Attitudes of High School Band Directors in the United States toward Solo and Ensemble Activities

abstract: The purpose of this study was to investigate the attitudes of high band directors in the United States toward solo and ensemble activities. Independent variables such as teaching experience, level of education, MENC region in which directors taught, personal solo and ensemble activity expe...

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Other Authors: Meyers, Brian D. (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9191
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-91912018-06-22T03:01:46Z Attitudes of High School Band Directors in the United States toward Solo and Ensemble Activities abstract: The purpose of this study was to investigate the attitudes of high band directors in the United States toward solo and ensemble activities. Independent variables such as teaching experience, level of education, MENC region in which directors taught, personal solo and ensemble activity experience, teaching assignment, and director-centered external factors (supplemental contracts, teaching evaluations, program awards) were used to investigate potential differences in attitudinal responses. Subjects were high school band directors (N = 557) chosen through a stratified random sample by state. Participation in the study included completing an online researcher-designed questionnaire that gathered demographic information as well as information regarding directors' attitudes towards benefits from student participation in solo and ensemble activities, the importance of such activities to directors, and attitudes towards student participation in local, regional, and state solo and ensemble festivals and contests. One-way analyses of variance and two-way multivariate analyses of variance were conducted to investigate potential differences in responses according to various independent variables. Significant differences were found in responses to statements of the importance of solo and ensemble to directors and of solo and ensemble festivals and contests according to region, solo and ensemble experience, and director-centered external factors. No significant differences were found for statements of director's attitudes toward benefits of student participation in solo and ensemble activities according to any independent variables. Results indicate that directors understand and believe strongly in the benefits of solo and ensemble activities to students, but factors such as time, job demands, band program expectations, and festival and contest adjudication, format, and timing may hinder directors' inclusion of solo and ensemble activities as an integral part of their program. Further research is suggested to investigate directors' attitudes within individual states as well as ways to integrate solo and ensemble activities into daily band rehearsals. Dissertation/Thesis Meyers, Brian D. (Author) Sullivan, Jill (Advisor) Busg, Jeffrey (Committee member) Schmidt, Margaret (Committee member) Stauffer, Sandra (Committee member) Tobias, Evan (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Music Education contests festivals solo and ensemble eng 150 pages D.M.A. Music Education 2011 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9191 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2011
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Music Education
contests
festivals
solo and ensemble
spellingShingle Music Education
contests
festivals
solo and ensemble
Attitudes of High School Band Directors in the United States toward Solo and Ensemble Activities
description abstract: The purpose of this study was to investigate the attitudes of high band directors in the United States toward solo and ensemble activities. Independent variables such as teaching experience, level of education, MENC region in which directors taught, personal solo and ensemble activity experience, teaching assignment, and director-centered external factors (supplemental contracts, teaching evaluations, program awards) were used to investigate potential differences in attitudinal responses. Subjects were high school band directors (N = 557) chosen through a stratified random sample by state. Participation in the study included completing an online researcher-designed questionnaire that gathered demographic information as well as information regarding directors' attitudes towards benefits from student participation in solo and ensemble activities, the importance of such activities to directors, and attitudes towards student participation in local, regional, and state solo and ensemble festivals and contests. One-way analyses of variance and two-way multivariate analyses of variance were conducted to investigate potential differences in responses according to various independent variables. Significant differences were found in responses to statements of the importance of solo and ensemble to directors and of solo and ensemble festivals and contests according to region, solo and ensemble experience, and director-centered external factors. No significant differences were found for statements of director's attitudes toward benefits of student participation in solo and ensemble activities according to any independent variables. Results indicate that directors understand and believe strongly in the benefits of solo and ensemble activities to students, but factors such as time, job demands, band program expectations, and festival and contest adjudication, format, and timing may hinder directors' inclusion of solo and ensemble activities as an integral part of their program. Further research is suggested to investigate directors' attitudes within individual states as well as ways to integrate solo and ensemble activities into daily band rehearsals. === Dissertation/Thesis === D.M.A. Music Education 2011
author2 Meyers, Brian D. (Author)
author_facet Meyers, Brian D. (Author)
title Attitudes of High School Band Directors in the United States toward Solo and Ensemble Activities
title_short Attitudes of High School Band Directors in the United States toward Solo and Ensemble Activities
title_full Attitudes of High School Band Directors in the United States toward Solo and Ensemble Activities
title_fullStr Attitudes of High School Band Directors in the United States toward Solo and Ensemble Activities
title_full_unstemmed Attitudes of High School Band Directors in the United States toward Solo and Ensemble Activities
title_sort attitudes of high school band directors in the united states toward solo and ensemble activities
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9191
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