758 resultados para Teaching of music
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Aim: To determine whether the use of an online or blended learning paradigm has the potential to enhance the teaching of clinical skills in undergraduate nursing.
Background: The need to adequately support and develop students in clinical skills is now arguably more important than previously considered due to reductions in practice opportunities. Online and blended teaching methods are being developed to try and meet this requirement, but knowledge about their effectiveness in teaching clinical skills is limited.
Design: Mixed methods systematic review, which follows the Joanna Briggs Institute User guide version 5.
Data Sources: Computerized searches of five databases were undertaken for the period 1995-August 2013.
Review Methods: Critical appraisal and data extraction were undertaken using Joanna Briggs Institute tools for experimental/observational studies and interpretative and critical research. A narrative synthesis was used to report results.
Results: Nineteen published papers were identified. Seventeen papers reported on online approaches and only two papers reported on a blended approach. The synthesis of findings focused on the following four areas: performance/clinical skill, knowledge, self-efficacy/clinical confidence and user experience/satisfaction. The e-learning interventions used varied throughout all the studies.
Conclusion: The available evidence suggests that online learning for teaching clinical skills is no less effective than traditional means. Highlighted by this review is the lack of available evidence on the implementation of a blended learning approach to teaching clinical skills in undergraduate nurse education. Further research is required to assess the effectiveness of this teaching methodology.
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We live in a richly structured auditory environment. From the sounds of cars charging towards us on the street to the sounds of music filling a dancehall, sounds like these are generally seen as being instances of things we hear but can also be understood as opportunities for action. In some circumstances, the sound of a car approaching towards us can provide critical information for the avoidance of harm. In the context of a concert venue, sociocultural practices like music can equally afford coordinated activities of movement, such as dancing or music making. Despite how evident the behavioral effects of sound are in our everyday experience, they have been sparsely accounted for within the field of psychology. Instead, most theories of auditory perception have been more concerned with understanding how sounds are passively processed and represented or how they convey information of world, neglecting how this information can be used for anything. Here, we argue against these previous rationalizations, suggesting instead that information is instantiated through use and, therefore, is an emergent effect of a perceiver’s interaction with their environment. Drawing on theory from psychology, philosophy and anthropology, we contend that by thinking of sounds as materials, theorists and researchers alike can get to grips with the vast array of auditory affordances that we purposefully bring into use when interacting with the environment.
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This chapter focuses on the relationship between improvisation and indeterminacy. We discuss the two practices by referring to play theory and game studies and situate it in recent network music performance. We will develop a parallel with game theory in which indeterminacy is seen as a way of articulating situations where structural decisions are left to the discernment of the performers and discuss improvisation as a method of play. The improvisation-indeterminacy relationship is discussed in the context of network music performance, which employs digital networks in the exchange of data between performers and hence relies on topological structures with varying degrees of openness and flexibility. Artists such as Max Neuhaus and The League of Automatic Music Composers initiated the development of a multitude of practices and technologies exploring the network as an environment for music making. Even though the technologies behind “the network” have shifted dramatically since Neuhaus’ use of radio in the 1960’s, a preoccupation with distribution and sharing of artistic agency has remained at the centre of networked practices. Gollo Föllmer, after undertaking an extensive review of network music initiatives, produced a typology that comprises categories as diverse as remix lists, sound toys, real/virtual space installations and network performances. For Föllmer, “the term ‘Net music’ comprises all formal and stylistic kinds of music upon which the specifics of electronic networks leave considerable traces, whereby the electronic networks strongly influence the process of musical production, the musical aesthetic, or the way music is received” (2005: 185).
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A specialist entry into the SAGE Encyclopedia on 'musicking'
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This paper explores a recent, broadly 'electroacoustic', fixed medium composition by Tullis Rennie, which uses his background in ethnographic fieldwork to explore (in this case through auto-ethnography) modes of listening, and the role of technologies in mediating this listening. Muscle Memory: A conversation about jazz, with Graham South (trumpet) (2014) begins to answer questions about how one work can comment on and analyse or critique another through its own agency as music, bringing composition and ethnography together in fruitful collision, and illuminating the human capacity to manipulate and be manipulated by musical activity. The paper uses the piece to test the extent to which four functions, identified by Simon Frith (1987. Towards an aesthetic of popular music. In R. Leppert & S. McClary (Eds.), Music and society (pp. 133-49). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press) as crucial to the meaningfulness of popular music may, in the context of ubiquitously technologised music, have broader application than he originally intended.
