The aural skills acquisition process of undergraduate electroacoustic (EA) music majors in the context of a new aural learning method

Thesis (D.M.A.)--Boston University === Electroacoustic (EA) musicians require aural skills that exist beyond tonality and meter; however, specialized ear training courses for EA music are rare in university and college music programs that offer EA studies (EaSt) in their curricula. Since 2005, this...

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Main Author: Tsabary, Eldad
Language:en_US
Published: Boston University 2015
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/12863
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spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-128632019-12-07T03:02:41Z The aural skills acquisition process of undergraduate electroacoustic (EA) music majors in the context of a new aural learning method Tsabary, Eldad Thesis (D.M.A.)--Boston University Electroacoustic (EA) musicians require aural skills that exist beyond tonality and meter; however, specialized ear training courses for EA music are rare in university and college music programs that offer EA studies (EaSt) in their curricula. Since 2005, this researcher has been developing and teaching EA aural training at a Canadian university in that was inspired by concepts from Auditory Scene Analysis (ASA) studies, primarily integration and segregation. In the 2009/10 academic year, the researcher conducted an action study with his intact EA aural training class of 25 first year undergraduate students majoring in EaSt for the purposes of better understanding and improving the students' aural skill acquisition process. and of refining the teaching and learning sequence. The action study was organized into four cycles of observation, critical reflection, and action, and focused on optimizing and autonomizing the skill acquisition process within the large, varied group. Actions were designed in response to critical reflection on emerging problems, evaluations of students' views about the process, their moods and attitudes, and measurements of students' achievements-with specific attention to eight EA-oriented skills and seven tonal and metric skills. Qualitative and quantitative data gathered from questionnaires, in-class surveys and tests, homework, and competence tests provided evidence of skill acquisition, primarily in loudness discrimination, timbral discrimination, tonal awareness, interval discrimination, meter discrimination, and descriptive ability. The most notable emerging problems in the skill acquisition process were related to the group's variety of ability levels, including imbalances in difficulty levels, in students' level of interest in the activities, and in the all-inclusive effectiveness of the training. The main transformational aspects of the action study were autonomization of the skill acquisition process at home through weekly reflective practice reports and developing a cooperative learning environment in the classroom through regular in-class discussion. 2015-08-07T03:38:56Z 2015-08-07T03:38:56Z 2013 2013 Thesis/Dissertation (ALMA)contemp https://hdl.handle.net/2144/12863 en_US Boston University
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language en_US
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description Thesis (D.M.A.)--Boston University === Electroacoustic (EA) musicians require aural skills that exist beyond tonality and meter; however, specialized ear training courses for EA music are rare in university and college music programs that offer EA studies (EaSt) in their curricula. Since 2005, this researcher has been developing and teaching EA aural training at a Canadian university in that was inspired by concepts from Auditory Scene Analysis (ASA) studies, primarily integration and segregation. In the 2009/10 academic year, the researcher conducted an action study with his intact EA aural training class of 25 first year undergraduate students majoring in EaSt for the purposes of better understanding and improving the students' aural skill acquisition process. and of refining the teaching and learning sequence. The action study was organized into four cycles of observation, critical reflection, and action, and focused on optimizing and autonomizing the skill acquisition process within the large, varied group. Actions were designed in response to critical reflection on emerging problems, evaluations of students' views about the process, their moods and attitudes, and measurements of students' achievements-with specific attention to eight EA-oriented skills and seven tonal and metric skills. Qualitative and quantitative data gathered from questionnaires, in-class surveys and tests, homework, and competence tests provided evidence of skill acquisition, primarily in loudness discrimination, timbral discrimination, tonal awareness, interval discrimination, meter discrimination, and descriptive ability. The most notable emerging problems in the skill acquisition process were related to the group's variety of ability levels, including imbalances in difficulty levels, in students' level of interest in the activities, and in the all-inclusive effectiveness of the training. The main transformational aspects of the action study were autonomization of the skill acquisition process at home through weekly reflective practice reports and developing a cooperative learning environment in the classroom through regular in-class discussion.
author Tsabary, Eldad
spellingShingle Tsabary, Eldad
The aural skills acquisition process of undergraduate electroacoustic (EA) music majors in the context of a new aural learning method
author_facet Tsabary, Eldad
author_sort Tsabary, Eldad
title The aural skills acquisition process of undergraduate electroacoustic (EA) music majors in the context of a new aural learning method
title_short The aural skills acquisition process of undergraduate electroacoustic (EA) music majors in the context of a new aural learning method
title_full The aural skills acquisition process of undergraduate electroacoustic (EA) music majors in the context of a new aural learning method
title_fullStr The aural skills acquisition process of undergraduate electroacoustic (EA) music majors in the context of a new aural learning method
title_full_unstemmed The aural skills acquisition process of undergraduate electroacoustic (EA) music majors in the context of a new aural learning method
title_sort aural skills acquisition process of undergraduate electroacoustic (ea) music majors in the context of a new aural learning method
publisher Boston University
publishDate 2015
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/12863
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