Record Details

Toward musical independence: metacognitive strategies employed by young choristers engaged in notational reading tasks

DSpace at University of Victoria

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Creator Nolet, Marlene Jennifer
 
Date 2007-12-17T17:58:33Z
2007-12-17T17:58:33Z
2007
2007-12-17T17:58:33Z
 
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1828/277
 
Description The purpose of the study was to explore metacognitive strategy usage in young choristers engaged in notational literacy tasks. Constructivist approaches encouraging metacognition are used in many subject areas, but have not been studied within a music context. Music-specific strategies (Killian & Henry, 2005) and metacognitive self-regulatory strategies (Zimmerman & Pons, 1986) were sought to learn how students become musically independent.
Ten extra-curricular honour choir participants were studied using a collective case design. Participants completed a background questionnaire, a notational reading session, a performance of the piece studied in the reading session, and an interview describing their learning, which was recorded, analysed and transcribed. Processes of analysis included case aggregation, direct interpretation, and triangulation. Results indicate 1) learning is an individual process, 2) all students used strategies deliberately, though none evaluated the effectiveness of their choices, 3) students using the most strategies achieved the highest accuracy, and 4) students seemed to enjoy and benefit from discussing metacognitive processes.
 
Language English
en
 
Rights Available to the World Wide Web
 
Subject Metacognition
Music Literacy
Strategies
Self-regulation
Choir
Constructivism
UVic Subject Index::Humanities and Social Sciences::Education::Music--Instruction and study
 
Title Toward musical independence: metacognitive strategies employed by young choristers engaged in notational reading tasks
 
Type Thesis
 
Contributor Kennedy, Mary