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This paper reports on a research project designed to discover what schools are teaching in Religious Education in Northern Ireland and what procedures are in place to maintain standards in the delivery of the subject. A search through literature shows that little research has been carried out to determine what is being taught in Religious Education in Northern Ireland. It also indicates that there are very weak systems of control to measure the effectiveness or quality of what is delivered. A survey of the websites of all Post-Primary schools in the region was used to provide some answers to the basic question of what is being taught in RE. Using content and discourse analysis of these alongside supporting documentary sources (textbooks and exam specifications), it is possible to get a clearer picture of how the Northern Ireland Core Syllabus for Religious Education and any additional curricular elements are delivered in schools. The findings show that a significant minority of schools do not publicly articulate what pupils do in religious education. In situations where the content of religious education is made clear, some definite trends are evident. Despite the existence of a statutory core syllabus, there is significant variation in what is taught in schools. The content is most divergent from the syllabus in relation to the teaching of World Religions at Key Stage 3 and at Key Stage 4 whole elements of the syllabus are neglected due to limited conformity between the syllabus and exam specifications. These results raise important questions about the systems of regulation and control of the subject in the region. In law the subject is exempt from formal inspection by the local inspection authority; instead, a form of inspection is allowed for by the Christian churches who design the syllabus, but it is a process that is either entirely neglected or entirely unreported in situations where it does occur. It is argued that these findings raise questions of more general concern for this and other regions in Europe where the teaching of religious education is largely unregulated. For example, to what extent should states take an interest in what is taught in religious education, how it is delivered, what values it promotes and how standards of teaching and learning in the subject are upheld?
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Tanpura string vibrations have been investigated previously using numerical models based on energy conserving schemes derived from a Hamiltonian description in one-dimensional form. Such time-domain models have the property that, for the lossless case, the numerical Hamiltonian (representing total energy of the system) can be proven to be constant from one time step
to the next, irrespective of any of the system parameters; in practice the Hamiltonian can be shown to be conserved within machine precision. Models of this kind can reproduce a jvari effect, which results from the bridge-string interaction. However the one-dimensional formulation has recently been shown to fail to replicate the jvaris strong dependence on the thread placement. As a first step towards simulations which accurately emulate this sensitivity to the thread placement, a twodimensional model is proposed, incorporating coupling of controllable level between the two string polarisations at the string termination opposite from the barrier. In addition, a friction force acting when the string slides across the bridge in horizontal direction is introduced, thus effecting a further damping mechanism. In this preliminary study, the string is terminated at the position of the thread. As in the one-dimensional model, an implicit scheme has to be used to solve the system, employing Newton's method to calculate the updated positions and momentums of each string segment. The two-dimensional model is proven to be energy conserving when the loss parameters are set to zero, irrespective of the coupling constant. Both frequency-dependent and independent losses are then added to the string, so that the model can be compared to analogous instruments. The influence of coupling and the bridge friction are investigated.
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A presente investigação teve como objectivo aplicar, em contexto experimental, alguns conceitos e técnicas da Teoria do Movimento de Rudolf Laban numa acção de formação em regência e avaliar os respectivos efeitos nas competências gestuais dos regentes nela participantes. O estudo teve como base teórica o principio de que a gestualidade do regente é uma “manifestação exterior de impulsos interiores…” (Laban, 1978:32) e que a música, na sua essência, é uma “forma simbólica do sentimento humano”, “um movimento sonoro”, “… um análogo da vida emotiva”. (Susanne Langer, 1980:28) Com a adopção destes pressupostos procurou dar-se coerência às diferentes componentes envolvidas na problemática desta investigação. A parte experimental do estudo teve quatro momentos distintos. No primeiro, foi realizada uma gravação-vídeo para documentar os desempenhos dos estagiários antes da realização das formações (gravação pre-test). No segundo momento, os estagiários tiveram ocasião de frequentar um curso de Movimento Laban ministrado por um especialista nesta matéria, convidado para o efeito. Esta acção de formação terminou com uma gravação-vídeo, efectuada nas mesmas condições técnicas e programáticas da anterior (gravação post-test). Em terceiro lugar, realizou-se, sob orientação do autor do presente estudo, uma segunda acção de formação com o objectivo de plasmar os conceitos e técnicas de Laban na gestualidade específica da regência. Como corolário desta formação, foi realizado o último registo-vídeo (gravação repost-test). Estas gravações foram posteriormente editadas sem alterações técnicas e de conteúdo. Os dados, nelas constantes, foram analisados e avaliados por dois especialistas em regência, a partir de questionários previamente concebidos e fornecidos para o efeito. Após leitura dos pareceres dos especialistas expressos nesses questionários, o autor do presente estudo concluiu que a aplicação dos princípios e técnicas de Laban ao ensino da regência podem contribuir para promover, extensivamente, as competências gestuais dos regentes, tanto no plano da sua funcionalidade, como na sua dimensão expressiva.
