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Music education in schools cannot function effectively without an implicit agreement between stakeholders (e.g. teachers, student, parents, government etc.) about what it is for. The 'meaning of music' is a constantly shifting function of the discourses of these diverse groups, which may coalesce around a 'dominant ideology' which gains enough inter-group consensus to generate a stable educational agenda. It is argued that such a stable agenda has collapsed. Recent research suggests that (i) many school music educators have little respect for or understanding of the musical lives of those they teach; (ii) that the musical enthusiasms and aspirations of many young people are not addressed by the current curriculum; (iii) that the transition from primary to secondary school is a key 'parting-of-the-ways' between young people and their music teachers; and (iv) that music retains a key and central role in the lives of most people who see themselves as 'not musical', and that emotional self-management is at the heart of this role. Classroom music, as currently conceptualised and organised, may be an inappropriate vehicle for mass music education in 21st-century Britain. Hints of the parameters of a more effective music education environment may well be found within the somewhat anarchic mixed economy of out-of-school music provision in this country.
John Sloboda (Sat,) studied this question.