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Layering analytic lenses
considerations for assessing the narrative text in music education – a commentary
pp. 107-112
Abstrakt
Kaye Ferguson uses narrative inquiry to present the stories of two preservice music teachers. Her specific interest is in exploring how participants' self-views and beliefs filtered their teaching and learning experiences and influenced action. According to Connelly&Clandinin (2006), story is the portal by which one's experience of the world is interpreted and made personally meaningful (p. 477). Experience can be explored and presented as/in story, and, in that process, one gains perspective on the meanings of an individual's lived experiences. Ferguson's focus on accessing self-views encompasses "all beliefs and feelings a person holds about herself, including identity, the part of self that tends to be defined by society" (p. 2).
Publication details
Published in:
Barrett Margaret S., Stauffer Sandra L. (2009) Narrative inquiry in music education: troubling certainty. Dordrecht, Springer.
Seiten: 107-112
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4020-9862-8_10
Referenz:
McCarthy Marie (2009) „Layering analytic lenses: considerations for assessing the narrative text in music education – a commentary“, In: M. S. Barrett & S. L. Stauffer (eds.), Narrative inquiry in music education, Dordrecht, Springer, 107–112.