You are cordially invited to present at the 2013 Research Poster Session!!!
Each year, KMEA sponsors a research poster session at the February In Service
Workshop. This year, the session will be on Friday, February 22, from 3:00 - 3:55
PM in Room 205 of Century II. The session includes poster presentations of music
education research by public school educators, university faculty, and university
students. Each presenter has an exhibition area where they display materials
pertaining to their research. If you are interested in presenting original research at
this session, please contact me, Chris Johnson, KMEA Research Chair, by February
15. You may email me at the address shown at the top of this page.
The poster session is an excellent opportunity for workshop attendees to discover
many things. This session allows you to learn what the current burning questions in
music education are, and what we know about these topics. You will also have
opportunities to speak with the researchers who can tell you not only about the
project in hand, but also about many diverse topics in music education. This
session is one where people can drop in and stay for a few minutes to talk with
one person who may well have interesting information, or stay for the entire hour
and glean informed views from many participants regarding all manner of topics.
We usually see about 200 people come through this event. This year, we hope
even more people will come by to take advantage of this dynamic learning
opportunity.
2013 General Research Session
The general research session will include three presentations of recent research in
music education and the psychology of music. As in all years, the research arm of
KMEA seeks to identify and include research from the very best the state has to
offer. This year's session will feature three presentations that I am sure will inform
and engage. The first presentation will feature Teddi Ricketts, Nancy McKellar,
Randall Ellsworth, and Elaine Bernstorf discussing "Relationships Between
Instrumental Music Participation and Academic Achievement in Low Socioeconomic
Students." Their results showed a statistically significant relationship between
sixth grade instrumental music participation and reading scores, as well as math
scores, and also suggested that duration in a string instrumental music class may
be important to increases in academic achievement on state assessments. The
second presentation will feature Sheri Cook-Cunningham who will discuss a project
entitled: "University Singers' Hearing Dose and Voice Use During a Choir Concert: A
Case Study." The purpose of this case study was to document sound doses
acquired by female university singers (N = 4), simultaneous voice use and sound
doses acquired by 2 participants, and to solicit participants' perceptions of hearing
and singing effort during a college choir concert. Finally, Frederick Burrack and Phil
Payne will be discussing a pilot study identifying if there is a relationship between
success in university Engineering programs and number of years involved in arts in
secondary school (5-12 band, choir, orchestra, theater, and visual art).
These presentations represent the best research efforts of researchers in Kansas
and focus on topics that are pertinent to what is going on in society today. The
general session this year will be on Friday, February 22, from 12:55 - 1:45 PM in
Room 205 of Century II. As always, we will have abstracts for the general session
available at the door as you enter. We hope you will come by, look at the talks to
be presented, and come on in to see how the newest knowledge in our profession
can make your classroom a more effective experience for your students.