Music Education - M.M and Ph.D. Download to printCollege
College of the Arts
ResourcesDepartment
School of Music
E101 Kent State University's Center for the Performing Arts Description
The Master of Music in Music Education is offered online only and is designed to offer choral, instrumental and general music teachers the opportunity to develop and refine their professional skills as teachers. The degree program allows for enhancement and specialization relative to music teaching and learning in contemporary school contexts. The program is not intended to provide licensure and is constructed for those who have a music education background with the desire to improve the student and teacher experience in music classroom settings. Admission Requirements
M.M.: Prior degree in MUED; official transcript(s); 3.0 GPA; three letters of recommendation; resume; statement of career goals; a current, accredited U.S. teaching certificate; and one year of full-time teaching completed before beginning coursework. Please refer to the university policy for graduate admission. Ph.D.: Prior degree in Music Education; current and valid state teaching license earned from an accredited US university program; three letters of professional and pedagogical reference; scholarly writing sample of related discipline; statement of philosophy for pursuit of the Ph.D. degree; video/DVD sample of school music teaching; minimum three years of successful teaching experience at elementary and/or secondary levels; resume or curriculum vitae of professional musical and teaching work; official transcript(s); 3.0 GPA; and committee interview with Music Education Faculty (voice, video or personal campus visit). Please refer to the university policy for graduate admission. Graduation Requirements
M.M.: Minimum of 31 total credit hours. Program Learning Outcomes
Master of Music:
Ph.D.
Thesis/ Dissertation
M.M.: Students complete a 12-week, individual research investigation (Capstone Project) comparable to a master's thesis. Under the supervision of a capstone advisor, students synthesize knowledge through the development of a curricular project applicable to the student's specific area of teaching. A prescribed description outlines requirements, goals, objectives, procedures, and assessment. Activities include student reading-research-writing, preparation of a project outline and drafts, regular interaction with a research mentor, and evaluation of conclusions for the final submission. A primary goal is to support students to critically analyze and improve their own music teaching and learning skills in classroom settings. The project is reviewed and evaluated by a graduate committee of music education faculty.
Candidacy
For the Ph.D. a comprehensive, qualifying, candidacy examination is taken when the student has substantially completed his/her coursework and has received the consent of the advisor committee to attempt the examination. The examination includes an extensive written section consisting of proctored and non-proctored questions, and an oral section taken before a faculty committee. Material for both written and oral sections is drawn from the coursework taken during the degree program, current professional research literature, and current topics in music education. Students who fail the candidacy examination two times will be dismissed from the doctoral program. Accreditation
National Association of Schools of Music; National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education |
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