London Review of Education DOI: https://doi.org/10.18546/LRE.15.3.01
Volume 15, Number 3, November 2017
EDITORIAL
Music education in context: A special feature for the London
Review of Education
Hilary McQueen
*
and Maria Varvarigou
UCL Institute of Education, University College London
The power of music to enrich and enhance people’s lives is well documented. There are
numerous examples of the positive impact of music education. The contexts in which people
of all ages learn about music vary widely, yet each can provide the catalyst for engagement with
music that can have both individual and more extensive benefts. Therefore, particularly at a
time of fnancial constraints and global unrest, it is important that the contribution of education
in the arts, such as music, is kept to the fore.
The aim of this special feature was to draw on research and practice that illustrated the
effect of music education in specifc contexts. The result is a range of articles that demonstrate
the extent to which music can provide a catalyst for individual, group and wider social benefts.
The articles also provide an opportunity to think about teaching and learning more generally.
The potential for music to enhance learning in other curriculum areas has been widely
reported. Susan Hallam provides a convincing account of the contribution that music can make
to developing aural perception and language skills in a variety of music education contexts with
reference to a wealth of research. This is complemented by an article co-authored by Sylwia
Holmes and Susan Hallam demonstrating the potential that music has for the development of
mathematical skills.
The personal and social benefts of music are presented by Pauline Black, based on research
into jazz improvisation in Scotland. Marc Sarazin discusses the notion of cohesion through
interdependence, which underpins the purpose of a collective music programme in French
primary schools. His fndings suggest that the experience of collective music-making for young
people can be mixed.
Community music-making is the focus for two articles. The frst of these, by Debra Rodgers,
discusses the role that community music can play in countering the stigma associated with
mental health issues. Secondly, Andrea Gande and Silke Kruse-Weber present the Meet4Music
initiative in Austria, the aim of which is to bring diverse groups, including migrants, together,
leading to a suggestion for a conceptual framework for lifelong learning.
Two articles look at music in the context of ICT. Adam Hart discusses the development
of composition software for primary school learners, while Carol Johnson considers the shift
to teaching music online in higher education. Online technology is also one of the themes in
the article by Helen Julia Minors and colleagues, which explores diverse creativities through
consideration of fve case studies conducted in different higher education establishments.
* Corresponding author – email: h.mcqueen@ucl.ac.uk
©Copyright 2017 McQueen and Varvarigou. This is an Open Access article distributed under the
terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and
reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.