Abstract
Theoretical approaches to learning in practice-based jazz improvisation contexts include situated learning and ecological perspectives. This article focuses on how interest-driven, self-sustaining jazz learning activities can be matched against the concepts of stolen knowledge (Brown & Duguid, 1996) and landscape of learning (Bjerstedt, 2014). Based on an extensive interview study with Swedish professional jazz musicians, it argues that the multidirectedness involved in jazz improvisational practice calls for a rich learning ecology framework including several didactic loci.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
5 articles.
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2. Power relations in the music teaching studio;British Journal of Music Education;2023-07-13
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4. Improvisational Self-Directed Learning;Advances in Early Childhood and K-12 Education;2018
5. Improvisational Self-Directed Learning;Handbook of Research on Program Development and Assessment Methodologies in K-20 Education;2018