- Home
- ACADEMIC
- Music & Sound Studies
- Music and Sound Studies - Other
- Seeking the Significance of Music Education
This product is usually dispatched within 3 days
- Delivery and returns info
-
Free CA delivery on orders $40 or over
You must sign in to add this item to your wishlist. Please sign in or create an account
Description
Noted music educator Bennett Reimer has selected 24 of his previously published articles from a variety of professional journals spanning the past 50 years. During that time, he's tackled:
-generating core values for the field of music education;
-the core in larger societal and educational contexts;
-what to teach and how to teach it effectively;
-how we need to educate our teachers;
-the role of research in our profession; and
-how to improve our future status.
Reimer precedes each essay with background reflections and his position, both professional and personal, on effectively addressing the issue at hand. The opening "Letter to the Reader" presents a valuable overview based on his deeply grounded viewpoint. The entire music education profession will benefit from Reimer's perspective on past, present, and future concerns central to the functioning of music education in Seeking the Significance of Music Education: Essays and Reflections.
Table of Contents
Part 2 Establishing Core Values
Chapter 3 What Music Cannot Do
Chapter 4 Essential and Nonessential Characteristics of Aesthetic Education
Chapter 5 The Experience of Profundity in Music
Chapter 6 Should There Be a Universal Philosophy of Music Education
Chapter 7 Once More with Feeling
Part 8 The Core in Larger Contexts
Chapter 9 Selfness and Otherness in Experiencing Music of Foreign Cultures
Chapter 10 Gender, Feminism, and Aesthetic Education: Discourses of Inclusion and Empowerment
Chapter 11 Research and Justification in Arts Education: An Ill-Fated Romance
Chapter 12 Artistic Creativity, Ethics, and the Authentic Self
Part 13 Part II: Achieving Our Values
Part 14 What and How to Teach
Chapter 15 Choosing Art for Education: Criteria for Quality
Chapter 16 What Is Performing with Understanding?
Chapter 17 Merely Listening
Chapter 18 Philosophy in the School Music Program
Part 19 Educating Our Teachers
Chapter 20 An Agenda for Music Teacher Education, Part I, Part II
Chapter 21 Avoiding Extremes of Theory and Practice in Music Teacher Education
Chapter 22 Toward a Research-Based Foundation for Doctoral Studies in Music Education
Part 23 The Role of Research
Chapter 24 Toward a More Scientific Approach to Music Education Research
Chapter 25 Qualitative Research and the Post-Positivist Mind
Chapter 26 New Brain Research on Emotion and Feeling: Dramatic Implications for Music Education
Part 27 Part III: Preserving and Enhancing Our Viability
Part 28 Our Values in Service of Our Future
Chapter 29 Is Musical Performance Worth Saving?
Chapter 30 Musical Disenchantment and Reenchantment: The Challenge for Music Education
Chapter 31 Music Education for Cultural Empowerment
Chapter 32 The Way It Will Be
Product details
Published | Jun 16 2009 |
---|---|
Format | Paperback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 418 |
ISBN | 9781607092360 |
Imprint | R&L Education |
Dimensions | 231 x 156 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
-
This fascinating and exhaustive set of essays confirms Bennett Reimer not only as an inspirational thinker and educator, but as a philosopher of deep humanity whose clarity of thought and expression are equally matched by his breadth of vision, humour, and delight in finely honed language. If you care about or are involved in educating through music, not only in the USA, but worldwide, then this book is essential reading.
George Odam, head of research and staff development, Guildhall School of Music & Drama, UK
-
The enduring legacy of Bennett Reimer is that, for over 50 years, he has been able to challenge us to think much more deeply about the profession we proudly call music education. In this collection of essays, the reader is again summoned by Reimer's wise, empathetic, and learned mind as he weaves a brilliant intellectual tapestry that both celebrates and illuminates the role and function of music in our lives, and provides a profoundly eloquent foundation for a practical philosophy for music education. This intellectual memoir is endlessly thought-provoking and will live for generations as one of our discipline's finest achievements.
Gary McPherson, Marilyn Pflederer Zimmerman Endowed Chair in Music Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
-
It is often difficult to find among scholars in education individuals whose ideas are as deep as they are broad. In Bennett Reimer we have such an individual. The twenty-four essays that constitute this book touch many of the central questions one can raise about music and its place in education. To be able to articulate so clearly what these issues are and how they might be approached is a real achievement, one that Professor Reimer has attained. This book will be an invaluable resource for those preparing to teach in the arts. I recommend it with considerable enthusiasm.
Elliot W. Eisner, Lee Jacks Professor Emeritus and Professor Emeritus of Art, Stanford University
-
The entire music education profession will benefit from Reimer's perspective on past, present, and future concerns central to the functioning of music education in Seeking the Significance of Music Education: Essays and Reflections .
National Association for Music Education
-
I have known Bennett Reimer and admired his work for a long time. Seeking the Significance of Music Education is a very special publication. Essays written over a fifty-year timespan are now reprinted (as originally published) along with reflectionsfrom a present-day vantage point. As he puts it: 'This book is a kind of intellectual memoir of a life spent grappling with intractable questions relating to music education.' The essays are organized into three parts: Our Values as a School Subject (generating core values; core values in larger contexts); Achieving Our Values (what and how to teach; educating our teachers; the role of research); and Preserving and Enhancing Our Viability (our values in service of our future). So much has happened in theintervening years between the time the essays were written and the present. New technologies have radically altered our means for making and disseminating music. The arts (including music) have become highly politicized. Previous distinctions between 'high' and 'popular' music have been erased, and the image of the artist has changed. Reimer addresses the consequent issues confronting those who would teach music. Indeed, the issues are those that need to be addressed by all art educators. This is an inva
Jerome J. Hausman
-
I have known Bennett Reimer and admired his work for a long time. Seeking the Significance of Music Education is a very special publication. Essays written over a fifty-year timespan are now reprinted (as originally published) along with reflections from a present-day vantage point. As he puts it: 'This book is a kind of intellectual memoir of a life spent grappling with intractable questions relating to music education.' The essays are organized into three parts: Our Values as a School Subject (generating core values; core values in larger contexts); Achieving Our Values (what and how to teach; educating our teachers; the role of research); and Preserving and Enhancing Our Viability (our values in service of our future). So much has happened in the intervening years between the time the essays were written and the present. New technologies have radically altered our means for making and disseminating music. The arts (including music) have become highly politicized. Previous distinctions between 'high' and 'popular' music have been erased, and the image of the artist has changed. Reimer addresses the consequent issues confronting those who would teach music. Indeed, the issues are those that need to be addressed by all art educators. This is an invaluable book for all those who would want to teach art. Reimer is passionate, clear, and convincing in making the case for education in all of the arts.
Jerome J. Hausman