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ERIC EJ1000244: Transformative Music Invention: Interpretive Redesign through Music Dialogue in Classroom Practices PDF

2012·0.72 MB·English
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aaustralian s osc i e t y f o r mmu s i c Transformative music invention: educat ioen incorporated interpretive redesign through music dialogue in classroom practices Michelle Tomlinson Griffith University Abstract In this thematic case study in a rural primary school, young children of diverse socio-cultural origins use transformative and transmodal redesign in music as they explore new conceptual meanings through self-reflexive interaction in classroom music events. A focus on music dialogue created by interaction between modes is seen to promote inclusiveness and transformation of learning. This praxial approach to music learning in the classroom context uncovers hidden dogma used to justify existing structures in the curriculum. In music education in Australia there is still a common failure to acknowledge that embodied and situated music making found in “everyday life” (De Nora, 2011) is linked to conceptual knowledge of music. In this study, investigating young children’s selections of semiotic resources when redesigning meaning in a dialogue of modes enables educators to determine how conceptual knowledge of music is established, extended and expanded through children’s developing understanding of the elements of music during redesign. The complexity of young children’s use of music imagery and genre and their grasp of music concepts is evident in their interactions in classroom music events. Awareness of the space of music dialogue allows for a deeper insight in children’s capacity for music invention. Key words: classroom music dialogue, semiotic redesign, praxis, multimodality, music invention. Australian Journal of Music Education 2012:1, 42-56 Introduction not always used in conjunction, but rather are selected by children in specific combinations for The unique nature of music in the curriculum can particular uses in situated classroom practice. offer particular opportunities for learning through While interactions in this study occurred semiotic import that promotes cognitive growth between children within a framework of open- in problem solving, critical reflection, and the ended music invention, the teacher/researcher synthesis of ideas. In music events children select sometimes lightly scaffolded these music events semiotic resources of voice (spoken and sung), by accessing and preparing school instruments instruments (tuned and untuned), body language (such as taking notes off the xylophone and (gaze, posture, facial expressions), movement, leaving others as a pentatonic scale). At other gesture and the physical environment with times she asked leading questions or made its materials and structures to solve problems suggestions, but children always led with ideas in how to redesign these in music dialogue. and selections of resources. Jorgensen (2002) Other resources accessed by young children elucidated ideas of music learning through include digital music, and formal resources of interactive enquiry, creativity and meaning music elements or concepts (pitch, rhythm, making. She rejected curricula or methods dynamics). All resources contribute to children’s founded on rational and sequenced development co-construction of meaning. However, they are 42 2012, No. 1 Interpretive redesign in classroom practices of musical concepts. Rather, she outlined identifiable and competencies they imply, so that perspectives of children’s development that appropriate provision and pedagogic strategies emphasised mutual discovery between teachers can be designed.” and children based on different ways children This multiple case study of themes – music make meaning of self in the world, and cultural dialogue, transformative redesign and transmodal constructions reflecting ways of meaning making redesign in classroom music invention – is part (Bruner, 1986). This study also revealed children of a larger study of music inventive practices of make discoveries with peers alone. five-year-olds in classroom and home events Recent research into children’s composing conducted over six months. This study aims to gives insight into their musical development, just further understand how young children in a rural as text construction gives insight into literacy. school use modes interacting in dialogue as forms Mapping of children’s creative music strategies of organisation and redesign of meaning to assist and pathways has been attempted (Burnard & their development of conceptual knowledge in Younker, 2002; Diagnault, 1996; Wiggins, 2003; music events. The question of concern in this Younker & Burnard, 2004). Underlying patterns and study is: “How are children’s selections of semiotic modalities of thinking were investigated (Young, resources and interpretive redesign of modes in 2003, 2009, 2010) and children’s compositional classroom music invention realised?” products (Barrett, 1996) and aesthetic approaches (Barrett, 1998; Kratus, 1994). Assessing creativity The Praxis of Music Education: Music in compositions was attempted (Auh & Walker, Identity and Redesign of Meaning 2003; Hickey, 2009; Webster, 