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lenniel
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« Reply #2 on: October 10, 2010, 03:00:22 PM » |
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I am a music educator, having performance degrees as well as a PhD. My doctorate is not in music education, as those degrees generally are focused on education methodology, curriculum development and some pedagogy. Though I am not against the idea of a PhD in music ed, if you have already gotten experience in the public school system as well as abroad, you shouldn't discount the value of practical experience. I've seen an increase in the number of ads for applied faculty that want people with such experience. In fact, I have a colleague who owes their current university job to having K-12 teaching experience.
The first big question is what, ultimately, do you want to do with this degree? Merope's advice is very sound here, and I agree that a music education degree will not help you land a university gig as a violin professor. Your teaching experience, where you got your degrees, if you have a good network for placing students, student success (competitions, jobs, festivals, etc.) and performance record will. (I think I know perhaps one applied prof with a PhD in education, though I know there are more. Almost all have DMAs or DMs, some with a sub specialty in education.)
If you were to pursue a PhD, you will need to focus mostly on writing and research, leaving limited time for performance. Also, take into account the time and cost: it could take years, and take you away from your current music network. If you have been teaching in public school have you been doing so in the US? Are you certified? Do you want to continue to teach K-12, or teach at university? And, are you still performing or have a specialty?
When you decide which direction you want to go, not only with that help you target likely jobs but programs if you decide to pursue a related degree. There are other musicians here, probably with better advice than mine so hopefully you will get some more ideas. Feel free to send me a message as well.
Good luck!
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