Select eighth-grade chorister and choir director views of why the students may continue in high school curricular choir
Abstract
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Select eighth-grade chorister and choir director views of why the students may continue in high school curricular choir
- Creators
- Christopher Martin Marple
- Contributors
- Jeremy Manternach (Advisor)Mary Cohen (Committee Member)Adam Harry (Committee Member)Leslie Locke (Committee Member)Trevor Harvey (Committee Member)
- Resource Type
- Dissertation
- Degree Awarded
- Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), University of Iowa
- Degree in
- Music
- Date degree season
- Summer 2021
- Publisher
- University of Iowa
- DOI
- 10.17077/etd.006025
- Number of pages
- xvii, 219 pages
- Copyright
- Copyright 2021 Christopher Martin Marple
- Language
- English
- Description illustrations
- illustrations
- Description bibliographic
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 151-185).
- Public Abstract (ETD)
Adolescent singers in the 8th grade must decide whether to continue in choral singing as they transition out of middle school and into high school. There are several factors that may influence their choice (Freer, 2006; Sweet, 2010). Researchers have extensively examined how specifically male or female adolescents feel about the sense of community they experience in their choir ensembles (Demorest, 2000; Parker, 2010). Researchers have also investigated factors that may influence the choices of high school students to remain in choir as they transition to college (Baker, 2009; Sichivitsa, 2001).
In the current investigation, I explored how 8th-grade singers assign value to various factors that may affect their decision to remain in choir. The factors I asked 8th-grade students to consider were related to: (a) how they perceived their singing skills, (b) the support they received from their parents, (c) social dynamics in their choir, (d) thoughts on personal growth and how they were challenged, (e) how they valued the importance of music, (f) their intentions to continue in music making, and (g) how they perceived the cultural aspects of their choral experience. I also asked choir directors from around the United States to estimate the percentage of 8th-grade singers that they think will value these factors. The following are some of the findings from the current study: (a) students indicated that they most value the opportunity for personal growth, (b) although the students highly valued the opportunity for personal growth, results showed that this factor did not play a large part in whether the singers actually continued in choir, (c) choir directors believed that the highest percentage of their students would value social factors, (d) the students indicated that the cultural aspects of their choral experiences are the least valued of all the listed factors, and (e) although the students did not assign a high value to cultural aspects of their choral experiences, this variable turned out to be a moderate factor when deciding to continue in high school choir.
- Academic Unit
- School of Music
- Record Identifier
- 9984124572102771