2003). Children were investigated composing with computers (Mellor, Because situated cultural forms of expression 2009; Seddon & O’Neill, 2001) and constructing involve choice of resources in artistic composition collaborative compositions (MacDonald & Meill, processes, praxis in music education (as opposed 2000; Morgan, Hargreaves & Joiner, 1998). Marsh to aesthetics, the study of music as art or object) (2008) developed a case for open-ended process- was important to this study. Articulated in detail oriented music creative practices. Investment in by some authors (Barrett, 2011; Elliott, 2005; culturally situated resources in classrooms where Green, 2008, 2011; Regelski, 2000, 2004, 2005(a), value adding and identity building is encouraged 2005(b); Swanwick, 1979, 1994), this philosophy in music inventive practices have been advocated is held by many music researchers. It is concerned as an approach to music invention (Bowman, 2002; with the production, study and appreciation Custodero, 2009; Green, 2011 and Harrop-Allin, of music in contexts (Regelski, 2000, p. 16) and 2010, 2011). Children’s agentive inventive music emphasises the action of music making. Regelski practices in home and community contexts have (2004, p. 17), a cultural critical theorist, took this been investigated, along with their implications for further to define “praxis as embodied knowledge pedagogy (Barrett, 2005b, 2011). Barrett (2005b, and experience” in music. He recommended p. 261) has urged for more research in music accessing cultural affordances for composition education to “investigate children’s experience practices. As Green (2008, p. 185) argued, the and understanding of music,” particularly their approach to music education that “validates conceptual knowledge. Young (2003, p. 56) also embodied knowledge, competencies and highlighted the need for ongoing research that experiences” gives value and voice to children looks at “the inter-sensory whole” of music – and their music, enabling them to participate in instruments, voice, materials and movement, building curriculum knowledge and to enrich and to investigate “forms of organisation that are extend their learning. Australian Journal of Music Education 43 Tomlinson Robinson (2001) noted that rich, contextualised the classroom” (Stein, 2008, p.152). Glissant (2001) learning promotes higher thinking skills involving elucidated the concept of identity as formed and critical engagement, reflective practice and extended in relationality. An elusive concept, creativity. Recent research demonstrates that identity is dynamic and unpredictable, dialogic these broad literacy skills are developed through and transactional (Titlestad, 2007). This philosophy everyday embodied and creative interactions of identity is based on the rhizomatics of Deleuze (Newfield & Stein, 2000; Pahl & Roswell, 2012; Van and Guattari (1987) where meaning making is Leeuwen, 2005). Because musical experiences unpredictable, nomadic and multi-dimensional. are complex, elusive, transitory (never the same), Semiotic production uses similar processes and diverse, the different manifestations of of appropriation, modification, hybridization, music should shape educational procedures and manipulation, invention and transformation as common constructs (Harrop-Allin, 2011; Swanwick, well as improvisation as strategies and repertories 1979, p. 40). Community music activities and home for inclusive and creative productivity. practices connect with children’s identities (Green, Barrett (2005b) identified contextualized music 2008, 2011) and their resources (Temmerman, learning in Australian urban school playgrounds 2005; Marsh, 2008, 2011). Both are essential to as musicianship in communities of practice (Lave enrich and consolidate learning in classroom & Wenger, 1991), examining children’s musical contexts, promoting music and language literacy. interactions from a socio-cultural perspective. She Learning and conceptual understanding is emphasised “members have agency, and thus take inseparable from practices (Kress, 2003). up, resist, transform, and reconstruct the social and A body of research has also acknowledged cultural practices afforded them in and through children’s created or recreated music making the events of everyday life” (Barrett, 2005a, p. 189). as being key indications of children’s layered Barrett contributed to an understanding of how identities (Barrett, 2005b; Campbell, 1991, children learn within the practices of their games 2004b; Marsh, 2008; Pahl & Roswell, 2005). These in situated contexts. She maintained that future researchers in music education sought to enrich research in music educational policy and practice children’s learning experiences in classroom should “investigate children’s experience and contexts by investigating their meaningful music understanding of music” (Barrett, 2005b, p. 261). making in out-of-school situated practices. O’Toole She critiqued current educational practices: “Too (2005, p. 297) argued this is “a primary reason often a deficit view of children’s musical ability for music making is identity affirmation.” This pervades teaching and learning interactions in was particularly relevant when considering the school settings, as educators measure children’s meanings of children’s actions