67 resultados para Communicative musicality

em Deakin Research Online - Australia


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Abstract
This paper provides a brief overview of recent literature relating to infant musicality and its basis for effective parent-infant work in music therapy. Two strong trends are revealed: the international breadth of the developing work by music therapists within family-centred contexts of practice, especially work with infants and their parents in the early years; and the use oftheoretical principles of communicative musicality (Malloch &Trevarthen, 2008] combined with knowledge of early musical skills. This focus on musical perception and musical development (Briggs, 1991; Trehub, 2003] provides a rationale as to why musical interaction supported by a qualified music therapist can offer a potential pathway for improved attachment between the parent and infant when therapeutic support is indicated.

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This thesis examines the implementation of the 1984 English syllabus, which is claimed to be communicative. The study was conducted in three government Senior High Schools in Singaraja, northern Bali. The results indicate that the implementation of the Communicative Approach has been constrained by the limited resources, inadequate professional development and the national examination system, the EBTANAS.

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Explores team teaching and communicative language teaching in Japanese schools. The study's first phase uses the ethnographic approach of participant observation. The second phase uses eleven case study interviews to discover the teachers' conceptions of communicative language teaching. Identifies elements of team taught lessons and elucidates the conceptions of communicative language teaching held by a sample of teachers.

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 Objective: This study investigated the relationship between motor performance and social-communicative impairment in children with ADHD-combined type (ADHD-CT). Method: An upper limb Fitts’ aiming task was used as a measure of motor performance and the Social Responsiveness Scale as a measure of social-communicative/autistic impairment in the following groups: ADHD-CT (n = 11) and typically developing (TD) controls (n = 10). Results: Children with ADHD-CT displayed greater variability in their movements, reflected in increased error variance over repeated aiming trials compared with TD controls. Motor performance variability was associated with social-communicative deficits in the ADHD-CT but not in the TD group. Conclusion: Social-communicative impairments further complicate the clinical picture of ADHD-CT; therefore, further research in this area is warranted to ascertain whether a particular pattern of motor disturbance in children with ADHD-CT may be clinically useful in identifying and assessing children with a more complex ADHD presentation. © 2012 SAGE Publications.

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In this evaluation of New Zealand audit going concern standards, we ask what underlying messagescan be found in these professionally-designed standards. To do so, we apply a linguistic taxonomy ofcommunicative acts to the three sets of going concern standards, and 469 speech acts, that have overtime been produced. This taxonomy developed by Bach and Harnish (1979) is based on Austin’s wellknownlinguistic principle of the illocutionary act, which is concerned with the force of a text. Ouranalysis is further informed by our evaluation of the New Zealand socio-political–economic contextand from the results of an interview with one of the standard setters. We conclude that among otherpossible rationales, a lack of courtroom guidance, a defensive posture and a marketing exercise instandard expansion may explain the force of the text that we found. Our results also reveal a professionwhich, in this text at least, situates itself ‘above public debate’, conveying a sense of ‘expertise’ indevised ‘truths’ about the obligations of the auditor and others.