Error management for musicians: an interdisciplinary conceptual framework

Musicians tend to strive for flawless performance and perfection, avoiding errors at all costs. Dealing with errors while practicing or performing is often frustrating and can lead to anger and despair, which can explain musicians’ generally negative attitude toward errors and the tendency to aim fo...

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Main Authors: Silke eKruse-Weber, Richard eParncutt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00777/full
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spelling doaj-6a451662b9174c1a93c113e74bb397622020-11-24T23:25:46ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782014-07-01510.3389/fpsyg.2014.0077792860Error management for musicians: an interdisciplinary conceptual frameworkSilke eKruse-Weber0Richard eParncutt1University of music and performing arts, Grazuniversity of GrazMusicians tend to strive for flawless performance and perfection, avoiding errors at all costs. Dealing with errors while practicing or performing is often frustrating and can lead to anger and despair, which can explain musicians’ generally negative attitude toward errors and the tendency to aim for errorless learning in instrumental music education. But even the best performances are rarely error-free, and research in general pedagogy and psychology has shown that errors provide useful information for the learning process. Research in instrumental pedagogy is still neglecting error issues; the benefits of risk management (before the error) and error management (during and after the error) are still underestimated. It follows that dealing with errors is a key aspect of music practice at home, teaching, and performance in public. And yet, to be innovative, or to make their performance extraordinary, musicians need to risk errors. Currently, most music students only acquire the ability to manage errors implicitly - or not at all. A more constructive, creative and differentiated culture of errors would balance error tolerance and risk-taking against error prevention in ways that enhance music practice and music performance. The teaching environment should lay the foundation for the development of these abilities. In this contribution, we survey recent research in aviation, medicine, economics, psychology, and interdisciplinary decision theory that has demonstrated that specific error-management training can promote metacognitive skills that lead to better adaptive transfer and better performance skills. We summarize how this research can be applied to music, and survey relevant research that is specifically tailored to the needs of musicians, including generic guidelines for risk and error management in music teaching and performance. On this basis, we develop a conceptual framework for risk management that can provide orientation for further music education and musichttp://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00777/fullRisk ManagementmetacognitionRisk takingmusic performanceerror managementerror prevention
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Silke eKruse-Weber
Richard eParncutt
spellingShingle Silke eKruse-Weber
Richard eParncutt
Error management for musicians: an interdisciplinary conceptual framework
Frontiers in Psychology
Risk Management
metacognition
Risk taking
music performance
error management
error prevention
author_facet Silke eKruse-Weber
Richard eParncutt
author_sort Silke eKruse-Weber
title Error management for musicians: an interdisciplinary conceptual framework
title_short Error management for musicians: an interdisciplinary conceptual framework
title_full Error management for musicians: an interdisciplinary conceptual framework
title_fullStr Error management for musicians: an interdisciplinary conceptual framework
title_full_unstemmed Error management for musicians: an interdisciplinary conceptual framework
title_sort error management for musicians: an interdisciplinary conceptual framework
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2014-07-01
description Musicians tend to strive for flawless performance and perfection, avoiding errors at all costs. Dealing with errors while practicing or performing is often frustrating and can lead to anger and despair, which can explain musicians’ generally negative attitude toward errors and the tendency to aim for errorless learning in instrumental music education. But even the best performances are rarely error-free, and research in general pedagogy and psychology has shown that errors provide useful information for the learning process. Research in instrumental pedagogy is still neglecting error issues; the benefits of risk management (before the error) and error management (during and after the error) are still underestimated. It follows that dealing with errors is a key aspect of music practice at home, teaching, and performance in public. And yet, to be innovative, or to make their performance extraordinary, musicians need to risk errors. Currently, most music students only acquire the ability to manage errors implicitly - or not at all. A more constructive, creative and differentiated culture of errors would balance error tolerance and risk-taking against error prevention in ways that enhance music practice and music performance. The teaching environment should lay the foundation for the development of these abilities. In this contribution, we survey recent research in aviation, medicine, economics, psychology, and interdisciplinary decision theory that has demonstrated that specific error-management training can promote metacognitive skills that lead to better adaptive transfer and better performance skills. We summarize how this research can be applied to music, and survey relevant research that is specifically tailored to the needs of musicians, including generic guidelines for risk and error management in music teaching and performance. On this basis, we develop a conceptual framework for risk management that can provide orientation for further music education and music
topic Risk Management
metacognition
Risk taking
music performance
error management
error prevention
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00777/full
work_keys_str_mv AT silkeekruseweber errormanagementformusiciansaninterdisciplinaryconceptualframework
AT richardeparncutt errormanagementformusiciansaninterdisciplinaryconceptualframework
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