Music education for a prairie town
Aassociate professor Dr. Jody Stark wants to help decolonize and Indigenize school music by focusing on the local.
Aassociate professor Dr. Jody Stark wants to help decolonize and Indigenize school music by focusing on the local.
Music teachers’ remarkably uniform experiences as music learners and music teacher candidates result in the reproduction of a Euro-derived pedagogy focused on the performance of specific musical work, rather than allowing students to create their own music or to engage with the musical practices of local musicians.
Desautels Faculty of Music associate professor Dr. Jody Stark wants to do something to change the situation.
Stark has received over $60 000 from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) to develop and pilot a local music pedagogy that responds to and incorporates various ways people make and enjoy music in Winnipeg, Canada.
Stark plans to engage in a collaborative research project with a group of music educators and community collaborators including local Indigenous and settler musicians and representatives of various local cultural institutions and organizations.
Together, the group will create and test out a decolonizing pedagogical framework for local music education on the land, and with the popular, contemporary, and traditional musics, of Treaty 1 territory.
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