The Oxford Handbook of Social Media and Music Learning (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Waldron, Janice L.; Veblen, Kari K.; Horsley, Stephanie
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The Oxford Handbook of Social Media and Music Learning (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Waldron, Janice L.; Veblen, Kari K.; Horsley, Stephanie
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The rapid pace of technological change over the last decade, particularly the rise of social media, has deeply affected the ways in which we interact as individuals, in groups, and among institutions to the point that it is difficult to grasp what it would be like to lose access to this everyday aspect of modern life. The Oxford Handbook of Social Media and Music Learning investigates the ways in which social media is now firmly engrained in all aspects of music education, providing fascinating insights into the ways in which social media, musical participation, and musical learning are…mehr
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- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 656
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. Oktober 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780190660796
- Artikelnr.: 60367801
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 656
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. Oktober 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780190660796
- Artikelnr.: 60367801
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
* Huib Schippers
* Introduction
* Why Should We Care About Social Media?
* Janice L. Waldron, Stephanie Horsley, and Kari K.Veblen
* Part I. Community Identity and Social Media
* 1. Social Media and Theoretical Approaches to Music Learning in
Networked Communities
* Janice L. Waldron
* 2. Envisioning Pedagogical Possibilities of Social Media and Sonic
Participatory Cultures
* Evan S. Tobias
* 3. Application of Affinity Space Characteristics in Music Education
* Jared O'Leary
* 4. Creating Multiple Sites of Engagement for Music Learning
* Jonathan Savage
* Reflections from the Field of New Media and Sociology: Networked
Music Learning
* Somrita Ganchoudhuri and Barry Wellman
* 5. Diaspora, Transnational Networks, and Socially-Mediated Musical
Belonging
* John O'Flynn
* Part II: Convergent Music Making and Social Media
* 6. 21st-Century Implications for Media Literacy and Music Education
* Daniel A. Walzer
* 7. Online Collaboration in Supporting Music Teaching and Learning
* Radio Cremata and Bryan Powell
* 8. Swedish Hip-Hop Youth Association "The Movement" Goes Online
* Alexandra Söderman and Johan Söderman
* 9. The Disquiet Junto as an Online Community of Practice
* Ethan Hein
* Reports From the Field: Genres of Classical Music
* 10. Building a New Social Contract for Community Engagement Through
Music Virtual Hangouts
* Patrick Schmidt
* 11. The Multiple Affordances of Social Media for Classical Composers
* Heidi Partti
* Reports From the Field: Genres of Popular Music
* 12. Confessions of a Facebook Punk or How Not To Do Social Media
* Gareth Dylan Smith
* 13. Learning to Play the Guitar with the Novaxe Online Learning
Platform
* Anne-Marie Burns and Caroline Traube
* Reports From the Field: Supportive Networks
* 14. Connect Resound as a Support for Music Making in Rural England
* Andrew King, Helen M. Prior, and Caroline Waddington-Jones
* 15. "Vini Ansanm" Come Together for Inclusive Community Music
Development in Port Au Prince, Haiti Gertrude Bien-Aime
* Donald DeVito, Hannah Ehrli, and Jamie Schumacher
* Part III: Musical Identity and Social Media
* 16. Feminist Cyber-Artivism, Musicing, and Teaching and Learning
* Marissa Silverman
* 17. A Content Analysis of Creating and Curating a Musical Identity on
Social Media
* Julie Derges Kastner
* 18. Cultivating Meaningful Personal Learning Networks in an Era of
Multimodal and Globalized Music Learning and Education
* Deanna C. C. Peluso
* 19. Musical (Dis)Empowerment in the Digital Age?
* Ketil Thorgersen
* 20. Learning by Lip-Synching
* Patricia G. Lange
* 21. Fanception and Musical Fan Activity on YouTube
* Christopher Cayari
* Reflections from the Field of Communications and Anthropology:
* Learning to Dream and Dreaming to Learn
* Patricia G. Lange
* Part IV: Continuity and Change in Teaching and Learning Through
Social Media
* 22. Social and Informational Affordances of Social Media in Music
Learning and Teaching
* Anabel Quan-Haase
* 23. "Tradition," Vernacularism, and Learning to be a Folk Musician
with Social Media
* Simon Keegan-Phipps and Lucy Wright
* 24. Ethnomusicology, Music Education, and the Power and Limitations
of Social Media
* David G. Hebert and Sean Williams
* 25. New Materiality and Young People's Connectedness Across Online
and Offline Life Spaces
* Susan O'Neill
* Reflections from the Field of Communications:
* Weird Materiality
* Jeremy Hunsinger
* 26. Learning from Japanese Vocaloid Hatsune Miku
* Matthew D. Thibeault and Koji Matsunobu
* 27. Children's Musical Play in a Digital Era
* Kari K. Veblen and Nathan B. Kruse
* Part V: Provocations and Social Media
* 28. Social Media, Social Justice, and Music Learning
* Joseph Abramo
* 29. Can the Disabled Musician Sing? Songs, Stories, and Identities of
Disabled Persons In/Through/With Social Media
* adam patrick bell and Jesse Rathgeber
* 30. Nurturing Vulnerability to Develop Pedagogical Change Through
MOOC Participation and Public Blogging
* James Humberstone, Catherine Zhao, and Danny Liu
* 31. The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly of Social Media in Music
Education
* Vincent C. Bates and Daniel J. Shevock
* 32. Educating Musical Prosumers for the Economic Conditions of the
21st Century
* Lauri Väkavä
* 33. Creativity and Commerce in Social Media, Digital Technology and
Music Education
* David Lines
* Afterword
* Janice L. Waldron, Stephanie Horsley, and Kari K. Veblen
* Huib Schippers
* Introduction
* Why Should We Care About Social Media?
