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Daily Archives: July 8, 2008

Case Study Interventions of Level 1 LLSN Partnerships

The RUBRICS CUBE System as a Point of Departure Assessment

Advancing music for changing times requires that the evolving role of music in education must always be considered in the context of current education policy. in this period of mounting pressure on schools to produce documented evidence of meeting ever-expanding accountability benchmarks for success, music is emerging as a strategic entry point and priority for reform and improvement through arts and arts-integrated learning. A select group of schools nationwide and their higher education and arts organization partners have chosen to embrace these challenges by developing new models of inquiry and research as part of the Music-In-Education Learning Laboratory School Network (LLSN).

In this Chapter, music-in-education collaborating practitioners and researchers report on the challenges of developing documentation, assessment, and research practices as part of the process of creating music-in-education laboratory programs in schools. First, Larry Scripp, Director of the Center for Music-in-Education at New England Conservatory, describes how the RUBRICS CUBE framework provides a ‘universal-field’ approach to embracing multi-factored assessment of multivariate program outcomes through both qualitative and statistical analyses. Scripp offers case study portraits and the evolution of the consortium research methods.

Larry Scripp and David Reider team up to offer a detailed examination of the Music Ventures project in Vista, California. This study, commissioned by the NAMM Foundation (formerly the International Foundation for Music Research), indicates that statistically significant, positive links between music and language reading and writing skills exist at the early stages of literacy development, and that these links strengthen considerably, especially with ELL students, as teachers are trained to support music and language-integrated reading and writing instruction through ‘teaching for transfer’ strategies in their classrooms. In this way music reading and writing become an essential tool for creating a broader and deeper understanding of general symbolic skill development.

Read more:

Morrison Elementary (Norwalk, CA): Mid-Journey Reflections: A Classroom Teacher Incorporates Music

This report contains three extended narratives that illustrate the core narrative:

  • Norwalk/Morrison Steel Pan Band – Karen Calhoun
    story: Professional development from the music teacher point of view, showing growth over three years. Focuses on students’ performance success, but also demonstrates the value of sustained partnership and especially mentorship among students. Includes sidebar of student reflections.
  • Using Dulcimer Instruction for Music Integration – Lori Knight
    story: Professional development from the classroom teacher point of view. Teacher uses her own interest in the dulcimer to fuel students’ natural curiosity for learning. Features examples of integration with music and language arts (story orchestra), social studies, and math. Sessions and on-line forums with professional musicians create music growth as well as more opportunities for literacy
  • Journey of a Teaching Artist – Andrew Grueshow
    story: Professional Development and growth from the teaching artist point of view.

Download Morrison’s Core Narrative by Grande (PDF) | Calhoun | Knight | Grueshow