Existing Conditions of Choral Music in the American High School

Existing Conditions of Choral Music in the American High School
Author: Muriel Adele Kjerstad
Publisher:
Total Pages: 156
Release: 1940
Genre: Choral singing
ISBN:

Choral music in the American high school has been the victim of a great deal of experimentation in the past while supervisors were seeking its best medium and educators were pondering its place in the curriculum. The high school vocal music department has passed through several periods, each characterized by a particular interest. There were, for instance, periods of hymn singing, lyrical frivolities, oratorio singing, and a recent period when the word a cappella, applied to any chorus or choral composition, became a panacea. Although they were times of poorly balanced music curricula, these eras of specialized interest were not useless, for through them vocal music education has gained the necessary experience from which a well-balanced program of high standards may be built. At the present time there is a need for evaluation of the work being done. It is not the purpose of this thesis to trace historical development of high school choral music, to remedy present ills, or to discuss choral techniques but rather to take stock of the present situation. The study of existing conditions was made by means of a questionnaire which is discussed in full in the second section of this thesis. Previous studies were used as a basis for statements of conditions in the past. Studies made by committees of the Music Supervisors Conference and the Music Teachers National Association, the Bureau of Education of the Department of the Interior, and a few books of authorities in the field have been particularly helpful. A discussion of general trends in the voice class movement in the high school is included because this movement is so closely allied with the future of high school choral music. Recommendations and predictions for the future have been made on the basis of these previous studies, results gleaned from the questionnaire, and the writer's personal experience.

Arts education in public elementary and secondary schools

Arts education in public elementary and secondary schools
Author: Basmat Parsad
Publisher: DIANE Publishing
Total Pages: 85
Release:
Genre:
ISBN: 1428928014

Student access to arts education and the quality of such instruction in the nation's public schools continue to be of concern to policymakers, educators, and families. Specifically, research has focused on questions such as: To what extent do students receive instruction in the arts? Under what conditions is this instruction provided? What is the profile of arts education instructors? (Ruppert and Nelson 2006). This study is the third of its kind to be conducted by the National Center for Education Statistics (nces) in the Institute of Education Sciences (ies), U.S. Department of Education, to provide national data that inform these issues. The first study was conducted in the 1994-95 school year to provide baseline data on public schools' approaches to arts education. The second study was conducted during the 1999-2000 school year to provide broader coverage of arts education issues by collecting the first national data on educational backgrounds, professional development activities, teaching loads, and instructional practices of elementary school teachers--self-contained classroom teachers, music specialists, and visual arts specialists. To update the information from a decade ago, Congress requested that the U.S. Department of Education's Office of Innovation and Improvement (oii) and nces conduct a new study that would borrow from and build on the previous studies. This study examines many of the issues from the previous studies, including the extent to which students received instruction in the arts; the facilities and resources available for arts education instruction; and the preparation, work environments, and instructional practices of music and visual arts specialists and non-arts classroom teachers. This study also addresses emerging issues such as the availability of curriculum-based arts education activities outside of regular school hours and the presence of school-community partnerships in the arts. In addition, the current study provides broader coverage of arts education instructors by including two new surveys for secondary music and visual arts specialists. Selected indicators on arts education in public elementary and secondary schools are organized into four sections, one for each arts education subject area--music, visual arts, dance, and drama/theatre. Using its Fast Response Survey System (frss), nces conducted the surveys during the 2009-10 school year, with the two school surveys and the collection of sampling lists for the teacher surveys starting in fall 2009. frss is a survey system designed to collect small amounts of issue-oriented data from a nationally representative sample of districts, schools, or teachers with minimal burden on respondents and within a relatively short period of time. The findings in this report have been chosen to demonstrate the range of information available from the frss study rather than to discuss all of the observed differences; they are not meant to emphasize any particular issue. The findings are based on self-reported data from public school principals and teachers. Where relevant, national findings are broken out by the poverty concentration at the school, measured as the percent of students eligible for free or reduced-price lunch. Appended are: (1) Technical Notes; and (2) Standard Errors for Text Tables and Figures. (Contains 63 tables, 27 figures and 16 footnotes.) [For "Supplemental Tables to the nces Report. Arts Education in Public Elementary and Secondary Schools: 1999-2000 and 2009-10 (nces 2012-014)," see ed530716.].