Safety, Identity, Transmission and Enculturation: An Investigation of Four Formative Aspects of Choral Cultures on Music Majors in Undergraduate Auditioned and Non-Auditioned Collegiate Choirs

The primary purpose of this study was to investigate the perceived impact of four elements of choral cultures in lives of undergraduate music majors within the contexts of auditioned and non-auditioned choir settings. Specifically, this study sought to determine: 1.) Do the elements of safety, ident...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Van Vat-Chromy, Jo-Anne (authoraut)
Format: Others
Language:English
English
Published: Florida State University
Subjects:
Online Access:http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-4551
id ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_254345
record_format oai_dc
collection NDLTD
language English
English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Music
spellingShingle Music
Safety, Identity, Transmission and Enculturation: An Investigation of Four Formative Aspects of Choral Cultures on Music Majors in Undergraduate Auditioned and Non-Auditioned Collegiate Choirs
description The primary purpose of this study was to investigate the perceived impact of four elements of choral cultures in lives of undergraduate music majors within the contexts of auditioned and non-auditioned choir settings. Specifically, this study sought to determine: 1.) Do the elements of safety, identify, transmission, and enculturation demonstrate a formative influence in shaping the attitudes about choral cultures in undergraduate collegiate choirs? 2.) Is there a difference between how these experiences are perceived in terms of music majors in an auditioned vs. non-auditioned setting? 3.) Did choir members perceive their ensemble participation would impact their future music teaching careers, and if so, in what manner? A survey instrument, adapted from the literature (Hylton, 1980; Adderley et. al, 2003; and Morrison, 2001), was organized into three sections: demographics, twenty-five Likert-type scale questions and seven open-ended questions. The survey was piloted by undergraduate music majors at a large, southeastern American university (N = 23, n = 11, non-auditioned choir; n = 12, auditioned choir). Participants in the study (N = 154; n = 68, non-auditioned choirs, n = 86, auditioned choirs) were undergraduate music majors from seven choral ensembles at three American universities. Factor analysis of the survey instrument revealed factor loading above .600 for fifteen of the twenty-five questions, which shaped survey revisions. Mean scores comparison of the quantitative data indicated seven questions of the fifteen tied in rank order significance across the two choir types. Mean score rankings per category indicated category ranked importance across both choir types to be safety - identity, enculturation and transmission. Significant differences were noted within the categories and between the two choir types in the categories of identity, transmission and enculturation. Free response data was codified for emergent themes and code word frequency using HyperRESEARCH™, a qualitative data software program and were reported by frequency rank order. Frequency tallies indicated the highest code word tally in the category of enculturation (64.4%). The non-auditioned choir type perceived the category ranked importance to be enculturation, safety, identity and transmission, while the auditioned choir typed ranked the category importance as enculturation, safety, transmission, and identity. 13.6% of total coded words were evidence of flow experiences in choral rehearsals, across both choir settings (5.6% for the non-auditioned choirs and 8% for the auditioned choirs). Both quantitative and qualitative data indicated the auditioned choir members perceived their choral experience as more directly applicable to their future music teaching careers than the non-auditioned choir participants. Behaviors of safety, identity, transmission and enculturation in choral rehearsals, recommendations for choral music teaching and suggestions for further research were given. === A Dissertation submitted to the College of Music in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. === Summer Semester, 2010. === June 15, 2010. === Choral Cultures, Safety, Identity, Transmission Enculturation, Formative Aspects, Music Majors, Undergraduate Auditioned Choirs, Undergraduate Non-Auditioned Choirs, Collegiate Choirs, Survey Instrument, Factor Analysis, Flow, Student Teachers === Includes bibliographical references. === Judy K. Bowers, Professor Directing Dissertation; Richard J. Morris, University Representative; Clifford K. Madsen, Committee Member; André J. Thomas, Committee Member; Steven N. Kelly, Committee Member.
