SKU: GI.G-10242
Selected Papers from
the Seventh International
Symposium on Assessment
in Music Education.
Composed by Marshall
Haning and Timothy S.
Brophy. Music Education.
534 pages. GIA
Publications #10242.
Published by GIA
Publications
(GI.G-10242).
ISBN
9781622774463.
Cont
ributors: Michael L.
Alexander, Myriam I.
Athanas, Leonardo Borne,
Frederick Burrack,
Isabelle Adna Lopes da
Hora, Paul F. Doerksen,
Sergio Figueiredo,
Christina Haaf, Barry
Hartz, Johannes
Hasselhorn, Jason A.
Hawkins, Michele L.
Henry, Jasmine Hines,
Kelly Hollingsworth,
Gabriel Imthurn, Amanda
Kastner, Anita Kumar,
Andreas C. Lehmann,
Andreas Lehmann-Wermser,
Florian Lill, Melissa A.
Lloyd, Brandon C.
McDaniel, Adam P. Miller,
David W. Montgomery,
Dorothy J. Musselwhite,
Patty K. Nelson, Glenn E.
Nierman, Douglas C.
Orzolek, Kelly A. Parkes,
Phillip Payne, Seth
Pendergast, Leigh M.
Powell, Jared R.
Rawlings, Patricia E.
Riley, Joanne Rutkowski,
Elizabeth S. Schultz,
Sydney C. Seed, Megan M.
Sheridan, Dayvison Sousa
Silva, David A.
Stringham, Justine
Swainson, Jack Walton,
Dennis Ping-Cheng Wang,
Jeffrey Ward, Brian C.
Wesolowski The Seventh
International Symposium
on Assessment in Music
Education was hosted by
the University of
Florida. The symposium
brought together 112
participants from 12
nations across six
continents and 24 U.S.
states to learn of each
other’s work,
establish collaborations
and professional
networks, and shape new
directions for research
in this important area of
music education at the
University of Florida in
Gainesville from March
19–22, 2019. The
two keynote addresses and
31 papers published in
this volume document
music assessment practice
and the measurement and
evaluation of music
learning across the world
in local, state, and
national contexts at all
levels. The attendees
also attended special
work sessions to begin
developing a set of
assessment literacy
standards for music
teachers based on the
International Principles
for Assessment in Music
Education (developed and
introduced by the
co-chairs at ISAME6 in
2017), and their
discussions are
summarized in this
collection. As music
educators across the
world come to terms with
increased expectations
for accountability of
learning in music, the
scholars and
practitioners who have
contributed to this
volume provide insight to
guide their work. About
the Editors: Timothy S.
Brophy is Professor of
Music Education and
Director of Institutional
Assessment at the
University of Florida in
Gainesville. Marshall
Haning is Assistant
Professor of Music
Education at the
University of Florida in
Gainesville.