Challenges and Innovations in Africanising Music in the Classroom

A Kenyan Experience

Authors

  • Ernest Patrick MONTE Kabarak University, Kenya
  • Mellitus N. WANYAMA Kabarak University, Kenya
  • Doseline W. KIGURU The British Institute in Eastern African

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.58216/kjri.v4i2.40

Keywords:

Africanising Music; Western Music; Bloom’s taxonomy; culture; modernity; tradition

Abstract

This paper interrogates possibilities of Africanizing music in the classroom against the backdrop of modernity, innovations and challenges that come with globalization and modern technology. The major questions that the paper attempts to answer are: why is it necessary to Africanise the music classroom in Kenya today? What are the major challenges in Africanising music in the classroom? What are the innovative possibilities that are likely to emerge in the process of Africanising music in the classroom in view of the effect of modernity on African cultural arts such as music?  Basically, the scope of the paper is limited to classroom instruction with regard to creativity in the process of music making by employing elements of music in the context of African music philosophy, theory and practice. However, where applicable, examples from the Western music making perspectives are referred to. Theoretically, the paper is underpinned by the three domains of learning in Bloom's Taxonomy; namely:  Cognitive, Psychomotor and Affective as expounded by Benjamin Bloom (1948). The study adopts a qualitative approach with a survey design. Data was collected from purposively sampled informants –mainly music lecturers from selected Kenyan universities. The collected data was analysed and interpreted with a focus on answering the earlier raised study questions. Finally, conclusions and ways forward  outlined.

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Author Biographies

Ernest Patrick MONTE, Kabarak University, Kenya

P.O. Box Private Bag, Kabarak, 20157, Kenya

Tel: +254 717 467230,

Email: monte0801@gmail.com

Mellitus N. WANYAMA, Kabarak University, Kenya

school of Music

Doseline W. KIGURU, The British Institute in Eastern African

P.O. Box 30710 GPO, Laikipia Rd, Nairobi, Kenya, Tel: +254 717 256 501,

References

Agawu, K. V. (2003). Contesting Difference: A Critique of Africanist Ethnomusicology. In M. Clayton, T. Herbert, & R. Middleton (Eds.), The Cultural Study of Music: A Critical lntroduction (pp. 227-237). New York: Routledge.

Bloom, B. S. (1948 [1964]). Taxonomy of Educational Objectives (Vol. 2). New York: Longmans, Green.

Bohlman, P. (2001). The Musical Culture of Europe. In B. Nettle (Ed.), Excursions in World Music (3rd ed., pp. 196-226). Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall.

Chong, P. L. (2013). Kenyah Recreational Songs and their Significance to Music Education. Unpublished Thesis, University of Pretoria.

Cook, N. (1998). Music: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Kidula, J. N. (2006). Ethnomusicology, the Music Canon, and African Music: Positions, Tensions, and Resolutions in the African Academy. Africa Today, 52(3), 99-113.

wa Thiong'o, N. (1981). Decolonising the Mind: The Politics of Language in African Literature. Harare: Zimbabwe Publishing House.

Published

2017-02-27

How to Cite

Ernest Patrick MONTE, Mellitus N. WANYAMA, & Doseline W. KIGURU. (2017). Challenges and Innovations in Africanising Music in the Classroom: A Kenyan Experience. Kabarak Journal of Research & Innovation, 4(2), 93–101. https://doi.org/10.58216/kjri.v4i2.40

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