author2 Van Vat-Chromy, Jo-Anne (authoraut)
author_facet Van Vat-Chromy, Jo-Anne (authoraut)
title Safety, Identity, Transmission and Enculturation: An Investigation of Four Formative Aspects of Choral Cultures on Music Majors in Undergraduate Auditioned and Non-Auditioned Collegiate Choirs
title_short Safety, Identity, Transmission and Enculturation: An Investigation of Four Formative Aspects of Choral Cultures on Music Majors in Undergraduate Auditioned and Non-Auditioned Collegiate Choirs
title_full Safety, Identity, Transmission and Enculturation: An Investigation of Four Formative Aspects of Choral Cultures on Music Majors in Undergraduate Auditioned and Non-Auditioned Collegiate Choirs
title_fullStr Safety, Identity, Transmission and Enculturation: An Investigation of Four Formative Aspects of Choral Cultures on Music Majors in Undergraduate Auditioned and Non-Auditioned Collegiate Choirs
title_full_unstemmed Safety, Identity, Transmission and Enculturation: An Investigation of Four Formative Aspects of Choral Cultures on Music Majors in Undergraduate Auditioned and Non-Auditioned Collegiate Choirs
title_sort safety, identity, transmission and enculturation: an investigation of four formative aspects of choral cultures on music majors in undergraduate auditioned and non-auditioned collegiate choirs
publisher Florida State University
url http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-4551
_version_ 1719322432426213376
spelling ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_2543452020-06-20T03:08:44Z Safety, Identity, Transmission and Enculturation: An Investigation of Four Formative Aspects of Choral Cultures on Music Majors in Undergraduate Auditioned and Non-Auditioned Collegiate Choirs Van Vat-Chromy, Jo-Anne (authoraut) Bowers, Judy K. (professor directing dissertation) Morris, Richard J. (university representative) Madsen, Clifford K. (committee member) Thomas, André J. (committee member) Kelly, Steven N. (committee member) College of Music (degree granting department) Florida State University (degree granting institution) Text text Florida State University Florida State University English eng 1 online resource computer application/pdf The primary purpose of this study was to investigate the perceived impact of four elements of choral cultures in lives of undergraduate music majors within the contexts of auditioned and non-auditioned choir settings. Specifically, this study sought to determine: 1.) Do the elements of safety, identify, transmission, and enculturation demonstrate a formative influence in shaping the attitudes about choral cultures in undergraduate collegiate choirs? 2.) Is there a difference between how these experiences are perceived in terms of music majors in an auditioned vs. non-auditioned setting? 3.) Did choir members perceive their ensemble participation would impact their future music teaching careers, and if so, in what manner? A survey instrument, adapted from the literature (Hylton, 1980; Adderley et. al, 2003; and Morrison, 2001), was organized into three sections: demographics, twenty-five Likert-type scale questions and seven open-ended questions. The survey was piloted by undergraduate music majors at a large, southeastern American university (N = 23, n = 11, non-auditioned choir; n = 12, auditioned choir). Participants in the study (N = 154; n = 68, non-auditioned choirs, n = 86, auditioned choirs) were undergraduate music majors from seven choral ensembles at three American universities. Factor analysis of the survey instrument revealed factor loading above .600 for fifteen of the twenty-five questions, which shaped survey revisions. Mean scores comparison of the quantitative data indicated seven questions of the fifteen tied in rank order significance across the two choir types. Mean score rankings per category indicated category ranked importance across both choir types to be safety - identity, enculturation and transmission. Significant differences were noted within the categories and between the two choir types in the categories of identity, transmission and enculturation. Free response data was codified for emergent themes and code word frequency using HyperRESEARCH™, a qualitative data software program and were reported by frequency rank order. Frequency tallies indicated the highest code word tally in the category of enculturation (64.4%). The non-auditioned choir type perceived the category ranked importance to be enculturation, safety, identity and transmission, while the auditioned choir typed ranked the category importance as enculturation, safety, transmission, and identity. 13.6% of total coded words were evidence of flow experiences in choral rehearsals, across both choir settings (5.6% for the non-auditioned choirs and 8% for the auditioned choirs). Both quantitative and qualitative data indicated the auditioned choir members perceived their choral experience as more directly applicable to their future music teaching careers than the non-auditioned choir participants. Behaviors of safety, identity, transmission and enculturation in choral rehearsals, recommendations for choral music teaching and suggestions for further research were given. A Dissertation submitted to the College of Music in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Summer Semester, 2010. June 15, 2010. Choral Cultures, Safety, Identity, Transmission Enculturation, Formative Aspects, Music Majors, Undergraduate Auditioned Choirs, Undergraduate Non-Auditioned Choirs, Collegiate Choirs, Survey Instrument, Factor Analysis, Flow, Student Teachers Includes bibliographical references. Judy K. Bowers, Professor Directing Dissertation; Richard J. Morris, University Representative; Clifford K. Madsen, Committee Member; André J. Thomas, Committee Member; Steven N. Kelly, Committee Member. Music FSU_migr_etd-4551 http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-4551 This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s). The copyright in theses and dissertations completed at Florida State University is held by the students who author them. http://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A254345/datastream/TN/view/Safety%2C%20Identity%2C%20Transmission%20and%20Enculturation.jpg