This article considers the impact that the Swanwick-Tillman spiral article (Swanwick & Tillman, 1986) has had on contemporary thinking in music education in England. Building on a discussion concerning the antecedents of the notion of a spiral, the ways in which a generalist music curriculum can be planned and organised are discussed. Drawing on the contemporary example of the Model Music Curriculum (DfE, 2021), and then charting this thinking as arising from a graded music examination repertoire-based way of planning, this article goes on to explain why the Swanwick-Tillman spiral still has relevance, as well as much to teach us in today’s very different music education world where assessment, measurement, and accountability are dominant. ...
June Boyce-Tillman and Keith Swanwick’s article on musical development is the second most widely cit...
This article presents five case studies from within Music in Higher Education programmes which colle...
Vol. 7. No. 2 Nov 2017 Professor Martin Fautley is director of research in the School of Education ...
The notion of the spiral for progression and development is familiar both in general educational dis...
In commemorating the 35th anniversary of the publication of the Swanwick/Tillman spiral, this editor...
Classroom music teachers in England design their own music curricula for Key Stage 3 (11 – 14 year o...
This paper has been initiated by my awareness of a lack of concern in many areas of music teaching i...
Texto completo. Acesso restrito. p. 14-29The aim of this article is to describe the study that inves...
Curriculum design is a domain which infrequently forms a discrete element of initial teacher trainin...
The aim of this research was to explore the impact of the adoption of the Musical Futures approach o...
It is fair to say that the Model Music Curriculum has caused quite a stir in music classrooms in Eng...
Music curriculum programmes are designed by English Music teachers in schools as the primary means o...
The distinction between learning to perform on an instrument or voice and learning music in a wider ...
Classroom music teachers in English secondary schools, teaching Key Stage 3 (11 – 14 year olds), are...
‘The Sequence of Musical Development’ by Swanwick and Tillman was published in the British Journal o...
June Boyce-Tillman and Keith Swanwick’s article on musical development is the second most widely cit...
This article presents five case studies from within Music in Higher Education programmes which colle...
Vol. 7. No. 2 Nov 2017 Professor Martin Fautley is director of research in the School of Education ...
The notion of the spiral for progression and development is familiar both in general educational dis...
In commemorating the 35th anniversary of the publication of the Swanwick/Tillman spiral, this editor...
Classroom music teachers in England design their own music curricula for Key Stage 3 (11 – 14 year o...
This paper has been initiated by my awareness of a lack of concern in many areas of music teaching i...
Texto completo. Acesso restrito. p. 14-29The aim of this article is to describe the study that inves...
Curriculum design is a domain which infrequently forms a discrete element of initial teacher trainin...
The aim of this research was to explore the impact of the adoption of the Musical Futures approach o...
It is fair to say that the Model Music Curriculum has caused quite a stir in music classrooms in Eng...
Music curriculum programmes are designed by English Music teachers in schools as the primary means o...
The distinction between learning to perform on an instrument or voice and learning music in a wider ...
Classroom music teachers in English secondary schools, teaching Key Stage 3 (11 – 14 year olds), are...
‘The Sequence of Musical Development’ by Swanwick and Tillman was published in the British Journal o...
June Boyce-Tillman and Keith Swanwick’s article on musical development is the second most widely cit...
This article presents five case studies from within Music in Higher Education programmes which colle...
Vol. 7. No. 2 Nov 2017 Professor Martin Fautley is director of research in the School of Education ...