Sunday, February 10, 2013

Emily Babski Jounal #3

Source #1: http://jmt.sagepub.com/content/19/2/41.short

I found this first source from the VT Library database. This was an incredible source and I am so happy I stumbled upon it. I additionally learned many things from this source including a better understanding of music performance as a career, music teaching as a career, the motivation behind what drives people to continue with music as a career, and the expectations that undergraduate music majors have for what they think their future career's will contain. A few questions have been raised from this source however. I want to know if the satisfaction levels that these students wanted to get out of their career actually lived up to their expectations? I also want to know the turnout of successful musicians in the long run. This new source made me realize that music is a good career if you have immense talent and are not necessarily concerned about making a lot of money. The main motivation found in this survey though was that students chose music as a career so that they can share their love for music with kids through educating them. The author seems to speak from a perspective of possible experience, but mostly from a standpoint that is meant to inform the reader and relay information that was collected from research and data. I believe the audience is aimed at the general public. I did not see much biased, but the study may have a flaw considering the main source of research was from a survey. You never know how biased those surveys could be, so that may have a factor. There may be further questions and research that I will do because of this source, but overall, it is a very good first source to start with and I am very happy to have found it.

Source #2: Interview of John Walker and Alan Weinstein


 I interviewed these two musicians/ teachers at Virginia Tech about my topic. I learned many interesting things from these men, including why they chose to be musicians, how their life has been in this career, and what they believed about students who choose music as a career.  John and Alan have lived the lives as musicians and teachers which makes them very credible when concerning this topic. I will both be the author and publisher of this source so I am qualified because I know which questions to ask since it is my paper and my credentials are related to the fact that I have had both these professors as teachers and know that they are a reliable source. My personal interview with these musicians is very credible in the content because it is first hand, these men are people who live the lives as professional musicians every day, and they are obviously trusted by Virginia Tech to be knowledgeable enough to be teaching at this top university.  This source is very appropriate because it gave me some answer to some major questions I have surrounding my topic and give incite on how difficult (or easy) it is to live the life as a professional musician. After interviewing them, my thoughts have been strengthened. They both agreed that living lives as musicians is a hard way of life and that reaffirmed my previous perceptions regarding musician life. Alan and John were talking from experience but were aiming the information they provided to future and prospective music majors. They may have some bias because they are musicians and are fairly successful, because professors at a great college. From interviewing these men, I am curious to interview music majors at VT right now and learn more about what they are hoping for their future and what they are expecting as the lives as future musicians. 

5 comments:

  1. Emily, I believe the research you plan to do with music as a career is pretty cool. The two interviews will serve as strong primary sources for your research paper. Is there a reason you chose to research the field of music? In other words, what's your personal connection to music?

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    1. Thanks for the feedback Brian! I chose this topic because music has always been a huge part of my life and I thought about a career in music for a long time but chose a different major mainly because of the financial reasons. The life of a musician is hard.

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  2. I also think your interview plans are going to give you great results. It will keep your perspective current and real because the students and teachers are becoming and have already been professional musicians, respectively. These contemporary sources paired with solid facts or numbers should make for a strong paper.

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  3. Your topic and sources are very unique and interesting. I believe you will be able to write an intriguing paper, especially because one of your sources was an interview, which enabled you to get all the details needed by simply asking the two artists. Other than discussing the music career, you should also relate the topic to yourself, and make it personal- your appreciation of music.

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  4. these are two great sources, the first one seemed to be a very solid one content wise and is especially good because you found it on the vt website. It is very cool that you were able to interview professors here at tech for your paper. I'm sure they were extremely informative and will make excellent additions to you sources.

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