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Predicting collegiate wind players' practice efficiency, flow, and self-efficacy for self-regulation: An exploratory study of relationships between teachers' instruction and students' practicing

URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10497/17174
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Type
Article
Files
 JRME-63-2-162.pdf (341.8 KB)
Citation
Miksza, P., & Tan, L. (2015). Predicting collegiate wind players' practice efficiency, flow, and self-efficacy for self-regulation: An exploratory study of relationships between teachers' instruction and students' practicing. Journal of Research in Music Education, 63(2), 162-179. https://doi.org/10.1177/0022429415583474
Author
Miksza, Peter
•
Tan, Leonard Yuh Chaur 
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine whether students' practice efficiency, flow during practicing, and self-efficacy for self-regulation varied as a function of their practice tendencies, their tendencies towards self-evaluation, their self-regulatory tendencies to be self-reflective when practicing, tendencies to exhibit grit in their learning, and their teachers’ methods of instruction in practicing. Participants were 52 studio lesson teachers and 241 of their students from 25 large collegiate music programs in the United States. Both the teachers and students represented a diverse range of instruments: flute, oboe, bassoon, clarinet, saxophone, French horn, trumpet, trombone, euphonium, and tuba. The data for this study were self-reports collected via online questionnaires. Findings indicated that of the five predictor variables examined, only two – students' tendencies to exhibit grit in their learning and their tendencies to be reflective about their practicing – were consistently related to the three outcome variables. Furthermore, all outcome variables were significantly related to one another.
Date Issued
2015
Publisher
Sage
Journal
Journal of Research in Music Education
DOI
10.1177/0022429415583474
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