and perspectives musical ability solely against the communities during musical inventions. She asserted that of musical practice extant in the adult musical context is the playground for identity formation, world” (Barrett, 2005a, p.189). Marsh (2008, p. 12) for our senses of self are subjective, reliant on the acknowledged children’s music making as difficult worlds we live in, not independent of them (Butler, to capture, and always in a state of change and 1990, 2004; Foucault, 1984; Hall & Du Gay, 2003). transformation, because they were embodied Newfield (2010) proposed that identity consists performances in context, not fixed texts. of the sensitive action of learners’ sign making Significantly, she demonstrated that the nature activity. A child-centred teaching environment of learning, teaching and identity construction in may be created by valuing and working with and out of classrooms is fluid and interconnected learners’ diverse and expressive resources and through the sharing of musical tastes (Marsh, identities, especially by those who “have power in 2011). 44 2012, No. 1 Interpretive redesign in classroom practices In terms of music praxis in education, In an Australian study, Darian-Smith and Green (2008, p.13) wrote of “the difficulty of Henningham (2011) recorded in great detail the incorporating music from one culture into change and continuity of children’s schoolyard another, the challenges of adopting, within games and activities to make them accessible for formal education, music which is transmitted use in classroom contexts. In other recent studies, outside formal education; the lack of fit between pedagogical settings were structured so that the cultural assumptions that surround music writing and exploration of multimodal meanings and musical practices in different cultures.” She could be engaged simultaneously. It was found considered “how pedagogy in the music classroom that children participating in these settings could draw upon the world of informal popular developed a broader repertoire of meanings and music learning practices outside the school” means of expression (Gallas, 1994; Rowe et al., (Green, 2008, p. 1), noting that several musical 2003). This was evident as children collaborated identities in one individual develop and change and discussed their composing resources drawn over time (Green, 2011). Through situated case from alternative and culturally rich modes studies, she concluded that all learning involves introduced into the classroom (Kenner & Kress, interaction with the physical world, family, 2003). friendship, the media as well as conscious study A number of positions have contributed to the and application. value of syncretism in classroom practice and More recently, there have been studies that the conclusion that minority or hidden literacies incorporate the forms and musicality of children’s are crucial for learning. Barrett (2011), Green situated games in multi-literacy pedagogy (2011) and Harrop-Allin (2011) demonstrated within the general classroom. Harrop-Allin the importance of investigating children’s (2010) proposed that the gap in classroom music prior understanding and experience, to inform education is the need of teachers for tools with educators of the value of agentive interaction and which to “engage with musical play” (Harrop- contextualised learning. Their views were based on Allin, 2011, p. 158). She observed: “the absence the idea that identity is multifarious and changes of a sound methodology for incorporating over time (Deleuze & Guattari, 1987; Glissant, or accounting for children’s musical practices 2001). The representation of children’s situated in pedagogy is evident in much of the music cultural experiences in classrooms appears to education literature that engages with children’s rest in its potential to reveal competence in music” (Harrop-Allin, 2010, p. 36). In studying creative, innovative thinking through embodied Soweto playground games and interactions transformation of resources based on interest in situated music making she concluded that (Kress, 2011; Newfield, 2010; Stein, 2008). This culturally shaped materials, resources and hypothesis needs further investigation in relation inspiration in music education reside with the to children’s music invention in the classroom children and their identities. She suggested context. Pedagogic frameworks are insufficient they should build on forms and competence unless they appeal to the creative capacity of displayed in their games to reconstruct meaning children and build on their complex and plentiful in classroom contexts, assisted by teacher music inventions made in playground games and scaffolding. “Giving ‘voice’ to children’s music out-of-school practices (Barrett, 2011; Custodero, acknowledges that children not only inherit but 2009; Darian-Smith & Henningham, 2011; Green, also create culture and new forms of literacy.” It 2008; 2011; Marsh, 2008). This gives children “can create ongoing learning in a developmental, space to play with ideas in scaffolded classroom ‘future-orientated’ process” (Harrop-Allin, 2010, p. activities, featuring children’s transitory music 306). events. Australian Journal of Music Education 45 Tomlinson Social Semiotics, Modal Redesign redesigning these resources within a