Advanced Musical Performance
Investigations in Higher Education Learning
Herausgeber: Papageorgi, Ioulia; Welch, Graham
Advanced Musical Performance
Investigations in Higher Education Learning
Herausgeber: Papageorgi, Ioulia; Welch, Graham
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This book brings together current psychological and educational research on issues related to advanced musical performance learning within higher education contexts. Each of the book's four sections focus on one aspect of music performance and learning: musics in higher education and beyond; musical biographies and musical journeys; performance learning; and developing expertise and professionalism.
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This book brings together current psychological and educational research on issues related to advanced musical performance learning within higher education contexts. Each of the book's four sections focus on one aspect of music performance and learning: musics in higher education and beyond; musical biographies and musical journeys; performance learning; and developing expertise and professionalism.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 404
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. Dezember 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 744g
- ISBN-13: 9781409436898
- ISBN-10: 1409436896
- Artikelnr.: 42053797
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 404
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. Dezember 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 744g
- ISBN-13: 9781409436898
- ISBN-10: 1409436896
- Artikelnr.: 42053797
Ioulia Papageorgi is the Director of the University of Nicosia Teaching and Learning Institute (UNTLI) and an Assistant Professor in the Department of Social Sciences at the University of Nicosia. She is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (FHEA) and a Chartered Psychologist (CPsychol), as well as an Associate Fellow of the British Psychological Society (AFBPsS). She previously held the position of Lecturer and Coordinating Research Officer in the Department of Psychology and Human Development and the Department of Arts and Humanities at the Institute of Education, University of London, and of Associate Lecturer at the Open University (UK). Ioulia has presented her work in many international conferences and seminars and has several publications in a number of peer-reviewed journals and books. Graham Welch holds the Institute of Education, University of London Established Chair of Music Education. He is elected Chair of the internationally based Society for Education, Music and Psychology Research (SEMPRE), Immediate Past President of the International Society for Music Education (ISME) and past Co-Chair of the Research Commission of ISME. Publications number over three hundred and embrace musical development and music education, teacher education, the psychology of music, singing and voice science, and music in special education and disability.
Contents: Foreword; Preface. Part I Musics in Higher Education and Beyond:
Western classical music studies in universities and conservatoires, Harald
Jÿrgensen; Brilliant corners: the development of jazz in higher education,
Tony Whyton; Popular music in higher education, Gareth Dylan Smith; Wha's
like us? A new Scottish conservatoire tradition, Celia Duffy and Peggy
Duesenberry; The epirotic vocal folk polyphony in contemporary Greece:
performance and the involvement of higher education in an oral/aural
tradition, Konstantinos Tsahouridis; Music performance in a 'transitional
era' of education: a case study of folk song performance in China, Yang
Yang. Part II Musical Journeys and Educational Reflections: Concepts of
ideal musicians and teachers: ideal selves and possible selves, Andrea
Creech and Ioulia Papageorgi; Music, motivation and competence-acquisition
across genres, Rachel Swindells and Christophe de Bézenac; Creativity and
the institutional mindset, Elizabeth Haddon and John Potter; Through a
glass, vividly: shedding light on the extraordinary musical journeys of
some children on the autism spectrum, Adam Ockelford. Part III Performance
Learning: How do musicians develop their learning about performance?,
Ioulia Papageorgi and Graham Welch; Spaces of learning and the place of the
conservatoire in Scottish music, Frances Morton; Pitch perception and
absolute pitch in advanced performers, Desmond Sergeant and Maria Vraka;
Learning free improvisation in education, Simon Rose and Raymond MacDonald;
Hidden instrumental and vocal learning in undergraduate university music
education, Elizabeth Haddon; Learning to be a professional singer, Filipa
Martins Baptista Lã; Learning to be an instrumental musician, Terry Clark,
Tania Lisboa and Aaron Williamon. Part IV Developing Expertise and
Professionalism: Developing and maintaining expertise in musical
performance, Ioulia Papageorgi; Developing expertise and professionalism:
health and well-being in perform
Western classical music studies in universities and conservatoires, Harald
Jÿrgensen; Brilliant corners: the development of jazz in higher education,
Tony Whyton; Popular music in higher education, Gareth Dylan Smith; Wha's
like us? A new Scottish conservatoire tradition, Celia Duffy and Peggy
Duesenberry; The epirotic vocal folk polyphony in contemporary Greece:
