1. Effects of extended practice with computerized eye guides for sight-reading in collegiate-level class piano.
- Author
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Hagen, Sara L., Cremaschi, Alejandro, and Himonides, Cynthia Stephens
- Subjects
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MUSIC in universities & colleges , *PIANO studies & exercises , *METRONOME , *MUSIC & technology , *PIANO playing techniques , *MUSICAL performance , *MUSIC education , *MUSICAL instrument techniques - Abstract
Collegiate class piano courses demand sight-reading competencies and many pedagogical approaches exist, but there is relatively little information regarding the use of computerized settings for practice of this skill in environments that seek to guide the eye in learning to sight-read piano music. This study followed a series of examinations of computerized eye guides including the sweep, the highlighted measure, and the note-to-note guides in learning to sight-read. Four groups of randomly placed college-level class piano students (N=69) practiced sight-reading for six weeks, in fifteen-minute sessions, in one of four environments: Finale Performance Assessment (sweep) (n=20), Home Concert Xtreme (highlighted measure) (n=18), Flash animation (note-to-note highlight) (n=16), and a control group using paper and a metronome (n=15). All environments contained a metronomic click, but no additional sound reinforcement. Results indicated that all groups significantly improved, but no significant differences were found among the groups. Pedagogical implications are discussed along with suggestions for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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