multimodal and Learning context. Semiotics provides a lens through which children’s music events are examined to reveal Children’s orientation towards learning through complex micro interactions. Semiotic resources the principled, motivated and agentive selection include voice, instruments, media, movement, of resources to remake meaning was observed gesture, gaze and proxemics. Formal resources in recent studies (Kress, 2003; Mavers, 2011; are the conceptual elements of pitch, rhythm, Pahl, 2007 and Van Leeuwen, 2005). These social meter, dynamics, tempo and timbre. According to semioticians agreed that choice of mode is seen Green (2011), Kress (2011) and West (2009) there is to have an effect on the production of meaning need of more specific in-depth analysis of young (Kress & Van Leeuwen, 2001, pp. 99-127). Different children’s music learning through examination modes were seen to shape knowledge in different of their use of semiotic resources for redesign. ways because the interpretation of knowledge No full study of transmodal and transformational is shaped by the agent’s choice of or disposition redesign has been done in the field of young towards a mode. Kress (2003, p. 52) stated that children’s classroom music invention, within the meaning arises from “affordances,” the cultural space of music dialogue. Harrop-Allin (2010, 2011) “potentials” and “limitations” of modes in material analysed children’s playground games using a representations. Jewitt (2009) reinforced the framework of social semiotics and related the significance of identifying participants’ use of forms of children’s musical play to multiliteracy affordances in diverse learning environments. She practice in classrooms. She acknowledged the noted that in social semiotics meaning making need to address the silences in the literature of is foregrounded by agencies through specific music learning and pedagogy through further concrete, sensory, material and embodied acts studies of children’s use of semiotic resources for in situated contexts. Modal representations music redesign. in social semiotics do not convey meaning Orientation towards learning through principled through abstract representational systems or and purposeful selection of resources has been cognitivism, usually attributed to reading and observed in studies by Kress (2003) and Mavers writing. Children use embodied resources for (2011). “Children have a social and personal redesigning familiar music material and ideas investment in the symbolic meanings of their to make meaning. Language is not the central culture right from the start, and it follows that focus for learning. As examples in this paper their engagement with them is likely to be always demonstrate, different modes are different ways intentional and purposeful” (Lancaster, 2007, p. of transporting a message and allow for choice 125). Semiosis is a term referring to contextualised in different shaping of resources. Signs are text-making practices or the ways in which texts motivated (Kress, 2000a; Van Leeuwen, 2005). The are the expression of cultural knowledge, beliefs sign is the product of interested action. Agentive and practices (Jewitt, 2009). Their sign making has action shapes the sign and the relationships of constraints as they make selections using materials power (Kress, 2010). “to hand” (Kress, 1997) and are possibly influenced Building on the social semiotic gives structure to by both convention and cultural practices. this study: focus is on domains of transformative In social semiotics, activity occurs across modes and transmodal redesign in music dialogue in as well as in one predominant mode to redesign lower primary school. The term music dialogue meaning (Jewitt, 2003; Stein, 2003). Transformation is central to this study and developed for the (Kress, 2010, p. 43) involves “changes in ordering purpose of investigating children’s co-construction and configurations of elements within one of meaning through selections of modes and 46 2012, No. 1 Interpretive redesign in classroom practices mode.” Transformative redesign is a thematic extended interaction when motivated by the case in this study. It is the “interested action” “of exercise of choice in multimodal events has also socially located, culturally and historically formed been demonstrated as enhancing their expressive individuals, as the remakers, the transformers vocabulary as they reflect on meaning and form and the re-shapers of the representational during moments of transmodal authoring (Rowe, resources available to them” (Kress, 2000a, p. 155). 