Modulating Pedagogical Spaces for Creativity in Music Education
Published in SoundArts, The MENZA Magazine, 5(3), 2009
Pamela Burnard, PhD
Faculty of Education
University of Cambridge

Documenting moments of significant creativity in music, and understanding how these evolve, develop and
change, among children and young people, are widely recognised as challenging issues for music educators.
What do we take to be creativity in music and what constitutes creative learning spaces which open up the
possibilities of thinking differently around a musical issue? In turn, how is ‘progress’ related to notions of
musical creativity – in the unfolding of a developing composition, and in developing a ‘hearing’ and a
performance of it, as well? How should we describe the shifts in learning? How should creativity in music be
taught to achieve progression? And if progression is an outcome of what and how we teach, what are the
aspects of teaching that will enable progress in musical creativity to occur and to be assessed?
      Within the past 10 years, the desirability of creativity, its unfolding and its application, has gained
increasing prominence in educational policy. At the same time calls for higher standards and increased
accountability, whilst meeting the needs and interests of students, has required music teachers to adapt
educative learning journeys for catalyzing collaborations, widening participation among and across diverse
communities. Spaces that enable pupils to connect areas of experience in innovative and imaginative ways are
those which promote:

             Questioning and challenging
             Making connections and seeing relationships
             Envisaging what might be
             Playing with ideas and keeping options open
             Representing ideas in a variety of ways




                                           In this digital age, where learners create music learning contexts for
themselves within and across settings, a commitment to re-imaging pedagogical spaces in music education
brings many challenges, but equally it brings responsibilities. It requires us to think deeply about how we
understand, articulate and hope to answer questions such as: What do pedagogies which enable creativity look
like? When is a pedagogy innovative? We know that pedagogies which enable creativity include allowing
children choice and ownership of their learning, time for reflection, creating a stimulating environment, and
modelling creative action within a genuine partnership. But not all spaces in a school can or should always
allow for all of these but the school should work towards design solutions that contain as many of these as
possible. Spaces that support questioning and challenging musical behaviour might include the possibilities for
one-to-one musical conversation, collaborative group dialogue, and communication and musical interaction (in
real time or asynchronous time, for examples through email or interactive blogs (Burnard, 2006).
The pedagogies which relate to flexibility of space and time and engage the imagination are more often
those in which the teachers position themselves off-centre stage and promote learning through the children’s
self chosen activities and interests. Whilst not afraid to use direct instruction and teacher-led work where
necessary, music teachers who seek to balance teacher and child-led initiatives, explicitly fostering a sense of
possibility and agency in their young learners more often create the time and space for children to explore their
environment and the materials provided, encouraging both actual and mental play.The features of this distinct
pedagogic practice appear to promote and foster the children’s full engagement in problem solving - problem
finding activities and thus support their development as young possibility thinkers (see Figure 1.
Underpinning the pedagogic practices of standing back, profiling learner agency and creating time and space
are the teachers’ conceptions of children as young musical thinkers and creators and of learning as a process of
discovery. These pedagogues often lead by following, creating flexible maps en route with the class, and
enabling the children to experience a high degree of ownership of their musical learning. Creative pedagogies
involve being co-participative and combine in action as the music teachers encourage the children to direct
more of their learning journeys.




                              The literature tells a story, by no means consistent, of what we know about how
teachers conceptualise musical creativity at classroom level, what teachers do in their classrooms, the nature of
tasks given, and the longstanding problem of making judgements about creativity in music. The story assumes a
common understanding of how, and by whom, the construct ‘creativity’ is defined, interpreted and made real, in
terms of curriculum, pedagogy, and assessment practices in music.
Inspirational spaces are not simply rooms for teaching and performance of the arts. The whole curriculum can
be approached through creativity. Bringing together more than one curriculum area into a single space can
promote creativity in musical teaching and learning. Spaces that suggest creativity should signal a respectful
and trusting relationship between learner and teacher in the physical setting because the required acceptance of
risk, trial and error and freedom to experiment is supported by such a setting. In such spaces, it is important
teachers respect the knowledge and inventiveness that young people can bring with them to school that can
become a resource for others, including teachers themselves.




Creative spaces are more likely to found on the edges of rooms than in the middle because these are the sites
where we might find nooks and crannies, meeting corners and softer, less exposed areas for dreaming and
thinking. The same might be said of the outdoor school environment, where it is often around the edges of
buildings that students gather to socialise and where imagination and meaning-making flourishes in relation to
the natural and built environment.




