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    Shifting the cantus firmus: Australian music educators and the ERA

    153258_153258.pdf (92.22Kb)
    Access Status
    Open access
    Authors
    Bennett, Dawn
    Date
    2010
    Type
    Journal Article
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Citation
    Bennett, Dawn. 2010. Shifting the cantus firmus: Australian music educators and the ERA. Australian Journal of Music Education. 2010 (1): pp. 25-35.
    Source Title
    Australian Journal of Music Education
    ISSN
    0004-9484
    School
    Centre for Research and Graduate Studies-Humanities
    Remarks

    The Australian Society for Music Education is a not for profit organisation. We are completely dependant on researchers accessing our publications to raise funds for future publications. I appreciate that your university is able to make the claim that "It is a non-profit service, and no charge is made for the use of any of the material deposited" but your institution is government funded and the organisation I offer my services voluntarily receives no government funding--Associate Professor David Forrest, School of Education/School of Art, RMIT University.

    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16944
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    Managing the teaching-research-creative practice nexus is a concern for everyone working in higher music education, particularly those involved with the supervision and mentorship of graduate students and early career academics. This paper takes as its subject the new Excellence in Research for Australia (ERA), drawing examples from research frameworks elsewhere to identify some of the pertinent issues facing music educators and their students. The findings from a series of surveys and short interviews suggest that the formal recognition of artistic research remains largely dependent on the articulation of that research into traditional academic language. Furthermore, the increasing focus on research as a form of revenue generation highlights the separation of research and teaching and the lessening of academic autonomy. The paper argues that a balance can be achieved only with a fundamental, systemic shift that recognises the new knowledge and innovative methodological approaches within artistic research and, equally, within the scholarship of teaching.

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