Detailed Record



Educator-Level Applications of the DMIS in Music Education


Abstract Overcoming deeply engrained issues related to Denial, Defense, and Minimization in music education will require many of the widespread systemic changes discussed in Chap. 4 . However, it will also require music teachers who are able and willing to implement these changes in practice. Within this chapter, I examine the ways in which Bennett’s DMIS model can serve as a tool to help to individual music educators recognize and overcome ethnocentric tendencies (in themselves and others), on their individual journeys towards higher levels of intercultural sensitivity. By considering common indicators of Denial, Defense, Minimization, Acceptance, Adaptation, and Integration, as well as strategies for growth, we can better understand the reasons why certain ethnocentric norms are reproduced in music classrooms and work to change them … one music educator at a time.
Authors Jennifer M. Mellizo University of Wyoming
Journal Info Springer International Publishing | Re-Imagining Curricula in Global Times , pages: 83 - 104
Publication Date 1/1/2023
ISSN 2522-8269
TypeKeyword Image book-chapter
Open Access closed Closed Access
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-37619-1_5
KeywordsKeyword Image Music Education (Score: 0.624552) , Musical Development (Score: 0.564934) , Motivation in Music (Score: 0.54404) , Cultural Sustaining Pedagogy (Score: 0.504895)