Towards an Epistemology of Authenticity in Higher Popular Music Education

Tom Parkinson, Gareth Dylan Smith

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract


Popular m usic education is becom ing firm ly established as an academ ic field, in the UK and internationally. In order to help ensure that scholarship and practice within the field develop in reflexive and ethical ways appropriate to particular traditions, musics, people and institutional contexts, the authors advocate a discursive and iterative approach to the question of what it means to be “authentic” across higher popular music education (HPME). With reference to current research, policy and industry docum entation, the authors present a discussion framed by theories concerning authenticity in the domains of the vocational and academic, employability, music, gender, and pedagogy. The authors conclude that institutions and individuals w orking in higher popular m usic education have a responsibility to place the issue of authenticity at the center of pedagogy, curriculum design, institutional strategy and disciplinary knowledge share, in order for the field to develop in ways that are beneficial to all involved.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)93
Number of pages127
JournalAction, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education
Volume14
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - 2015

Keywords

  • Popular Music
  • education
  • employability
  • gender
  • pedagogy
  • curriculum
  • epistemology

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