The degree of time and space enabled by the timetable for supporting meetings and the sustainability of
dialogue, networking and talking about pedagogic practice is crucial for pedagogic innovation to flourish.
Building in adequate amounts of time for reflection on practice and for supporting partnerships, peer mentoring
collaborations and collegiality, is essential if teachers are to search and re-search practice and submit each other
to questioning their pedagogic practices. And in so doing intervene. Teachers who choose to work
collaboratively with artists have the potential to co-construct new pedagogic practices and discourses. In order
to develop, transform and improve one’s own teaching, whether as beginning teacher, as experienced
practitioner in the formal sectors of schools or higher education, or as artist educator, a heightened level of self
awareness and critical reflection is needed (Burnard, 2008).
Tips for Modulating Pedagogical Spaces for Creativity in Music Education

Start simply, build progressively:
        Find easy ways in to creative musical learning. Start with the classroom environment. Move on to how
        pupils and staff use and engage with music in their lives. Show and share tangible changes.
        Be a creative advocate for music. Create a presentation or materials that you can use both within your
        school to convince colleagues and out of school. This will help to build a whole-school ethos around
        creativity in music.
        Focus on one area at a time, for example, in developing more creative learning in music, and use this to
        raise awareness and encourage staff to think about applications in other spaces in the school.
        Organise a Musical Enquiring Minds-type project where pupils have an opportunity to negotiate the aim
        of the project and are instrumental in designing how it is carried out (see www.enquiringminds.org.uk)
        Set up a ‘music inventors’ or ‘music creators’ club after school
        Transform one small area in the school as a space designed for creativity in music and imagination.
        Make sure that the pupils have some ownership of the project.

     If music educators are to successfully develop pupils’ creativity in music, further attention will need to be
 paid to what it might mean to develop creativity in a way which progresses, for all students. The study
 described above sought to explore the potential for mapping progression in musical composition; it has
 brought to light some little considered, but very serious, problems that may be encountered when bringing
 empirical research methods to the study of progression in musical creativity. We need to place more reliance
 on empirical research to fully comprehend how children’s understanding changes over time, and focus on
 developing theoretical explanations.



Burnard, P. (2006). The individual and social worlds of children’s musical creativity in G.McPherson (ed), The
     Child as Musician: A Handbook of Musical Development. pp. 353-374. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Burnard, P. (2008) UNESCO Observatory E-Journal, Multi-Disciplinary Research in the Arts Special Issue on
     'Creativity, policy and practice discourses: productive tensions in the new millennium'
Burnard, P., Craft, A. and Grainger, T. et al (2006), Possibility thinking, International Journal of Early Years
     Education, 14, (3), 243-262.
Cremin, T., Burnard, P., Craft, A. (2006), Pedagogy and possibility thinking in the early years, Journal of
     Thinking Skills and Creativity, 1 (2), 108-119.
Figure 1 Modulating Pedagogical Spaces for Creativity in Music Education

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Pam Burnard Modulating Pedagogical Spaces For Creativity

