ABSTRACT

Educational Change and the Secondary School Music Curriculum in Aotearoa New Zealand provides a fascinating case study in educational change. The music curriculum has been greatly affected by deep cultural and economic forces such as the growth of popular music's importance in young people's lives, by demands for inclusive and multicultural education, and not least by advances in technology that promise to invigorate all aspects of teaching and learning. This book brings together the work of a number of leading music education scholars and teachers from Aotearoa/New Zealand to both explore these issues and to share case studies of practice: both the positive changes and the unintended consequences. Each chapter focuses on a current issue in music education and the final chapter contains responses from a number of practitioners to the issues raised by the authors, drawing together the practical and theoretical dimensions of the book.

section 1|91 pages

Educational change and the music curriculum

chapter 1|9 pages

Mapping the field

chapter 3|15 pages

The future just happened

Lessons for twenty-first-century learning from the secondary school music classroom

chapter 5|18 pages

‘Top-notch’ knowledge

Transitioning to tertiary music study: A case study

section 2|88 pages

Curriculum makers at work

chapter 8|18 pages

The future just happened – or did it?

Teachers’ views and uses of digital technology

chapter 9|17 pages

Music teachers talking

Views on secondary school curriculum content

chapter 10|17 pages

‘What a fantastic model!’

Secondary school links to ‘real-world’ music communities

chapter 11|16 pages

Unfinished business and unintended consequences

A conversation about teaching music in New Zealand secondary schools