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You are here: Home / IJRCS / IJRCS — Assessment in the Choral Classroom: A Case Study of a Secondary Choral Program

IJRCS — Assessment in the Choral Classroom: A Case Study of a Secondary Choral Program

April 26, 2021 by Amanda Bumgarner Leave a Comment


The International Journal of Research in Choral Singing (IJRCS)  is ACDA’s scholarly publication that welcomes studies that apply rigorous, systematically-grounded methodologies, either quantitative or qualitative, to investigate phenomena of potential interest to all who sing in, work with, or are otherwise interested in choral ensembles. Below is the abstract of this article written by Elizabeth (Libby) R. Hearn titled “Assessment in the Choral Classroom: A Case Study of a Secondary Choral Program.” You can find this article and more from Volume 9 here.
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Abstract
Assessment in the large choral ensemble classroom continues to be a widely examined topic
among music education practitioners and scholars. Scholars have dedicated a significant body of
research to identifying and examining the assessment practices of music educators (Denis, 2016; McQuarrie & Sherwin, 2013) However, due to their design, a number of the studies did not thoroughly explore the why and how of music assessment through the voices and experiences of students and teachers (Kotora, 2005; McClung, 1996; McCoy, 1991; Russell & Austin, 2010). This instrumental case study (Stake, 1995) explored perceptions of assessment practices as reported by high school choir students and their choir teacher.

Research questions examined participants’ beliefs about assessment, the factors that influenced those beliefs, their experiences with assessment practices, and the challenges of assessing choral
music students. Through analysis of multiple types of data collected from various data sources, the findings revealed that the teacher used both musical and nonmusical assessment practices to evaluate student learning. Students perceived all assessment practices, musical and nonmusical, to be in support of what they viewed as the primary goal of the choral program—ensemble achievement. The study identified external and internal influences that directly affected the use of assessment practices at Allen Thomas High School (ATHS), including the choir’s role in the school curriculum and culture.

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Visit https://acda.org/2021/01/ijrcs-volume-9/ to read this article!


Filed Under: IJRCS Tagged With: ACDA Membership Benefits, ACDA Publications, IJRCS

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