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The effects of imagerial and anatomical/imagerial approaches to resonance training and choral experience on high school students' vocal tone quality

Clark A Roush, University of Nebraska - Lincoln

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of two pedagogical approaches to resonance (imagerial and anatomical/imagerial) and choral experience on the tone quality of male and female high school students. The subjects were members of Nebraska Class B and C high school choral programs. Each treatment group received six lessons focusing on resonance. Experimental group one used an imagerial approach, and experimental group two used an anatomical/imagerial approach. A third group of subjects received no treatment and served as the control group. A panel of experts evaluated the subjects' pre- and post-treatment vocal tone quality. The effects of the independent variables, teaching method and choral experience, on the dependent variable, tone quality, were assessed using a two-way analysis of covariance (p = $<$.05) with pre-treatment tone quality ratings serving as the covariate. Results indicated no significant difference among treatments, but did indicate a significant interaction between grade and group. Juniors treated via anatomy/imagery scored significantly higher than other subjects.

Subject Area

Music education|Curricula|Teaching|Secondary education

Recommended Citation

Roush, Clark A, "The effects of imagerial and anatomical/imagerial approaches to resonance training and choral experience on high school students' vocal tone quality" (1995). ETD collection for University of Nebraska-Lincoln. AAI9604435.
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/dissertations/AAI9604435

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