Tímarit um menntarannsóknir - 01.01.2009, Page 83

Tímarit um menntarannsóknir - 01.01.2009, Page 83
81 Tímarit um menntarannsóknir, 6. árgangur 2009 successful elementary school music teachers towards their work. It focused on evolving role identity and professional identities in relation to general education, music education, occupational well-being and other significant factors. The main research questions were: What factors influence the well-being • and professional stamina of a successful music teacher? What factors influence the • construction of the professional identity of a music teacher? What characterises the music • teacher’s attitudes and ideas towards his profession? The study was based on interviews which took place in the autumn of 2005 with nine practising elementary school music teachers who had between 4 and 31 years of teaching experience. They were educated in two schools: the University of Education in Iceland (Kennaraháskóli Íslands) and the Music Conservatory in Reykjavík (Tónlistarskólinn í Reykjavík). Results indicated that the support of school principals was particularly important to the teachers’ working environment and to their sense of well-being. In spite of differences in approach and practice in their teaching, all the participants emphasised creative student participation. They were all well educated in their field, i.e. music and pedagogy, and considered themselves first and foremost specialist teachers in music. They actively participated in moulding the overall culture of their respective schools and in some ways saw themselves as “artistic directors” of their schools. The teachers in the study had strong professional identities which, in most cases, were based on solid musical education and knowledge. They all believed in the importance of their teaching and had developed a clear philosophical focus towards their job. This formed the foundation for their strength and self-reliance, which they uses to gain support from parents and other significant others. They were content with the flexibility of the national music curriculum, even though a contradiction in their attitudes toward the curriculum was observed. One of the main results of the study was that solid grounding in both music and pedagogy/ teaching methods was a prerequisite for the music teacher’s clear vision of his role in the school environment. On that basis, they constructed their professional identity as musicians and teachers. The unification of musician and teacher was in some ways the key to being a successful music teacher. It seems important in the music teacher training program to combine education in music and in pedagogy. The two universities that now educate music teachers in Iceland, the Iceland Academy of the Arts and the University of Education, appear to reflect respectively each of the two different kinds of musician/teacher identity. On the one hand the Academy emphasises the ‘musician’ and musical development, whilst the University of Education places a significant emphasis on pedagogical issues and the making of ‘teachers’. With the prolongation of teacher training in Iceland from three years (B.Ed.) to five years (M.Ed. or M.A.) a golden opportunity is presented to accommodate for possible shortcomings in the respective schools, without either of them having to sacrifice their current emphasis on the B.Ed. level. Heimildaskrá Andri Ísaksson. (1983, október). Að mennta afl og önd. Erindi flutt á ráðstefnu Menntamálaráðuneytisins og Skólaþróunardeildar, Reykjavík. Bladh, S. (2002). Musiklærere–I utbildning och yrke. En longitudinell studie av musiklärere i Svergie. Gautaborg: Institut för musikvetenskap, Göteborgs Universität. Hlutverkavitund og starfsumhverfi farsælla tónmenntakennara
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