Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-25-2017
Abstract
This study explores how a variety of music alumni perceive the skills that they learned at their institutions in comparison to their diverse career outcomes using data from the Strategic National Arts Alumni Project (SNAAP). Focusing on alumni with music education, music theory, and music performance majors (16,317 respondents from 105 different arts undergraduate and graduate colleges or arts programs within larger universities), the study demonstrates how a survey of skills learned and career outcomes is a meaningful way of measuring student achievement and skill. Similarities and differences between these three majors are further investigated using inferential statistical analyses. There is also further discussion suggesting that equating “value” in education solely with alumni income may not be the most appropriate for the arts, and that value instead could be expanded to include various skills and components of job satisfaction in understanding alumni success.
Rights Information
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 License
Citation / Publisher Attribution
International Journal of Education & the Arts, v. 18, no. 29, p. 1-29.
Scholar Commons Citation
Miller, Angie L.; Dumford, Amber D.; and Johnson, William R., "Music Alumni Play a Different Tune: Reflections on Acquired Skills and Career Outcomes" (2017). Leadership, Counseling, Adult, Career and Higher Education Faculty Publications. 272.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/ehe_facpub/272