Teen playlist: music discovery, production, and sharing among a group of high school students

The purpose of this investigation was to determine if a select group of adolescents exhibited behaviors and practices regarding digital music discovery, production, and sharing that influenced their classroom music instruction. The qualitative study focused on ways in which a group of adolescents in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nielsen, Teresa Raynor
Language:en_US
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/19561
id ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-19561
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-195612019-01-08T15:40:26Z Teen playlist: music discovery, production, and sharing among a group of high school students Nielsen, Teresa Raynor Music education Adolescents Digital music Educational technology Instrumental case study Multimedia consumption Social media The purpose of this investigation was to determine if a select group of adolescents exhibited behaviors and practices regarding digital music discovery, production, and sharing that influenced their classroom music instruction. The qualitative study focused on ways in which a group of adolescents informally engaged with digital music in relationship to learning music in their classroom. A constructivist–interpretivist viewpoint framed the theoretical perspective that a person’s knowledge constructions take place within the context of social interaction. In the early 21st century, young people interacting via digital social networking can experience and share music in ways previous generations could not imagine. Peer learning and exchange occur when adolescents share musical ideas and digital artifacts. In addition, autonomous learning takes place while interacting with a digital device. I used Mayer’s (2002) cognitive theory of multimedia learning to support an understanding of the learning effects associated with content-rich digital experiences. Linking social-constructivist and multimedia educational theories provided the conceptual framework needed to extrapolate meaning from adolescents’ preferences, influences, and feelings regarding digital musicking. In an instrumental case study, I followed four high school participants and their music teacher over the course of 6 months. The data consisted of participants’ detailed reflections and perspectives regarding digital music media discovery, production, and sharing. Detailed accounts collected from interviews and observations illustrated the behaviors of the participants, building a thick description. Although the research focused on adolescents, viewpoints of others emerged throughout the study, including those of peers, colleagues, and family members. Consequently, the investigation also considered what music teachers understood about their students’ out of school digital music discovery, production, and sharing. Findings show the convergence and divergence of digital music engagement in a high school music setting. Themes of experiencing music for personal identity, creativity, and popular culture intermix in classroom and informal learning environments. I present outcomes indicating direct implications for music curriculum development and suggest paths to connect in school and out of school music learning via digital music experiences. This study might help contemporary music teachers take advantage of students’ out of school digital music media practices to strengthen in school music programs. 2016-12-08T18:29:48Z 2016-12-08T18:29:48Z 2016 2016-11-07T20:07:03Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/19561 en_US Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Music education
Adolescents
Digital music
Educational technology
Instrumental case study
Multimedia consumption
Social media
spellingShingle Music education
Adolescents
Digital music
Educational technology
Instrumental case study
Multimedia consumption
Social media
Nielsen, Teresa Raynor
Teen playlist: music discovery, production, and sharing among a group of high school students
description The purpose of this investigation was to determine if a select group of adolescents exhibited behaviors and practices regarding digital music discovery, production, and sharing that influenced their classroom music instruction. The qualitative study focused on ways in which a group of adolescents informally engaged with digital music in relationship to learning music in their classroom. A constructivist–interpretivist viewpoint framed the theoretical perspective that a person’s knowledge constructions take place within the context of social interaction. In the early 21st century, young people interacting via digital social networking can experience and share music in ways previous generations could not imagine. Peer learning and exchange occur when adolescents share musical ideas and digital artifacts. In addition, autonomous learning takes place while interacting with a digital device. I used Mayer’s (2002) cognitive theory of multimedia learning to support an understanding of the learning effects associated with content-rich digital experiences. Linking social-constructivist and multimedia educational theories provided the conceptual framework needed to extrapolate meaning from adolescents’ preferences, influences, and feelings regarding digital musicking. In an instrumental case study, I followed four high school participants and their music teacher over the course of 6 months. The data consisted of participants’ detailed reflections and perspectives regarding digital music media discovery, production, and sharing. Detailed accounts collected from interviews and observations illustrated the behaviors of the participants, building a thick description. Although the research focused on adolescents, viewpoints of others emerged throughout the study, including those of peers, colleagues, and family members. Consequently, the investigation also considered what music teachers understood about their students’ out of school digital music discovery, production, and sharing. Findings show the convergence and divergence of digital music engagement in a high school music setting. Themes of experiencing music for personal identity, creativity, and popular culture intermix in classroom and informal learning environments. I present outcomes indicating direct implications for music curriculum development and suggest paths to connect in school and out of school music learning via digital music experiences. This study might help contemporary music teachers take advantage of students’ out of school digital music media practices to strengthen in school music programs.
author Nielsen, Teresa Raynor
author_facet Nielsen, Teresa Raynor
author_sort Nielsen, Teresa Raynor
title Teen playlist: music discovery, production, and sharing among a group of high school students
title_short Teen playlist: music discovery, production, and sharing among a group of high school students
title_full Teen playlist: music discovery, production, and sharing among a group of high school students
title_fullStr Teen playlist: music discovery, production, and sharing among a group of high school students
title_full_unstemmed Teen playlist: music discovery, production, and sharing among a group of high school students
title_sort teen playlist: music discovery, production, and sharing among a group of high school students
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/19561
work_keys_str_mv AT nielsenteresaraynor teenplaylistmusicdiscoveryproductionandsharingamongagroupofhighschoolstudents
_version_ 1718812005714886656