performance and the involvement of higher education in an oral/aural
tradition, Konstantinos Tsahouridis; Music performance in a 'transitional
era' of education: a case study of folk song performance in China, Yang
Yang. Part II Musical Journeys and Educational Reflections: Concepts of
ideal musicians and teachers: ideal selves and possible selves, Andrea
Creech and Ioulia Papageorgi; Music, motivation and competence-acquisition
across genres, Rachel Swindells and Christophe de Bézenac; Creativity and
the institutional mindset, Elizabeth Haddon and John Potter; Through a
glass, vividly: shedding light on the extraordinary musical journeys of
some children on the autism spectrum, Adam Ockelford. Part III Performance
Learning: How do musicians develop their learning about performance?,
Ioulia Papageorgi and Graham Welch; Spaces of learning and the place of the
conservatoire in Scottish music, Frances Morton; Pitch perception and
absolute pitch in advanced performers, Desmond Sergeant and Maria Vraka;
Learning free improvisation in education, Simon Rose and Raymond MacDonald;
Hidden instrumental and vocal learning in undergraduate university music
education, Elizabeth Haddon; Learning to be a professional singer, Filipa
Martins Baptista Lã; Learning to be an instrumental musician, Terry Clark,
Tania Lisboa and Aaron Williamon. Part IV Developing Expertise and
Professionalism: Developing and maintaining expertise in musical
performance, Ioulia Papageorgi; Developing expertise and professionalism:
health and well-being in perform
Contents: Foreword; Preface. Part I Musics in Higher Education and Beyond:
Western classical music studies in universities and conservatoires, Harald
Jÿrgensen; Brilliant corners: the development of jazz in higher education,
Tony Whyton; Popular music in higher education, Gareth Dylan Smith; Wha's
like us? A new Scottish conservatoire tradition, Celia Duffy and Peggy
Duesenberry; The epirotic vocal folk polyphony in contemporary Greece:
performance and the involvement of higher education in an oral/aural
tradition, Konstantinos Tsahouridis; Music performance in a 'transitional
era' of education: a case study of folk song performance in China, Yang
Yang. Part II Musical Journeys and Educational Reflections: Concepts of
ideal musicians and teachers: ideal selves and possible selves, Andrea
Creech and Ioulia Papageorgi; Music, motivation and competence-acquisition
across genres, Rachel Swindells and Christophe de Bézenac; Creativity and
the institutional mindset, Elizabeth Haddon and John Potter; Through a
glass, vividly: shedding light on the extraordinary musical journeys of
some children on the autism spectrum, Adam Ockelford. Part III Performance
Learning: How do musicians develop their learning about performance?,
Ioulia Papageorgi and Graham Welch; Spaces of learning and the place of the
conservatoire in Scottish music, Frances Morton; Pitch perception and
absolute pitch in advanced performers, Desmond Sergeant and Maria Vraka;
Learning free improvisation in education, Simon Rose and Raymond MacDonald;
Hidden instrumental and vocal learning in undergraduate university music
education, Elizabeth Haddon; Learning to be a professional singer, Filipa
Martins Baptista Lã; Learning to be an instrumental musician, Terry Clark,
Tania Lisboa and Aaron Williamon. Part IV Developing Expertise and
Professionalism: Developing and maintaining expertise in musical
performance, Ioulia Papageorgi; Developing expertise and professionalism:
health and well-being in perform
Western classical music studies in universities and conservatoires, Harald
Jÿrgensen; Brilliant corners: the development of jazz in higher education,
Tony Whyton; Popular music in higher education, Gareth Dylan Smith; Wha's
like us? A new Scottish conservatoire tradition, Celia Duffy and Peggy
Duesenberry; The epirotic vocal folk polyphony in contemporary Greece:
performance and the involvement of higher education in an oral/aural
tradition, Konstantinos Tsahouridis; Music performance in a 'transitional
era' of education: a case study of folk song performance in China, Yang
Yang. Part II Musical Journeys and Educational Reflections: Concepts of
ideal musicians and teachers: ideal selves and possible selves, Andrea
Creech and Ioulia Papageorgi; Music, motivation and competence-acquisition
across genres, Rachel Swindells and Christophe de Bézenac; Creativity and
the institutional mindset, Elizabeth Haddon and John Potter; Through a
glass, vividly: shedding light on the extraordinary musical journeys of
some children on the autism spectrum, Adam Ockelford. Part III Performance
Learning: How do musicians develop their learning about performance?,
Ioulia Papageorgi and Graham Welch; Spaces of learning and the place of the
conservatoire in Scottish music, Frances Morton; Pitch perception and
absolute pitch in advanced performers, Desmond Sergeant and Maria Vraka;
Learning free improvisation in education, Simon Rose and Raymond MacDonald;
Hidden instrumental and vocal learning in undergraduate university music
education, Elizabeth Haddon; Learning to be a professional singer, Filipa
Martins Baptista Lã; Learning to be an instrumental musician, Terry Clark,
Tania Lisboa and Aaron Williamon. Part IV Developing Expertise and
Professionalism: Developing and maintaining expertise in musical
performance, Ioulia Papageorgi; Developing expertise and professionalism:
health and well-being in perform