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Pathways of Musical Creativity:the Effects of an Intervention for Enhancing Teacher-Student Interaction during Music Lessons in Primary Education
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- Author(s): Hendriks, Linda
- Source:
Hendriks , L 2025 , ' Pathways of Musical Creativity : the Effects of an Intervention for Enhancing Teacher-Student Interaction during Music Lessons in Primary Education ' , Doctor of Philosophy , University of Groningen , [Groningen] .
- Document Type:
Electronic Resource
- Online Access:
https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/82cfec54-fa5c-4f76-8c77-3650aa48ae08
https://doi.org/10.33612/diss.1198588129
https://hdl.handle.net/11370/82cfec54-fa5c-4f76-8c77-3650aa48ae08
https://pure.rug.nl/ws/files/1198588131/Complete_thesis.pdf
https://pure.rug.nl/ws/files/1198588133/Propositions.pdf
- Additional Information
- Publisher Information:
University of Groningen 2025
- Abstract:
The dissertation Pathways of Musical Creativity shows that students’ musical creativity can develop in an intervention with Video Feedback Coaching for teachers, mediated by their support of students’ creative autonomy during classroom interactions in music lessons. Autonomy support entails fostering students' self-determined learning by providing space for their own choices and interests. The intervention introduced teachers to music-pedagogical strategies for enhancing classroom interaction in order to transition from a teacher- and method-centered style to a student-centered and autonomy-supportive interaction approach. This PhD research also took the nonverbal components of teachers' autonomy support into account because classroom interaction in music lessons is also nonverbal and musical in nature. Teachers changed their interaction style during the intervention to one that supported more autonomy, and they were less likely to return to mainly instruction and modelling. Although for verbal autonomy support a beneficial effect was observed, teachers found it more difficult to provide higher levels of non-verbal autonomy support in music teaching. In turn, students showed more originality and variation in their creative thinking and acting in music. Although over half of the classes engaged in playing more complex rhythmical patterns over the course of the intervention, at group-level no effect for this aspect was found in comparison to a control group. These findings suggest that in both primary education and teacher education, more focus should be placed on enhancing classroom interaction and supporting students’ creative autonomy support in music lessons.
- Subject Terms:
- Availability:
Open access content. Open access content
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
- Note:
application/pdf
application/pdf
English
- Other Numbers:
GRU oai:pure.rug.nl:publications/82cfec54-fa5c-4f76-8c77-3650aa48ae08
1487718072
- Contributing Source:
UNIV OF GRONINGEN
From OAIster®, provided by the OCLC Cooperative.
- Accession Number:
edsoai.on1487718072
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