2003). Transmodal semiosis is a process where modes of In conclusion, in multimodality and social representation or communication are changed, semiotics theory, inner semiosis, or children’s where “there is a change of meaning expressed internalised representation of meaning in their in one mode to that expressed in another” (Kress, thought processes, is synchronous with their 2010, p.43). The transmodal moment, a metaphor external actions. Together these form the space for the occurrence of a shift of thought or feeling, of music dialogue. Children select materials to is also understood as being relational to other represent the same meaning but in different periods of history and other ways of expressing ways, using different modes. In transmodal ideas and experiences (Newfield, 2010). Choice of semiosis the principal modes of communication familiar cultural forms of expression encourages are changed whereas through transformative self-reflexivity and gives shape to meaning, redesign of resources embodied representations bringing composing processes to life. There are made in one mode, based on interest (Kress, is opportunity for metacognition. This has a 2010; Newfield, 2010; Stein, 2008). Selection and pedagogic impact and can be seen as the way that redesign of modes assists children’s formation of children redesign meaning in music dialogue. musical identity through increased conceptual Kress (2000b, p.154) noted that the process of understanding. transduction through change in meaning across modes is something that simultaneously involves Methods cognitive and embodied meaning making. It has an external manifestation in transmodal Studies that apply a social semiotic framework redesign. Transduction is a thematic case in and multimodal analysis to the investigation of this study. It is an involved process of moving early composing processes are still few in number material from one mode to another (from speech (Bezemer & Mavers, 2011; Flewitt et al., 2009; to music, or from writing to film) that does not Kress, 1997, 2009; Mavers, 2007, 2011; Ranker, involve mere translation or transference of 2009). This case study explored music invention meaning. Inner semiosis, or children’s internalised using multiple methods of data collection (videos representations of meaning in thought processes, of small group classroom music activities and is synchronous with their external actions as home music events taken by the researcher as the child selects materials for redesign. This educator; parent/sibling videos of home music involves a “transduction” process that is not invention; field notes; recorded discussions with just “translating, but is in itself transformative” parents and children) to build a thick description (Kress & Van Leeuwen, 2001, p. 5). Transmodal (Feagin et al., 1991). The data sets contributed redesign has been observed in children’s to “the complete literal description of the redesign of literacy texts (Gutiérrez et al., 1999; incident, action or communicative event being Newfield, 2010; Pahl & Roswell, 2006) and in investigated” (Merriam, 1988), honouring the their multimodal music dialogue where music specificities of the case. Voices, feelings, actions practices are used in different spaces and across and meanings of interacting individuals (Denzin, sites or contexts (Harrop-Allin, 2011). Children’s 2002) were featured through the researcher’s engagement and empathy in classroom music Australian Journal of Music Education 47 Tomlinson composing events. These case studies were oblique representations of meaning. instrumental, aiming to contribute to a “better In music, elements or features of percussive or understanding and perhaps better theorising, lyric effects, dynamics, timbre and tone, pitch, about a still larger collection of cases” (Stake, meter, rhythmic variation and harmony are all 2005, p. 446). important for making meaning and for redesign. In This study was part of a larger case study of three this study, they became ways for identifying modal classroom locations: inner city, private college redesign and how meaning was translated or in suburban location, and a rural school (this made across modes. Modes of writing and drawing study). Music inventions were examined through are not, like those of speech, music and dance, thematic case studies of transmodal redesign and temporally instantiated. Sound resources vary in transformational redesign. Video transcriptions pitch, rhythm, duration, volume and intonation, of classroom and home music events, open- and often incorporate silence (Van Leeuwen, ended interviews of parents and participants, 1999). There is conveyance of different dimensions observations and field notes comprised the data of meaning to representations of visual symbols. sets. Video data was selected for analysis according All modes interacting “in dialogue” assist in the to categories of transmodal or transformational redesign of meaning during music invention. redesign of music dialogue (cases nested within Video clips were transcribed used overall the broader case study). Within the rural classroom descriptive functions of cognitive, affective, setting of this study there were participants of motor and social interaction taking place Aboriginal and European heritage and a bilingual (Rostvall & West, 2005). Tabular or synchronous student of recent arrival from Brazil. Repetition and diachronic mapping facilitated temporality of characteristic patterns of interaction and and modal separation for analysis (Bezemer & redesign were evidenced in the analysis of videos Mavers, 2011). This study used a system similar from classroom composing events. Interactions to that of a music score. Embodied meaning were transcribed as dynamic, embodied actions, (gaze, gesture and posture) was transcribed not “static” representations of speech turns. This by still images superimposed with dialogue to method allowed patterns of dialogue to emerge represent speech and eclectic responses (Norris, with coherence and consistency