Council for Research in Music Education Publications

Overview

Scope and Contents

Biographical Note

Subject Terms

Detailed Description

Box 1

Box 2



Email us about these publications

Finding Aid for Council for Research in Music Education Publications, 1963-2009 | The Sousa Archives and Center for American Music

By Tracie Tatz

RequestSubmit request (Aeon) | email Email us about these publications | printer Print this information

Collection Overview

Title: Council for Research in Music Education Publications, 1963-2009

ID: 12/5/817

Primary Creator: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. School of Music (1895-)

Extent: 2.0 cubic feet

Arrangement: Arranged by type of material and chronologically thereunder.

Subjects: Books, Dissertations, Education, Education, College of, Music, Music, School of, Music instruction, Music teachers, Music teachers - Training of, Music teachers - Training of - United States, Student Records, Teacher Education, Council of, University Bulletins

Languages: English

Scope and Contents of the Materials

Consists of approved doctoral dissertations in music education in-progress list, Bulletins of the Council for Research in Music Education, and research books published by members of the faculty of the School of Music, documenting the doctoral dissertations in music education conducted at the University of Illinois and the cooperatively published Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education, which features work by the School of Music, the college of Education, and the Office of the superintendent of Public Instruction from 1963 to 2009.

Biographical Note

The School of Music at the University of Illinois was established in March 1895 with an innagural class of 11 students and the establishment of the first music curriculum. Although Glee Clubs, Mandolin Clubs, and Military Bands had been formed on campus prior to 1895, pianist Charlott Patchin was the first faculty member hired to teach courses in music. After a campaign led by Captain Thomas J. Smith, a member of the Board of Trustees, the University Committee on Instruction voted to establish a degree in music with additional courses in musical instruction on June 9, 1897. By 1899, courses of instruction included piano, organ, voice, violin, elements of music, harmony, counterpoint, fugue and composition, conducting, ensemble playing, and the history of music.

According to Ann Silverberg, "just as the earliest university music instructors were women, and music instruction was offered in an attempt to attract women students, most music students in the early years were women." As one editorial from the Daily Illini noted in 1894, "It is now the intention to gradually establish a school of music, thereby giving the young ladies of the University equal advantages with the young men." With the addition of both male and female faculty members, the School of Music quickly diversified its student body. However, many of the large ensembles including the University Band relegated participation to male students for much of the first half of the century.

In 1921, Smith Hall, which was named for Tina Weedon Smith (the wife of Captain Thomas Smith), was officially completed. At the beginning of the following year, the curriculum of Music Education was added in cooperation with the College of Education. When the College of Fine and Applied Arts was organized on March 12, 1931, the School of Music was included in the new college. In 1933, the School had officially become a member of the National Association of Schools of Music. In 1948, the School began an outreach, "Extension," program and the following year it established the Illinois Summer Youth Music program, which has been in operation since 1949.

The School of Music expanded its degree program to graduate degrees in 1940, starting with the Master of Music in edcucation and, in 1953, the Doctor of Philosophy in Musicology. Both graduate and undergraduate curricula expanded until in 1974 the School of Music offered courses in the fields of theory, history, and applied music. Degrees offered include the Bachelor of Arts, Master of Music, Master of Science in Music Education, Doctor of Education in Music Education, Doctor of Philosophy in Musicology, and Doctor of Musical Arts in several performance fields including conducting and accompaniment. Always on the forfront of technological innovations, the School established the Experimental Music Studios in 1958, eventually supporting the Computer Music Project (CMP) and the Computer Assisted Music Instruction Laboratory (CAMIL) in the early 1990s.

Designed by architect Max Abramovitz, the Krannert Center for the Performing Arts opened in April 1969. Not only did the complex offer new performance venues for music students, but it was also designed across the street from the new School of Music building, which was officially completed in 1972. Musical groups associated with the School--such as the University Symphony Orchestra, Chamber Orchestras, Wind Ensemble, and Contemporary Chamber Players--expanded rapidly during this period, becoming open to qualified students from any college and any background. After the 1960s, the school also added the following ensembles and programs: jazz (officially added to the curriculum in 1967, and becoming a major in 2002), the University Russian Folk Orchestra (1974), University Gamelan (2006), and Lyric Theater (2007). In 2014, the School introduced a new Computer Science + Music dgree, which built on the Schools developments in both technology and musical innovation.

Over its storied past, the School of Music was led by several directors including: Walter Howe Jones (1895-1900), Frederick Locke Lawrence (1900-1907), Charles Henry Mills (1907-1913), John Lawrence Erb (1914-1920), Frederic Benjamin Stiven (1921-1946), John M. Kuypers (1947-1950), Duane A. Branigan (1950-1970), Thomas Fredrickson (1970-1974), Robert E. Bays (1974-1986), Austin McDowell (1986-1988), Don V. Moses (1988-1997), James C. Scott (1997-2001), Fred Stoltzfus (2001-2002), Karl Kramer (2002-2012), Edward Rath (2012), Jeffrey Magee (2012-2019), Jeffrey Sposato (2019-2023), and, most recently, Linda Moorhouse (2024-2026).

Subject/Index Terms

Books
Dissertations
Education
Education, College of
Music
Music, School of
Music instruction
Music teachers
Music teachers - Training of
Music teachers - Training of - United States
Student Records
Teacher Education, Council of
University Bulletins


Box and Folder Listing


Browse by Box:

[Box 1],
[Box 2],
[All]

Box 1
Item 1: Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education, 1963-1989
Volumes 1-3, 5, 7, 8, 10-14, 16-21, 23-91, 93-99
Box 2
Item 1: Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education, 1989-2009
Volumes 100-180
Item 2: Symposium in Music Education: A Festschrift for Charles Leonhard, 1982
Edited by Richard Colwell
Item 3: Custom and Cherishing: The Arts in Elementary Schools, 1987-1990
By, Robert Stake, Liora Bresler, Linda Mabry and with assistance from Nancy Ellis
Item 4: Institutional Directory of Approved Music Education Dissertations in Progress, 1985
Edited by Richard J. Colwell with assistance from Karel Lidral
Item 5: List of Approved Doctoral Dissertations in Progress in Music Education, 1979
Approved Doctoral Dissertations in Progress in Music Education as of January 1, 1979

Page Generated in: 0.571 seconds (using 173 queries).
Using 6.9MB of memory. (Peak of 7.15MB.)

Powered by Archon Version 3.21 rev-3
Copyright ©2017 The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign