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Showing 121 to 135 of 191 results Save | Export
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Thomas, Ronald B. – Music Educators Journal, 1991
Discusses the Manhattanville Music Curriculum Project's concentration on the purpose, substance, and means of music instruction. Describes improvisation as the dominant means for teaching concepts, knowing how music works, and knowing how to make musical sense. Urges that the same goals of aural acuity, creative thought, and musical facility are…
Descriptors: Creativity, Curriculum Development, Improvisation, Music Education
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Doyle, Charlotte L. – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 1973
The essence of what the author had to say in this paper was that creative artists frequently use words like honesty and truth in describing themselves at work, that honesty and truth are at the core of what they are doing in art. (Author/RK)
Descriptors: Artists, Creativity, Honesty, Individual Characteristics
Isaacs, Ann F. – Creative Child and Adult Quarterly, 1979
The paper considers some issues and events in the life of a music composer, and through review of the lives of 57 composers, attempts to discover constructive and destructive variables. (PHR)
Descriptors: Achievement, Creativity, Failure, History
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Cheyette, Irving – Journal of Creative Behavior, 1977
The author considers the manner in which children develop awareness of varieties of sound, pitch, and rhythm, and provides an outline for use in a class project in musical composition. (IM)
Descriptors: Creativity, Elementary Secondary Education, Exceptional Child Education, Musical Composition
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Jordan, Helen Bohn – Music Educators Journal, 1984
John Heiss, a teacher and composer, describes how he came to write "Songs of Nature," a song cycle with text by nineteenth-century American poets. Heiss believes that, though a composer must know his craft, there should be room for intuition and the emotions in the creative process. (CS)
Descriptors: Creativity, Interviews, Music, Music Teachers
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Cooper, Shelly – General Music Today, 2005
The article presents lessons for teaching composition in elementary general music classes. Students will be more successful in composition activities if a teacher allows time for multiple encounters with composition activities, encourages student experimentation, guides the class through composition experiences, provides constant encouragement,…
Descriptors: Music Education, Elementary School Students, Musical Composition, Classroom Techniques
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Gouzouasis, Peter – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2005
In many ways, culture is rooted in the arts. While one may argue that "public policy debates are connected to information technology" (Snyder, et. al., 1999), public policies are also profoundly influenced by the sounds and images that form the content of all aspects of broadcast and print media. Contrary to an information technologist's…
Descriptors: Music, Information Technology, Creativity, Music Education
Menger, Pierre-Michel – Education and Culture, 1977
Discusses an economic and morphological analysis of the field of contemporary music creation in order to define the three major problems which face governments and local authorities which intervene to support a fairly large number of bodies concerned with the production and/or performance of music and which are unable to finance themselves.…
Descriptors: Concerts, Creativity, Financial Needs, Illustrations
Horlacher, Wes; And Others – SoftSide, 1983
Discusses how microcomputers can aid in higher-level creative processes, enabling students to experience the joy/fulfillment of spontaneous creative expression. "The Magic Melody Box" (Atari) program, in which users choose a rhythm and draw a melody line, is used as an example to illustrate the computer's potential in this area. (JN)
Descriptors: Computer Programs, Creative Development, Creativity, Elementary Secondary Education
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Barrett, Margaret S.; Gromko, Joyce Eastlund – Psychology of Music, 2007
This article reports the findings of a research project that investigated the nature of the teaching and learning process in music composition. Over the period of one semester, the formal interactions in one-on-one study sessions between an eminent composer-teacher and an experienced graduate student-composer were videotaped. Following the…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Graduate Students, Music, Musical Composition
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Mellor, Liz – Music Education Research, 2008
This article investigates computer-based music composition using the CD Rom "Dance eJay" with pupils from a secondary school setting (13-15 years). Three issues are explored: the extent to which participants adopted different strategies during the composition process, how the strategies differed with respect to prior experience of formal…
Descriptors: Creativity, Music Education, Musical Composition, Secondary School Students
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Burns, Mary T. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 1988
Creative musical experiences appropriate to children's cognitive and psychomotor development should begin in kindergarten. Structured creativity through the process of musical composition can be used at grade 4 and above. Lesson plans using Haiku poetry, penatonic scales, rhythmic durations, and melodic contour to create a song are provided. (VW)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Creative Development, Creativity, Elementary Education
Watt, Dan – Popular Computing, 1984
Describes features of five new software programs--Songwriter, Musical Ideas, Musicalc I, Musical Construction Set, Musicland, and Music Designer II--which facilitate musical composition and musical creativity in a variety of ways. Shortcomings are briefly discussed, and sources for further information are given. (MBR)
Descriptors: Computer Graphics, Computer Software, Creativity, Documentation
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O'Grady, Terence J. – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 1980
The author reviews several perspectives on the relationship between the composer and the performer of a musical work. Specifically, he examines the boundaries of that relationship, seeking to define the extent to which the performer may creatively interpret a work without violating the composer's intentions or established musical tradition. (SJL)
Descriptors: Applied Music, Creativity, Interpretive Skills, Literature Reviews
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Campbell, Patricia Shehan – Music Educators Journal, 1991
Discusses the importance of teaching improvisation. Defines improvisation as the spontaneous generation of melody and rhythm without specific preparation or premeditation. Answers reasons for not teaching improvisation. Suggests training the ear, providing models, allowing for imitation, developing performance facility, guaranteeing success, and…
Descriptors: Creativity, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Improvisation
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