* Janice L. Waldron, Stephanie Horsley, and Kari K.Veblen
* Part I. Community Identity and Social Media
* 1. Social Media and Theoretical Approaches to Music Learning in
Networked Communities
* Janice L. Waldron
* 2. Envisioning Pedagogical Possibilities of Social Media and Sonic
Participatory Cultures
* Evan S. Tobias
* 3. Application of Affinity Space Characteristics in Music Education
* Jared O'Leary
* 4. Creating Multiple Sites of Engagement for Music Learning
* Jonathan Savage
* Reflections from the Field of New Media and Sociology: Networked
Music Learning
* Somrita Ganchoudhuri and Barry Wellman
* 5. Diaspora, Transnational Networks, and Socially-Mediated Musical
Belonging
* John O'Flynn
* Part II: Convergent Music Making and Social Media
* 6. 21st-Century Implications for Media Literacy and Music Education
* Daniel A. Walzer
* 7. Online Collaboration in Supporting Music Teaching and Learning
* Radio Cremata and Bryan Powell
* 8. Swedish Hip-Hop Youth Association "The Movement" Goes Online
* Alexandra Söderman and Johan Söderman
* 9. The Disquiet Junto as an Online Community of Practice
* Ethan Hein
* Reports From the Field: Genres of Classical Music
* 10. Building a New Social Contract for Community Engagement Through
Music Virtual Hangouts
* Patrick Schmidt
* 11. The Multiple Affordances of Social Media for Classical Composers
* Heidi Partti
* Reports From the Field: Genres of Popular Music
* 12. Confessions of a Facebook Punk or How Not To Do Social Media
* Gareth Dylan Smith
* 13. Learning to Play the Guitar with the Novaxe Online Learning
Platform
* Anne-Marie Burns and Caroline Traube
* Reports From the Field: Supportive Networks
* 14. Connect Resound as a Support for Music Making in Rural England
* Andrew King, Helen M. Prior, and Caroline Waddington-Jones
* 15. "Vini Ansanm" Come Together for Inclusive Community Music
Development in Port Au Prince, Haiti Gertrude Bien-Aime
* Donald DeVito, Hannah Ehrli, and Jamie Schumacher
* Part III: Musical Identity and Social Media
* 16. Feminist Cyber-Artivism, Musicing, and Teaching and Learning
* Marissa Silverman
* 17. A Content Analysis of Creating and Curating a Musical Identity on
Social Media
* Julie Derges Kastner
* 18. Cultivating Meaningful Personal Learning Networks in an Era of
Multimodal and Globalized Music Learning and Education
* Deanna C. C. Peluso
* 19. Musical (Dis)Empowerment in the Digital Age?
* Ketil Thorgersen
* 20. Learning by Lip-Synching
* Patricia G. Lange
* 21. Fanception and Musical Fan Activity on YouTube
* Christopher Cayari
* Reflections from the Field of Communications and Anthropology:
* Learning to Dream and Dreaming to Learn
* Patricia G. Lange
* Part IV: Continuity and Change in Teaching and Learning Through
Social Media
* 22. Social and Informational Affordances of Social Media in Music
Learning and Teaching
* Anabel Quan-Haase
* 23. "Tradition," Vernacularism, and Learning to be a Folk Musician
with Social Media
* Simon Keegan-Phipps and Lucy Wright
* 24. Ethnomusicology, Music Education, and the Power and Limitations
of Social Media
* David G. Hebert and Sean Williams
* 25. New Materiality and Young People's Connectedness Across Online
and Offline Life Spaces
* Susan O'Neill
* Reflections from the Field of Communications:
* Weird Materiality
* Jeremy Hunsinger
* 26. Learning from Japanese Vocaloid Hatsune Miku
* Matthew D. Thibeault and Koji Matsunobu
* 27. Children's Musical Play in a Digital Era
* Kari K. Veblen and Nathan B. Kruse
* Part V: Provocations and Social Media
* 28. Social Media, Social Justice, and Music Learning
* Joseph Abramo
* 29. Can the Disabled Musician Sing? Songs, Stories, and Identities of
Disabled Persons In/Through/With Social Media
* adam patrick bell and Jesse Rathgeber
* 30. Nurturing Vulnerability to Develop Pedagogical Change Through
MOOC Participation and Public Blogging
* James Humberstone, Catherine Zhao, and Danny Liu
* 31. The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly of Social Media in Music
Education
* Vincent C. Bates and Daniel J. Shevock
* 32. Educating Musical Prosumers for the Economic Conditions of the
21st Century
* Lauri Väkavä
* 33. Creativity and Commerce in Social Media, Digital Technology and
Music Education
* David Lines
* Afterword
* Janice L. Waldron, Stephanie Horsley, and Kari K. Veblen