Music Education on the Verge: Stories of Pandemic Teaching and Transformative Change
By (Author) Judy Lewis
Edited by Andrea Maas
Foreword by Randall Everett Allsup
Contributions by Michelle Amosu Thomas
Contributions by Luiz Claudio M. Barcellos
Contributions by Marsha Baxter
Contributions by Marie-Louise Bowe
Contributions by Sheelagh Chadwick
Contributions by Patrick K. Freer
Contributions by Nils Klykken
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
8th August 2022
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Educational: Arts, general
Music
780.71
Hardback
258
Width 158mm, Height 238mm, Spine 21mm
508g
In March 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic swept the world causing physical, emotional, economic, and social upheaval in every part of the globe. It also catalyzed a renewed interrogation, by music education faculty in higher education, of philosophies and practices that had long gone unexamined.
Music Education on the Verge: Stories of Pandemic Teaching and Transformative Change is a collection of narratives by music teacher-educators describing how they responded to the disruption of the COVID-19 pandemic with, and for, their students. Through these stories, the authors step back and reflect on the events, challenges, triumphs, and innovations discovered as they prepared the next generation of music educators in this time of crisis. They tell stories of reexamining old frameworks, discovering new affordances of technologies, humanizing pedagogy, deepening culturally responsive and sustaining experiences, and creating space for democratic practices. Each chapter offers examples of innovative music pedagogy that can be adapted and applied by music educators and music teacher educators with their students. Collectively, they paint a picture of possibilities, challenging music teacher-educators and educators in all fields to seek out openings and pursue pedagogies of change as we move forward into a post-pandemic world.
In this deeply complicated and emotionally charged discipline of music teaching and learning, once in a while a book comes along that touches the very soul of what we do. Maas and Lewis have expertly edited and contributed to a collection of reflections about what really matters. Sad that it took a world pandemic to prompt these kinds of meaningful perspectives and stories of bravery and creativeness but thrilling to know how our profession responded. This book provides the chance to, indeed, imagine spaces becoming wider, new paths emerging, and a set of achievements that mark a new era for music and its meaning in our lives.
-- Peter R. Webster, Thornton School of Music, University of Southern CaliforniaMusic Education During Crisis is a testament to music educators' dedication to supporting students and the ability to adapt in the context of a global pandemic. The specific pedagogical and curricular approaches that authors share are valuable in and of themselves, yet it is the intimacy of witnessing our colleagues' journeys, challenges, and processes of transforming curriculum and practice that invites us to pause and reflect on possibilities in our own contexts. These stories of pivots in technology, community, and roles as learners and educators are not just lessons learned through finding ways of being and teaching during COVID-19 but catalysts to reconsider what music learning and teaching might be as we move now and in the future.
-- Evan Tobias, Arizona State UniversityJudy Lewis is assistant professor of music education at the Crane School of Music, SUNY Potsdam.
Andrea Maas is assistant professor of music education at the Crane School of Music, SUNY Potsdam.