Vocal Improvisation and the Development of Musical Self-efficacy in Adolescent Choral Musicians

This study explored the development of musical self-efficacy and musical self-image in 35 young adolescents choral musicians engaged in a vocal improvisation program. A mixed methods methodology was employed. Quantitative measures were conducted through a survey instrument developed for this study b...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hirschorn, David Neal
Format: Others
Published: Digital Archive @ GSU 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/msit_diss/74
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1077&context=msit_diss
id ndltd-GEORGIA-oai-digitalarchive.gsu.edu-msit_diss-1077
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-GEORGIA-oai-digitalarchive.gsu.edu-msit_diss-10772013-04-23T03:22:42Z Vocal Improvisation and the Development of Musical Self-efficacy in Adolescent Choral Musicians Hirschorn, David Neal This study explored the development of musical self-efficacy and musical self-image in 35 young adolescents choral musicians engaged in a vocal improvisation program. A mixed methods methodology was employed. Quantitative measures were conducted through a survey instrument developed for this study based on a five-fold theoretical structure of efficacy development. Using a sequential explanatory design, quantitative data was followed by interviews, written reflections, and participant and teacher/researcher field notes. Participants were engaged in daily vocal improvisation activities for 16 weeks. Four transitions points in the study demarcated data collection segments. Transitions consisted of two participant observations and two improvisation concert performances. Findings indicate significant increases in two efficacy source factors: mastery experience and peer vicarious experience. Vocal improvisation facilitated mastery experience perceptions of vocal development through vocal range expansion. Interactive peer vicarious experiences were found to be an important source of efficacy information and an essential feature of musical self-efficacy development. The musical self-efficacy journey was found to be one of ebb and flow as participants struggled to negotiate the musical and social challenges of vocal improvisation. Findings from this study suggest differences in the ways girls and boys negotiated the musical and social challenges of vocal improvisation. Despite the inherent struggles of participants to negotiate these challenges, vocal improvisation provided a rich environment for the study of musical self-efficacy and musical self-image development. Musical self-image was revealed through multifaceted perceptions of musical/creative growth, participant self-regulatory actions and the values participants ascribed to the improvisation experience. Study findings include teacher/researcher reflections on the experience of teaching vocal improvisation in a middle school choral classroom. These reflections include an analysis of teacher identity tensions related to the creative development of students and the performance expectations of the teacher and the musical community. 2011-02-07 text application/pdf http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/msit_diss/74 http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1077&context=msit_diss Middle-Secondary Education and Instructional Technology Dissertations Digital Archive @ GSU improvisation self-efficacy self-image choral young adolescent Education
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic improvisation
self-efficacy
self-image
choral
young adolescent
Education
spellingShingle improvisation
self-efficacy
self-image
choral
young adolescent
Education
Hirschorn, David Neal
Vocal Improvisation and the Development of Musical Self-efficacy in Adolescent Choral Musicians
description This study explored the development of musical self-efficacy and musical self-image in 35 young adolescents choral musicians engaged in a vocal improvisation program. A mixed methods methodology was employed. Quantitative measures were conducted through a survey instrument developed for this study based on a five-fold theoretical structure of efficacy development. Using a sequential explanatory design, quantitative data was followed by interviews, written reflections, and participant and teacher/researcher field notes. Participants were engaged in daily vocal improvisation activities for 16 weeks. Four transitions points in the study demarcated data collection segments. Transitions consisted of two participant observations and two improvisation concert performances. Findings indicate significant increases in two efficacy source factors: mastery experience and peer vicarious experience. Vocal improvisation facilitated mastery experience perceptions of vocal development through vocal range expansion. Interactive peer vicarious experiences were found to be an important source of efficacy information and an essential feature of musical self-efficacy development. The musical self-efficacy journey was found to be one of ebb and flow as participants struggled to negotiate the musical and social challenges of vocal improvisation. Findings from this study suggest differences in the ways girls and boys negotiated the musical and social challenges of vocal improvisation. Despite the inherent struggles of participants to negotiate these challenges, vocal improvisation provided a rich environment for the study of musical self-efficacy and musical self-image development. Musical self-image was revealed through multifaceted perceptions of musical/creative growth, participant self-regulatory actions and the values participants ascribed to the improvisation experience. Study findings include teacher/researcher reflections on the experience of teaching vocal improvisation in a middle school choral classroom. These reflections include an analysis of teacher identity tensions related to the creative development of students and the performance expectations of the teacher and the musical community.
author Hirschorn, David Neal
author_facet Hirschorn, David Neal
author_sort Hirschorn, David Neal
title Vocal Improvisation and the Development of Musical Self-efficacy in Adolescent Choral Musicians
title_short Vocal Improvisation and the Development of Musical Self-efficacy in Adolescent Choral Musicians
title_full Vocal Improvisation and the Development of Musical Self-efficacy in Adolescent Choral Musicians
title_fullStr Vocal Improvisation and the Development of Musical Self-efficacy in Adolescent Choral Musicians
title_full_unstemmed Vocal Improvisation and the Development of Musical Self-efficacy in Adolescent Choral Musicians
title_sort vocal improvisation and the development of musical self-efficacy in adolescent choral musicians
publisher Digital Archive @ GSU
publishDate 2011
url http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/msit_diss/74
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1077&context=msit_diss
work_keys_str_mv AT hirschorndavidneal vocalimprovisationandthedevelopmentofmusicalselfefficacyinadolescentchoralmusicians
_version_ 1716584394710319104