between different 2004, 2009). They focussed on bodily action, modes: from explicit and direct information to gesture and interaction (Bezemer, 2008; Kress & Van Leeuwen, 2006). Representation of speech Figure 1: Nested Case Study Design. and/or sound was sometimes placed above Transmodal Transformational these images if these became principal modes TransmoRdeadl eRseigdnesign R e Tderasingsnformatoifo cnoanl vReeydinesgi gmne aning. A variety of transcription methods aided identification of emerging patterns across cases and contexts using all modes in context (Bezemer & Mavers, 2011). Transcriptions Participants of video data approached as artefactual evidence of European was seen as useful for analytical purposes, and Heritage Bilingual for the building of an argument. Choices were Participants Participants made to “shape the account of social interaction in of Aboriginal of Recent Heritage significant ways” (Bezemer & Mavers, 2011, p. 203). Arrival This method highlighted moments of particular Rural attention and simultaneity, such as types of bodily School configurations: the micro-ethnographic (Bezemer, Setting 2008; Erickson, 2004). Figure 1: Nested Case Study Design 48 2012, No. 1 Interpretive redesign in classroom practices There are enormous benefits to the use of video constructing meaning. Transformative practice recordings, in that they are durable and shareable with semiotic resources of physical materials records to be viewed repeatedly (Jewitt, 2011). (instruments and voice), and conceptual As noted by Knoblauch et al. (2006, p. 19), they resources of elements of music (pitch, rhythm, represent a real-time sequential medium that dynamics and phrasing) was traced. Attention “preserves the temporal and sequential structure was made to material representations. of interaction” which is so characteristic of music Socio-cultural resources of family, and familiar invention. Recordings provided a fine-grained musical styles – folk, pop or classical – were traced data that could be analysed frame by frame or in in participants’ music redesign. Musical instruments, seconds, where music is kept in context with modes and the physical space, assisted with children’s of gaze, body posture, facial expression and gesture. formation of music identities and music concepts. Modal redesign occurs as children select resources Discussion to co-construct meaning. Through these domains of situatedness, identity and modal redesign - the The study investigated the evidence that redesign space of music dialogue - children’s conceptual   through the selection o f semiotic resources in knowledge was identified, their processes of refining music invention has lasting and transforming understanding through redesign. Transcriptions effects on children’s music education. In particular reflected the researcher’s reading of the data in the redesign of modes realised in classroom particular ways, using multimodal analysis. music events was captured and shown to be The space of music dialogue was examined effective for promoting children’s conceptual in this paper in classroom music events understanding. Through music dialogue, the that incorporate paired, solo or small group interplay of modes and children’s selection of interactions. In collaborative explorations of music semiotic resources were evident as children co- Figure 2: The Space of Music Dialogue. Australian Journal of Music Education 49 Tomlinson transformation, Edward and Anna invented duos transcribing this event. Descriptive analysis was on the Orff alto xylophone that were rhythmically secondary, supporting meanings conveyed by complex, alternating with one keeping a beat the salience of image and music. Image captured while the other played syncopation, then vice gaze, gesture and facial expression, all crucial to versa. Edward introduced a rhythmic motif that co-constructing and transforming meaning in this trabscript 2  contained elements such as repeated quaver trabscript 2c reative music invention (see Transcript 2). notes, while Anna kept a steady beat that changed   to an “off-beat” syncopation with wide intervallic Transcript 2. leaps between the notes. This playful dialogue involved using a limited melodic range on their xylophone on C-E-G-A over two octaves. Proxemics Orff Bass Xylophone in interactions caused contrasting rhythmic ideas and changing time signatures (Anna added beats 2-3 in ¾ time bars 1-2, and syncopation on O.B. Xyl.    beats 2 and 5. Edward played the upper register.       