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  • Valuing Music in Education: A Charles Fowler Reader

    Valuing Music in Education by Resta, Craig;

    A Charles Fowler Reader

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 125.00
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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 3 November 2016

    • ISBN 9780199944361
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages314 pages
    • Size 160x236x22 mm
    • Weight 576 g
    • Language English
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    Short description:

    This book is a collection of articles by the renowned music education scholar and arts education advocate, Charles Fowler (1931-95). Serving as Education Editor at Musical America from 1974-1989, he published numerous articles about music in schools and society. This text is a curated selection of the most cogent articles, along with critical commentary.

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    Long description:

    Noted music education and arts activist Charles Fowler has inspired music educators for more than 60 years. In this reader, editor Craig Resta brings together the most important of Fowler's writings from the journal Musical America for new generations of readers. Here, Fowler speaks to timeless critical advocacy issues from creativity in the classroom, to funding, to reform, to gender and race in music education. The articles are both research-based and practical, and helpful for many of the most important concerns in school-based advocacy and scholarly inquiry today. Resta offers critical commentary with compelling background to these timeless pieces, placing them in a context that clarifies the benefit of their message to music and arts education.

    Fowler's words speak to all who have a stake in music education: students, teachers, parents, administrators, performers, community members, business leaders, arts advocates, scholars, professors, and researchers alike. Valuing Music in Education is ideal for everyone who understands the critical role of music in schools and society.

    Rereading Charles Fowler's balanced insights on music education reminds one of his major contribution on the profession's thinking. Few events, organizations, or personalities escaped his attention for their role in advancing the development of aesthetic sensitivities through creative experiences. He communicated to a wide audience his prescient ideas on the importance of a 'new' or reformed music education for schools and communities.

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    Table of Contents:

    PREFACE
    DEDICATION
    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
    INTRODUCTION
    SECTION ONE: MUSIC PEDAGOGY AND SCHOOLING
    1. National Survey of Musical Performance
    2. Music In Our Schools Day: An Opportunity to Take Stock
    3. The Accountability Dilemma
    4. Arts in the Schools: A Comprehensive View
    5. High Schools of the Arts
    6. Musical Achievement: Good News & Bad
    7. A Look into the Crystal Ball
    8. Music: A Basic Intelligence
    9. The Shameful Neglect of Creativity
    10. Academic Excellence in Teaching the Arts
    11. Evaluation: Pros and Cons
    12. Music in Our Schools: The First 150 Years
    SECTION TWO: ADVOCACY AND ARTS EDUCATION POLICY
    13. Education in the Arts: Getting It All Together
    14. The Role of the National Endowment (for the Arts)
    15. A New Rationale for the Arts in Education
    16. What's Wrong with Music Education?
    17. Funding for Arts Programs: The Total is Not So Bleak
    18. Arts Education: Does the Left Hand Know?
    19. Congress and the Arts: Getting With It
    20. Arts in Basic Education: A Fight for Life?
    21. Arts Policy in the U.S: Do We Have One?
    22. Music for Every Child, Every Child for Music
    23. Arts Education Triple Jeopardy
    SECTION THREE: ARTS, CULTURE, AND COMMUNITY
    24. The Smithsonian: Teaching Our Musical Heritage
    25. Valuing Our Cultural Treasury
    26. The Community School Movement
    27. Senior Citizen Symphony Brings Music to Children
    28. Public Universities: The New Cultural Centers
    29. Reaching Kids (Part I): How Symphonies Do It
    30. Reaching Kids (Part II): How Opera Companies Do It
    31. Whose Culture Should We Teach?
    SECTION FOUR: MUSIC EDUCATION AND PROFESSIONAL REFORM
    32. The Music Educators National Conference (MENC): David Faces New Goliaths
    33. The Tanglewood Symposium Revisited
    34. Music in Our Schools: An Agenda for the Future
    35. Changing Schools Through the Arts
    36. The Lack of Professionalism in Higher Education
    37. The Lack of Professionalism in Higher Education-Continued
    38. Music Educators Meet-But Do They Miss the Point?
    39. Are Teachers of the Arts Good Enough?
    40. Educational Reform: Ferment in the Arts
    41. Teacher Overhaul: Can We Do It?
    SECTION FIVE: DIVERSITY AND PLURALISM IN MUSIC EDUCATION
    42. Poverty: An Ingrained Idea
    43. Sex Bias in the Music Room
    44. Special Treatment for the Gifted
    45. More Arts for the Handicapped
    46. Black Participation at the Kennedy Center: Goals are Set for Cultural Diversity
    47. The Christmas Carol Hassle
    48. Arts by the Handicapped: A National Very Special Arts Festival
    49. Older Americans: A New Resource of Creative Talent
    50. The Many Versus the Few
    INDEX

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