This article examines the integration of Design-Based Research (DBR) into music education, concentrating on its philosophical underpinnings, methodological features, and its potential to yield transformative educational practices. The study analyzes DBR as a cyclical and iterative process that interweaves design, implementation, and reflection within authentic learning environments through a theory-driven synthesis and methodological literature review. Its originality lies in bridging the rich international discourse on DBR with the underrepresented field of music pedagogy, offering a comprehensive framework that integrates theories such as constructivism, conceptual change, activity theory, and cognitive apprenticeship. The article examines how DBR can inform the design of music learning environments responsive to students’ needs, culturally situated, and pedagogically adaptive. It highlights key challenges—such as the demands of long-term field engagement, the complexity of data management, and questions of generalizability—while emphasizing DBR’s capacity to produce grounded, flexible, and theory-informed solutions. Practical examples from recent studies illustrate its application across diverse musical contexts, including digital composition tools, informal music-making, community-based practices, and teacher education. By framing teaching as a design act and theory as emergent from practice, DBR is presented as a methodology and a dynamic stance toward innovation. It empowers music educators to act as reflective practitioners and co-researchers, supporting sustainable educational change. The article concludes by proposing directions for future research that expand the role of DBR in advancing inclusive, creative, and context-sensitive approaches to music learning.
Yannis Mygdanis (Thu,) studied this question.