  • 1. Modulating Pedagogical Spaces for Creativity in Music Education Published in SoundArts, The MENZA Magazine, 5(3), 2009 Pamela Burnard, PhD Faculty of Education University of Cambridge Documenting moments of significant creativity in music, and understanding how these evolve, develop and change, among children and young people, are widely recognised as challenging issues for music educators. What do we take to be creativity in music and what constitutes creative learning spaces which open up the possibilities of thinking differently around a musical issue? In turn, how is ‘progress’ related to notions of musical creativity – in the unfolding of a developing composition, and in developing a ‘hearing’ and a performance of it, as well? How should we describe the shifts in learning? How should creativity in music be taught to achieve progression? And if progression is an outcome of what and how we teach, what are the aspects of teaching that will enable progress in musical creativity to occur and to be assessed? Within the past 10 years, the desirability of creativity, its unfolding and its application, has gained increasing prominence in educational policy. At the same time calls for higher standards and increased accountability, whilst meeting the needs and interests of students, has required music teachers to adapt educative learning journeys for catalyzing collaborations, widening participation among and across diverse communities. Spaces that enable pupils to connect areas of experience in innovative and imaginative ways are those which promote: Questioning and challenging Making connections and seeing relationships Envisaging what might be Playing with ideas and keeping options open Representing ideas in a variety of ways In this digital age, where learners create music learning contexts for themselves within and across settings, a commitment to re-imaging pedagogical spaces in music education brings many challenges, but equally it brings responsibilities. It requires us to think deeply about how we understand, articulate and hope to answer questions such as: What do pedagogies which enable creativity look like? When is a pedagogy innovative? We know that pedagogies which enable creativity include allowing children choice and ownership of their learning, time for reflection, creating a stimulating environment, and modelling creative action within a genuine partnership. But not all spaces in a school can or should always allow for all of these but the school should work towards design solutions that contain as many of these as possible. Spaces that support questioning and challenging musical behaviour might include the possibilities for one-to-one musical conversation, collaborative group dialogue, and communication and musical interaction (in real time or asynchronous time, for examples through email or interactive blogs (Burnard, 2006).
  • 2. The pedagogies which relate to flexibility of space and time and engage the imagination are more often those in which the teachers position themselves off-centre stage and promote learning through the children’s self chosen activities and interests. Whilst not afraid to use direct instruction and teacher-led work where necessary, music teachers who seek to balance teacher and child-led initiatives, explicitly fostering a sense of possibility and agency in their young learners more often create the time and space for children to explore their environment and the materials provided, encouraging both actual and mental play.The features of this distinct pedagogic practice appear to promote and foster the children’s full engagement in problem solving - problem finding activities and thus support their development as young possibility thinkers (see Figure 1. Underpinning the pedagogic practices of standing back, profiling learner agency and creating time and space are the teachers’ conceptions of children as young musical thinkers and creators and of learning as a process of discovery. These pedagogues often lead by following, creating flexible maps en route with the class, and enabling the children to experience a high degree of ownership of their musical learning. Creative pedagogies involve being co-participative and combine in action as the music teachers encourage the children to direct more of their learning journeys. The literature tells a story, by no means consistent, of what we know about how teachers conceptualise musical creativity at classroom level, what teachers do in their classrooms, the nature of tasks given, and the longstanding problem of making judgements about creativity in music. The story assumes a common understanding of how, and by whom, the construct ‘creativity’ is defined, interpreted and made real, in terms of curriculum, pedagogy, and assessment practices in music.
  • 3. Inspirational spaces are not simply rooms for teaching and performance of the arts. The whole curriculum can be approached through creativity. Bringing together more than one curriculum area into a single space can promote creativity in musical teaching and learning. Spaces that suggest creativity should signal a respectful and trusting relationship between learner and teacher in the physical setting because the required acceptance of risk, trial and error and freedom to experiment is supported by such a setting. In such spaces, it is important teachers respect the knowledge and inventiveness that young people can bring with them to school that can become a resource for others, including teachers themselves. Creative spaces are more likely to found on the edges of rooms than in the middle because these are the sites where we might find nooks and crannies, meeting corners and softer, less exposed areas for dreaming and thinking. The same might be said of the outdoor school environment, where it is often around the edges of buildings that students gather to socialise and where imagination and meaning-making flourishes in relation to the natural and built environment. The degree of time and space enabled by the timetable for supporting meetings and the sustainability of dialogue, networking and talking about pedagogic practice is crucial for pedagogic innovation to flourish. Building in adequate amounts of time for reflection on practice and for supporting partnerships, peer mentoring collaborations and collegiality, is essential if teachers are to search and re-search practice and submit each other to questioning their pedagogic practices. And in so doing intervene. Teachers who choose to work collaboratively with artists have the potential to co-construct new pedagogic practices and discourses. In order to develop, transform and improve one’s own teaching, whether as beginning teacher, as experienced practitioner in the formal sectors of schools or higher education, or as artist educator, a heightened level of self awareness and critical reflection is needed (Burnard, 2008).
  • 4. Tips for Modulating Pedagogical Spaces for Creativity in Music Education Start simply, build progressively: Find easy ways in to creative musical learning. Start with the classroom environment. Move on to how pupils and staff use and engage with music in their lives. Show and share tangible changes. Be a creative advocate for music. Create a presentation or materials that you can use both within your school to convince colleagues and out of school. This will help to build a whole-school ethos around creativity in music. Focus on one area at a time, for example, in developing more creative learning in music, and use this to raise awareness and encourage staff to think about applications in other spaces in the school. Organise a Musical Enquiring Minds-type project where pupils have an opportunity to negotiate the aim of the project and are instrumental in designing how it is carried out (see www.enquiringminds.org.uk) Set up a ‘music inventors’ or ‘music creators’ club after school Transform one small area in the school as a space designed for creativity in music and imagination. Make sure that the pupils have some ownership of the project. If music educators are to successfully develop pupils’ creativity in music, further attention will need to be paid to what it might mean to develop creativity in a way which progresses, for all students. The study described above sought to explore the potential for mapping progression in musical composition; it has brought to light some little considered, but very serious, problems that may be encountered when bringing empirical research methods to the study of progression in musical creativity. We need to place more reliance on empirical research to fully comprehend how children’s understanding changes over time, and focus on developing theoretical explanations. Burnard, P. (2006). The individual and social worlds of children’s musical creativity in G.McPherson (ed), The Child as Musician: A Handbook of Musical Development. pp. 353-374. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Burnard, P. (2008) UNESCO Observatory E-Journal, Multi-Disciplinary Research in the Arts Special Issue on 'Creativity, policy and practice discourses: productive tensions in the new millennium' Burnard, P., Craft, A. and Grainger, T. et al (2006), Possibility thinking, International Journal of Early Years Education, 14, (3), 243-262. Cremin, T., Burnard, P., Craft, A. (2006), Pedagogy and possibility thinking in the early years, Journal of Thinking Skills and Creativity, 1 (2), 108-119.
  • 5. Figure 1 Modulating Pedagogical Spaces for Creativity in Music Education