Editorial
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.62563/bem.v2016141Keywords:
EditorialAbstract
We are delighted to present our first issue of bulletin of empirical music education research (b:em) edited by the new editing team consisting of Andreas Lehmann-Wermser (HMTM Hannover), Lina Oravec (Uni Koblenz-Landau), Jens Knigge (MH Lübeck) und Valerie Krupp-Schleußner (HMTM Hannover). Before we inform you about the content of our new issue, we would like to let you know about further changes concerning our journal.
Our 13th issue shows a variety of methods and places of empirical research in music education. There are two German contributions about quantitative studies, two articles in English language reflecting on certain methodical approaches, one from the USA and one from Sweden, as well as one book review about a qualitative study from Germany.
Valerie Krupp-Schleußner (Hannover, Germany) takes the capability approach as a theoretical basis to develop a model of cultural participation for empirical research. The empirical data confirm that justice of participation can not adequately be measured by looking at quantity of cultural participation only.
Christin Werner (Germany) analyzed how children at primary level notate music. In her quantitative study she could confirm earlier findings by Bamberger, Upotis and Hildebrandt from the 80’s and take these results as a basis for the development of an even more differentiated coding scheme.
Kimberly Lasinger Ankney (Newport News, USA) reflects on the benefits of using stimulated recall methodologies to foster teachers’ awareness of student thinking in class. One focus is put on technical aspects, e.g. on possible computer applications that can be used for collaboration of researchers and teachers in investigating relevant student cognition in music class.
Zadig, Folkestad, and Lyberg-Åhlander (Malmö and Lund, Sweden) introduce a tool they developed to explore and analyze actions of the individual choir singer. With the help of a computer software, multi-track recordings have been made accessible for visual analysis.
In her book review, Lina Oravec (Koblenz, Germany) presents the dissertation by Anne Steinbach (née Weber-Krüger) that has recently been honored with the “Sigrid-Abel-Struth-Preis”, the only German award for excellent dissertations in the field of music education. The qualitative study is based on interviews with pre school aged children about what music and music education mean to them.
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Bulletin of Empirical Music Education Research (b:em) is published as an open access online journal. All articles are freely accessible online free of charge, there are no publication fees (Diamond Open Access). The standard licensing of the articles is CC BY-NC 4.0 (Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0))