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Teaching Music in the Twenty-First Century Hardcover - 2000 - 2nd Edition
by Choksy, Lois; Abramson, Robert; Gillespie, Avon; Woods, David; York, Frank
- New
- Hardcover
Description
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Details
- Title Teaching Music in the Twenty-First Century
- Author Choksy, Lois; Abramson, Robert; Gillespie, Avon; Woods, David; York, Frank
- Binding Hardcover
- Edition number 2nd
- Edition 2
- Condition New
- Pages 360
- Volumes 1
- Language ENG
- Publisher Pearson, Upper Saddle River
- Date 2000-08-02
- Bookseller's Inventory # Q-0130280275
- ISBN 9780130280275 / 0130280275
- Weight 1.57 lbs (0.71 kg)
- Dimensions 9.5 x 7.2 x 0.9 in (24.13 x 18.29 x 2.29 cm)
- Library of Congress subjects School music - Instruction and study
- Library of Congress Catalog Number 00031368
- Dewey Decimal Code 780.71
From the rear cover
Today's music teachers are in a position to make advances that were not dreamed of in the mid-twentieth century by Jacques-Dalcroze, Carl Orff, Zoltan Kodaly, or those who developed Comprehensive Musicianship. Yet the principles espoused by these innovators offer a vision of music education that the world is only beginning to realize. The MENC National Standards include aspects of music literacy and personal fulfillment these methodologies have advocated for many years: music for all, singing as a basis for musicianship, moving to music, instrumental experience, analytical thinking, listening to music, improvising and composing. The authors have designed this book to help teachers promote musical learning in these areas by making knowledgeable curricular choices among methods.
Special features set this book apart:
- 1. Goals and Objectives and suggested skill hierarchies are given for each approach in four levels--early elementary, upper elementary, middle school-high school, and university.
- 2. Detailed teaching techniques show how to use each method at each level.
- 3. Sample lesson plans include numerous musical examples.
- 4. National Standards are described and discussed.
- 5. Suggestions are given for appropriate use of technology in the study of music.
- 6. The four methods are compared in their approach to creating, moving, singing and playing, musical reading and writing, and performing and listening.
- 7. A brief history of music education in North America relates the acceptance and spread of these four approaches.