ABSTRACT

Talent Education, or the Suzuki Method as it is better known internationally, is an interesting and highly successful method of teaching young children to play musical instruments, Although developed only forty years ago in Japan by Shinichi Suzuki, a Japanese violinist, it now has branches in twenty-three countries and approximately 300,000 students worldwide. The method’s very young students have attracted considerable public notice through their mass performances of difficult works for violin and piano which were previously the province of professional musicians and occasional child prodigies. Although the method itself remains a quintessentially Japanese approach to education which embodies deeply rooted Japanese cultural assumptions, its successful implementation in numerous foreign countries demonstrates its widespread appeal and ability to survive transplantation to other cultures. In the process of being adopted by other countries, certain aspects of the method have been modified to fit the indigenous educational attitudes and practices of the recipient cultures. This is particularly evident in the United States, where the method differs in a number of important respects from the way it is practiced in Japan.