
Music education and social development
Author(s) -
Oswaldo José Arráez Rodríguez
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
innovare
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2310-290X
DOI - 10.5377/innovare.v8i2.9089
Subject(s) - mediation , music education , politics , sociology , rhetoric , discipline , social change , pedagogy , psychology , political science , social science , linguistics , philosophy , law
Art education practices could strategically target those political, social and cultural disparities that negatively affects children and youth. Targeted practices are becoming more concurrent, and such is the case with music education. Historically, music education has directed its efforts mainly to the development of the so-called vocation or talent to play an instrument or to sing. It has been mostly focused to disciplinary training. Consequently, institutionality has governed the music teaching-learning processes since medieval times, prolonging the classical idea of trívium (grammar, dialect, rhetoric) and quadrivium (arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, music) with political mediation of the so-called conservatories or music schools.