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Travelling drum with different beats: experiencing African music and culture in Australian teacher education

journal contribution
posted on 2005-10-01, 00:00 authored by Dawn JosephDawn Joseph
This article reports on a study that examined the effectiveness of introducing African music and culture to Australian non-specialist primary teacher education students at Deakin University in Melbourne (Australia). The study demonstrates that African music enhanced the generic musical experiences, learning, motivation, interest, confidence and competence of students in their fourth year of teacher education. The research also addressed the significance and contribution of African music and culture as a cross-cultural experience for these beginning teachers who in turn could provide similar experiences for their own students. This study highlighted the author's role and cultural identity as a South African music educator in transmitting the music and culture represented in 'the travelling drum' to a cohort of students with a predominantly Eurocentric orientation. By extension, this curriculum initiative broadened students' understanding and application of indigenous methods of teaching and learning as part of a global experience. Such a curriculum represents a pathway to many other forms of non-Western indigenous knowledge of music, culture and pedagogy that can be mapped out as a journey along a multicultural route towards 'internationalising the curriculum'.

History

Journal

Teacher development: an international journal of teachers' professional development

Volume

9

Pagination

287-300

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

1366-4530

eISSN

1747-5120

Language

eng

Notes

Online Publication Date: 01 October 2005

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2005, Taylor & Francis

Issue

3

Publisher

Routledge