You are cordially invited to present at the 2014 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 28th 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 15th.
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 are the current
burning questions in music education, and what we
know about these topics. Opportunities to speak with
the researchers can tell you not only about the project
in hand, but also about what Music Education knows
about many diverse topics. 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.
2014 General Research Session
The general research session will include two
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 presenters features two engaging
presentations that I am sure will inform and engage.
The first presentation features Teddi Ricketts, Nancy
McKellar, Randall Ellsworth, and Elaine Bernstorf
discussing Relationships Between Instrumental Music
Participation and Academic Achievement in Low
Socioeconomic Students. The purpose of this study
was to examine relationships between student
participation in instrumental music class and
academic achievement, specifically in low SES
students. The hypothesis was that fifth and sixth
grade students who participated in an instrumental
music program would display increased levels of
achievement, with this relationship more pronounced
among students who receive free and reduced
lunches. Results show a statistically significant
relationship between sixth grade instrumental music
participation and reading scores, as well as math
scores. These results suggest that duration (i.e.,
months of instruction) in instrumental music class
may be important to increases in academic
achievement.
The second presentation in this session will feature
Melissa Grady who will discussing a project entitled:
Effects of nonverbal gestures exhibited by multiple
conductors on acoustical, visual, and
psychoacoustical measures of choral music-making:
A collective case study. This collective case study
examined potential acoustical and psychoacoustical
effects of conductor arm and hand gestural stimuli on
the choral music-making of an established women's
choir (N = 18), as it performed a previously learned
composition under multiple conductors (the
ensemble's regular conductor, whose nonverbal
leadership constituted the baseline condition, and 5
guest conductors, whose nonverbal leadership
constituted the experimental conditions).
The general session this year will be on Friday,
February 28th from 12:55-1:45 p.m. in Room 205 of
Century II. As always, we will have abstracts for the
general session available at the door to the session.
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.