From the Stage to the Studio - Cornelia Watkins, Laurie Scott

From the Stage to the Studio

How Fine Musicians Become Great Teachers
Buch | Hardcover
336 Seiten
2023 | 2nd Revised edition
Oxford University Press Inc (Verlag)
978-0-19-757866-7 (ISBN)
99,95 inkl. MwSt
In this update to their classic book From the Stage to the Studio, authors Cornelia Watkins and Laurie Scott offer aspiring teacher-musicians useful wisdom and practical tips to enhance their careers. This new edition features updated information on new methods and techniques of study for music education as well as best practice recommendations for online teaching.
An expanded, updated, and improved second edition of an essential book for aspiring teacher-musicians.

Whether serving on the faculty at a university, maintaining a class of private students, or fulfilling an invitation as guest artist in a master class series, virtually all musicians will teach during their careers. From the Stage to the Studio speaks directly to the performing musician, highlighting the significant advantages of becoming distinguished both as a performer and a pedagogue. Drawing on over sixty years of combined experience, authors Cornelia Watkins and Laurie Scott provide the guidance and information necessary for any musician to translate their individual approach into productive and rewarding teacher-student interactions. Premised on the synergistic relationship between teaching and performing, this book provides a structure for clarifying the essential elements of musical artistry, and connects them to such tangible situations as setting up a studio, teaching a master class, interviewing for a job, judging competitions, and recruiting students. From the Stage to the Studio serves as an essential resource for university studio faculty, music pedagogy teachers, college music majors, and professionals looking to add effective teaching to their artistic repertoire.

This second edition provides readers useful tools for understanding current and ever-changing neurological and behavioral studies of music practice. This edition also features best practice recommendations for online teaching in both individual and ensemble settings, as well as new sections featuring financial advice for independent musicians and self-employed studio teachers. Beyond this, the authors have added practical tips on essential writing and language skills for teaching, planning, self-promotion, job applications, and advocacy. They have also revised the book's discussion of additional training and certification requirements for teaching positions, and provided updated information on professional music teaching associations. Bringing it all together is the second edition's larger format, ideal for including readers' written responses, plus a new user-friendly, worksheet-style grid for cross-referencing sequenced instruction with a variety of learning approaches.

Cornelia Watkins, cellist and author, is a lecturer at the Bienen School of Music at Northwestern University in Evanston, IL, and teaches privately from her home in Madison, WI. She previously taught graduate pedagogy and preparatory cello at the Shepherd School of Music, Rice University. Ms Watkins speaks regularly at music teaching conferences and written articles for multiple music publications including The Strad and American String Teacher. She is the author of two books about teaching and playing: Rosindust: Teaching, Learning and Life from a Cellist's Perspective and the present volume. Laurie Scott is Associate Professor of Music and Human Learning at The University of Texas at Austin. Additionally, she serves as the director of The University of Texas String Project and the Musical Lives string program at UT Elementary School. Previous to this appointment, Dr. Scott served as professor of violin and viola and director of music education studies at Southwestern University in Georgetown, Texas. A former school orchestra director, she now mentors young professionals toward successful lives as string educators. Her former students have become exemplary string educators, professional studio and symphony musicians, and passionate arts advocates.

Acknowledgments
Foreword by Stephen Clapp
Preface

PART I | THE PERFORMING MUSICIAN
Introduction When Your Calling in Life Is to Perform, Why Learn to Teach?
1 Musicality
2 Listening
3 Technique
4 Practicing
5 Performing

PART II | THE ART OF TEACHING
6 Teaching Principles
7 Sequencing
8 Fostering Student Independence
9 Comprehensive Teaching
10 Your Teaching Philosophy

PART III | THE MUSICIAN AS A TEACHING PROFESSIONAL
11 Establishing a Teaching Studio
12 Groups, Ensembles, Classrooms, and Other Teaching Situations
13 Quandaries and Options
14 The Cyclical and Reciprocal Nature of Teaching and Learning

Conclusion
Appendixes
Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Zusatzinfo 40 figures, 14 tables
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 279 x 216 mm
Gewicht 998 g
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater Musik Allgemeines / Lexika
Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Ethik
ISBN-10 0-19-757866-7 / 0197578667
ISBN-13 978-0-19-757866-7 / 9780197578667
Zustand Neuware
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