Transcript  2 Millie and Bob’s Arm movements influenced the direction of the transcript 1  transcmripte 1l odic line (see Transcript 1). Transformative Redesign         In one music event, participants were asked to Transcript 1. volunteer to recount an experience or event in their life. Transmodal redesign of such experiences, initially verbally inscribed, occurred as they were Orff Alto Xylophone later communicated musically on a metallophone. The essence of the experience was captured, not the sequence of events. A short musical phrase O.A. Xyl. was sufficient to immediately shift previous verbal representations, giving the experience new Transcript 1 Edward and Anna’s meaning. Tracey’s flying bird became a repeated Transformative Redesign sequence of three notes below the tonic, then a Bob and Millie by contrast quickly settled into rising glissando followed by a repeat of the low playing the beat simultaneously while varying sequence in diminuendo, finishing on the tonic. the notes within the same range (Transcript 2). Transcriptions used a music score to convey music Various music activities in the school lead up to as the principal mode (see Transcript 3). this event, required them to keep a beat with Transcript 3. clapping or body percussion while singing. New Transcript 3  Transcript 3  rhythmic ideas and melodic patterns emerged Transcript 3  as they “fitted in” with each other, so proxemics Transcript 3  was important in influencing their playing. While Orff Bass Metallophone referred to as music dialogue between two peers, this was dialogue that did not take turns in space and time, but in responses through imitation O.B. Met. and extension of each other’s ideas. Millie played the high register but they often crossed over O.B. Met.   registers or played in contrary motion. The music   score and still images were equally important for          O.B. Met.         50 2012, No. 1 Interpretive redesign in classroom practices Transcript 3 Metallophone Event xylophones, drums and guiros. Tracey’s purposeful choice of who should play and in what sequence Anna captured ghost-like sounds by softly was based on visual, aural and gestural clues. striking the bass metallophone and playing Sometimes she watched a participant and chose minor seconds in rising sequences, finishing them for their awareness and eye contact. In on the supertonic and leaving her story this way she chose Sandra as the little girl who unresolved. Daniel made two darting, sharp, saved the bird (changing the content of the striking movements with his mallets, each note previous story). Through listening to the disjunct in turn, followed by two notes simultaneously, or opposing sounds provided by the bass drum as a repeated motif with variation. This strongly and guiro, she added more complex elements to expressed the terrifying “red snake lying in her story (Transcript 4). These were the crocodile the grass” then “biting my baby sister.” He and the kangaroo (the latter being chosen as a demonstrated sophisticated awareness of motif running through the entire piece, these structure and repetition in music texts. Leighton participants keeping a steady beat). This event was “saw a red-back spider at my home – in the an example of transmodal redesign from speech to bathroom,” capturing this with back-and-forth music. The decisions of Tracey and her friends were consecutive fourths and fifths, (C-G, D-G), a made using purposeful ideas to advance the story repeated G, then a final high, suspended E. and bring it to a riveting climax. There were many Edward “falled over – you know those cement levels of complexity in choice of music elements steps – and I hurted my knee.” He expressed this and interaction of modes in a multimodal on the metallophone by first scanning the whole ensemble of meaning. The music event was an range visually, then repeating the lowest note six effortful artistic expression of an experience. times, following it with one high note at the top of The use of musical instruments transformed the range. The individual symbolic representations Tracey’s conceptual and communicative capacity, of experiences, first expressed in the mode of for music was a familiar cultural resource with speech, were transducted and transformed which to make meaning in everyday interactions. into the mode of music on the metallophone Her story was transducted in this mode: by selecting salient features of pitch, dynamics, movement, crisis and change were achieved rhythm and phrasing. There was a shift in meaning through sound (a box drum represented the as the children captured their experience in the kangaroo, the timbre of the metallophone mode of music. with high, light sustained sounds represented In another classroom music event Tracey, who a “saving” of the owl by the little girl; the guiro had recently arrived from Brazil with English as a suggested danger and the bass drum - crocodile Second Language, was challenged while verbally - provided tension and climax). Tracey realised expressing in English her account of an event the counterscript suggested by Daniel, gazing with an owl that fell from a tree, and a little boy at him and weaving the bass drum into a climax who saved it. However, she fluently transformed involving a crocodile, adding other drums for a the verbal account into music. Her verbal account crescendo effect. Apt selections of resources and came to life through transduction into a musical ideas made music the principal communicative as she led the small group of participants. As mode. Children combined elements of music in “director” of a music drama, she requested each a moment of transmodal redesign where speech participant to select a percussion instrument. was secondary to timbre, phrasing, dynamics, Together the children reconstructed meaning silence and beat. Still images in this transcription through choice of ways to play their instrument (Transcript 4) revealed gesture, gaze, proxemics by exploring the contrasting affordances of Australian Journal of Music Education 51

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