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A expressão “Piano Funcional” designa a instrução, em grupo reduzido, em diversas competências funcionais – não incluídas no ensino tradicional europeu, mais orientado para a execução virtuosista. O estudo funcional do piano activa no estudante processos de relacionamento, síntese e generalização sobre diversos aspectos da actividade musical, contribuindo para uma consciência aprofundada da linguagem e alimentando a flexibilidade e autonomia dos educandos. O objectivo do Piano Funcional é o de permitir a aquisição de uma funcionalidade musical plena, através da apropriação e controlo da linguagem musical. O objectivo do presente trabalho é o de propor um Modelo Generativo de Piano Funcional. O modelo generativo proposto parte de um levantamento e análise crítica das dinâmicas que limitam a eficácia do sistema de ensino, nomeadamente: a predominância da descodificação simbólica em detrimento da oralidade e do movimento, o favorecimento do mecanicismo e a valorização excessiva da prática interpretativa. Tais dinâmicas conduzem frequentemente ao sacrifício das competências criativas na formação dos músicos. Propõe-se assim a adopção de um grupo de “novos paradigmas”, tais como: a promoção de valores funcionais; a integração de competências, e a (re)valorização do som, da criatividade, da audição e da sensorialidade como motores das aquisições musicais do aluno. O modelo articula três processos generativos, cada um deles agrupando experiências nos domínios da (i) leitura, (ii) harmonia e (iii) experimentação. O modelo de Piano Funcional é generativo, também, porque promove uma aprendizagem como construção pessoal e criativa. Adicionalmente, realizou-se um trabalho empírico que consistiu na aplicação de conceitos de Piano Funcional na aprendizagem pianística de três sujeitos, ao longo de seis meses. O objectivo deste trabalho empírico foi o de desenvolver actividades que ilustram o âmbito do Piano Funcional e o de aferir a aplicabilidade pedagógica do modelo proposto.
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O presente trabalho é o resultado duma investigação heurística sobre os efeitos do estudo da Técnica Alexander (TA) na prática e no ensino da flauta. Submeti-me a uma centena de aulas de Técnica Alexander e procedi a uma análise reflexiva da minha aprendizagem e prática individual e pedagógica, registando a sua evolução através da progressiva incorporação dos princípios e metodologias daquela técnica. A primeira parte descreve os princípios e procedimentos da TA enquadrando-a na problemática das relações entre conhecimento tácito e explícito, nos processos de controlo motor voluntário e involuntário, e na eficácia e eficiência dos automatismos neuromusculares. A segunda parte constitui a descrição e análise do processo transformador catalisado pelo estudo da TA: modificações na coordenação muscular; na técnica respiratória; no empunhar da flauta e na preparação para a emissão da primeira nota, e na relação entre o equilíbrio do instrumento e o movimento dos dedos. Vários procedimentos e exercícios desenvolvidos para a resolução de problemas pessoais são apresentados justificando a sua eficácia. A TA não proporciona apenas alterações na coordenação muscular mas pode modificar os processos mentais. Por isso alguns princípios para uma organização eficiente da prática são discutidos e concretizados nalguns exercícios que promovem maior variabilidade, alternância entre análise e integração e clareza na concepção do gesto técnico-musical. Por último, a evolução da minha abordagem pedagógica, incorporando procedimentos inspirados na TA e desenvolvidos ao longo da investigação são ilustrados com alguns alunos. A tese argumenta que a TA pode desempenhar um papel fundamental na melhoria do desempenho dum músico e revela-se uma ferramenta pedagógica que merece ser explorada mais sistematicamente num ensino mais baseado numa experimentação guiada que promova uma maior autoconsciência dos processos neuromusculares do que na instrução prescritiva e explícita.
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Historical time and chronological sequence are usually conveyed to pupils via the presentation of semantic information on printed worksheets, events being rote-memorised according to date. We explored the use of virtual environments in which successive historical events were depicted as “places” in time–space, encountered sequentially in a fly-through. Testing was via “Which came first, X or Y?” questions and picture-ordering. University undergraduates experiencing the history of an imaginary planet performed better after a VE than after viewing a “washing line” of sequential images, or captions alone, especially for items in intermediate list positions. However, secondary children 11–14 years remembered no more about successive events in feudal England when they were presented virtually compared with either paper picture or 2-D computer graphic conditions. Primary children 7–9 years learned more about historical sequence after studying a series of paper images, compared with either VE or computer graphic conditions, remembering more in early/intermediate list positions. Reasons for the discrepant results are discussed and future possible uses of VEs in the teaching of chronology assessed. Keywords: timeline, chronographics
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Although mindfulness-based interventions have been successfully used with older adults, there have been few interventions that, (a) are created specifically for older adults, (b) are delivered in the community, and (c) aim to promote ‘successful aging’ (rather than just treating dysfunction/disorder). To this end, the current study piloted a brief ‘positive aging’ intervention, comprising two 150 minute sessions, with six female older adults living in the community. Data were gathered through focus groups that were interwoven throughout the intervention. Using thematic analysis, four main themes were identified: (a) aging as a mixed blessing; (b) understanding mindfulness; (c) the challenges of mindfulness; and (d) the benefits of mindfulness. Overall, the intervention was successful in introducing participants to mindfulness and potentially forming the basis of a longer term practice. However, the study also highlighted important points on the challenges of practising mindfulness, in relation to which the paper makes recommendations pertaining to the teaching of mindfulness with older adults.
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Tese de doutoramento, Informática (Engenharia Informática), Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Ciências, 2015
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Tese de doutoramento, Educação (Formação de Professores), Universidade de Lisboa, Instituto de Educação, 2015