"Music is Waiting For You:" The Lived Experience of Children's Musical Identity

ABSTRACT “MUSIC IS WAITING FOR YOU:” THE LIVED EXPERIENCE OF CHILDREN’S MUSICAL IDENTITY by L. Michelle Mercier-De Shon This phenomenological study of lived experience (Van Manen, 1990) explored the perspectives of four 4th grade children as they live in and live through music to formulate their mus...

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Main Author: Mercier, Michelle, De Shon
Format: Others
Published: ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University 2012
Subjects:
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Online Access:http://scholarworks.gsu.edu/msit_diss/100
http://scholarworks.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1107&context=msit_diss
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spelling ndltd-GEORGIA-oai-scholarworks.gsu.edu-msit_diss-11072014-04-23T03:39:11Z "Music is Waiting For You:" The Lived Experience of Children's Musical Identity Mercier, Michelle, De Shon ABSTRACT “MUSIC IS WAITING FOR YOU:” THE LIVED EXPERIENCE OF CHILDREN’S MUSICAL IDENTITY by L. Michelle Mercier-De Shon This phenomenological study of lived experience (Van Manen, 1990) explored the perspectives of four 4th grade children as they live in and live through music to formulate their musical identities. Framed within perspectives of symbolic interaction theory (Blumer, 1969), communities of practice (Wenger, 1998), and figured worlds (Holland, et al., 1998), data were collected using methods consistent with qualitative inquiry. These included: observations of quasi-formal music learning settings, in musical playgroups and during professional musicians’ presentations; close observations of children’s daily school lives; and planned discussion group interviews (O’Reilly, 2005). Findings emerged from the data via a bricolage of existentialist (Morrisette, 1999; Holyroyd, 2001) and interpretative phenomenological analyses (Smith, 2003). Children in my study explored and expressed their musical identities through self-directed engagement across multiple modalities of singing, listening, performing on instruments, and creating music. They engaged with these modalities in individualized and shared ways. Singing was situated, by context and in concert with social and gender comparisons. Listening, performing, and creating encompassed a trajectory from experimentation to intentionality, with continually embedded exploration and musical play. Findings indicated that children in middle childhood may actively shape their musical identities within a dynamic nexus of individualized and social continuums of music experience and learning. These continuums may be understood along three dimensions: development; components, i.e., music participation and learning; and processes. The developmental spectrum of children in middle childhood provides a fluid context for understanding musical identity, revealed not as a fixed entity, but through interweaving elements of their past, present, and future musical lives. Self-directed music participation and learning may shape musical identity and provide a context for its expression through both musical and social roles, as children enact musical behaviors through social interaction. Finally, children’s musical identity may be understood as a process, in which personal dialogue meets external discourses, as children continuously negotiate self-conceptions of musicality within and among their musical worlds. Findings indicate that music teachers may offer opportunities for exploration and musical play as a basis for concurrently nurturing the development of musical identities and fostering musical understanding. 2012-12-20T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarworks.gsu.edu/msit_diss/100 http://scholarworks.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1107&context=msit_diss Middle-Secondary Education and Instructional Technology Dissertations ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University Musical Identity Informal Music Learning Musical Playgroups "Sound Learning "
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Musical Identity
Informal Music Learning
Musical Playgroups
"Sound Learning
"
spellingShingle Musical Identity
Informal Music Learning
Musical Playgroups
"Sound Learning
"
Mercier, Michelle, De Shon
"Music is Waiting For You:" The Lived Experience of Children's Musical Identity
description ABSTRACT “MUSIC IS WAITING FOR YOU:” THE LIVED EXPERIENCE OF CHILDREN’S MUSICAL IDENTITY by L. Michelle Mercier-De Shon This phenomenological study of lived experience (Van Manen, 1990) explored the perspectives of four 4th grade children as they live in and live through music to formulate their musical identities. Framed within perspectives of symbolic interaction theory (Blumer, 1969), communities of practice (Wenger, 1998), and figured worlds (Holland, et al., 1998), data were collected using methods consistent with qualitative inquiry. These included: observations of quasi-formal music learning settings, in musical playgroups and during professional musicians’ presentations; close observations of children’s daily school lives; and planned discussion group interviews (O’Reilly, 2005). Findings emerged from the data via a bricolage of existentialist (Morrisette, 1999; Holyroyd, 2001) and interpretative phenomenological analyses (Smith, 2003). Children in my study explored and expressed their musical identities through self-directed engagement across multiple modalities of singing, listening, performing on instruments, and creating music. They engaged with these modalities in individualized and shared ways. Singing was situated, by context and in concert with social and gender comparisons. Listening, performing, and creating encompassed a trajectory from experimentation to intentionality, with continually embedded exploration and musical play. Findings indicated that children in middle childhood may actively shape their musical identities within a dynamic nexus of individualized and social continuums of music experience and learning. These continuums may be understood along three dimensions: development; components, i.e., music participation and learning; and processes. The developmental spectrum of children in middle childhood provides a fluid context for understanding musical identity, revealed not as a fixed entity, but through interweaving elements of their past, present, and future musical lives. Self-directed music participation and learning may shape musical identity and provide a context for its expression through both musical and social roles, as children enact musical behaviors through social interaction. Finally, children’s musical identity may be understood as a process, in which personal dialogue meets external discourses, as children continuously negotiate self-conceptions of musicality within and among their musical worlds. Findings indicate that music teachers may offer opportunities for exploration and musical play as a basis for concurrently nurturing the development of musical identities and fostering musical understanding.
author Mercier, Michelle, De Shon
author_facet Mercier, Michelle, De Shon
author_sort Mercier, Michelle, De Shon
title "Music is Waiting For You:" The Lived Experience of Children's Musical Identity
title_short "Music is Waiting For You:" The Lived Experience of Children's Musical Identity
title_full "Music is Waiting For You:" The Lived Experience of Children's Musical Identity
title_fullStr "Music is Waiting For You:" The Lived Experience of Children's Musical Identity
title_full_unstemmed "Music is Waiting For You:" The Lived Experience of Children's Musical Identity
title_sort "music is waiting for you:" the lived experience of children's musical identity
publisher ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University
publishDate 2012
url http://scholarworks.gsu.edu/msit_diss/100
http://scholarworks.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1107&context=msit_diss
work_keys_str_mv AT merciermichelledeshon musiciswaitingforyouthelivedexperienceofchildrensmusicalidentity
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