: What, Why, When, How, Lackeus defined entrepreneurial competencies as “knowledge, skills and attitudes that affect the willingness and ability to perform the entrepreneurial job of new value creation” (p. 12). The main goal of most such education is for students to develop a level of these knowledge, skills, and/or attitudes, whether in an offering which is “about, for, or through entrepreneurship” (p. 10). Lackeus then theoretically articulated these specific skills and knowledge and how they relate to a more generalized notion of entrepreneurial skills and knowledge, but empirical data supporting this relation is lacking. IJEA Vol. 21 No. 10 http://www.ijea.org/v21n10/ 4 Empirical research has contextualized and further defined these entrepreneurial skills and knowledge alongside the educational and cultural contexts in which arts entrepreneurship is being offered. In the Netherlands, Brandenburg et al. (2016) determined the “six most essential entrepreneurial skills for Art & Technology students” (p. 25) and evaluated a selection of business modeling methods based on the extent to which they contributed to mastering these skills. Thom (2016) surveyed 208 lecturers of the fine arts (who were also working artists) from 89 higher education institutions in the UK and Germany to rank the 16 most “crucial skills for the entrepreneurial success” (p. 3) of artists. Miller et al. (2017) published a study in the International Journal of Education & the Arts in which 16,317 music performance, music theory, and music education alumni from U.S. higher education institutions rated the perceived professional importance for 16 different categories of skills and knowledge and their perceptions of their acquisition of these skills and knowledge during their music education. They found that: ...the average ratings of importance for business and entrepreneurial skills are quite high across all three majors, with music performance majors rating them significantly higher. This gap between the perceived acquisition of skills and the importance of such skills in the workplace should be a concern for music faculty and administrators. Music students of all major types need increased exposure to business and entrepreneurial skills to be better prepared for the logistic and practical components of work in their field. Trends in the arts economy suggest that since many artists are selfemployed, they need direct instruction in entrepreneurial experiences such as marketing, budgeting, taxes, and strategic planning (Haase & Lautenschläger, 2011). Since we also see that music performance majors are more likely to be self-employed, this is a place where more curriculum reform might aid in the development of music professionals. (p. 11) In a similar study, Skaggs, Frenette, Gaskill & Miller (2017) found music alumni perceived their acquisition of skills were significantly lower than their importance in a similar fashion to Miller et al. (2017), with the biggest gaps being for business and financial skills (-58%) and entrepreneurial skills (-43%). The Need for Further Study While these studies individually inquire into how various entrepreneurial skills are viewed as “essential” (Brandenburg et al., 2016), “crucial” (Thom, 2016), or “important” for artists (Miller et al., 2017) in different cultural, educational, and artistic contexts, they fall short of their potential to provide a more thorough, contextualized exploration of these skills, how they relate to a more generalized notion of entrepreneurial skills, and how arts entrepreneurship Toscher: The Skills and Knowledge Gap 5 education is related to their acquisition. How