Using Life Course Analysis to investigate the absence of popular musicians from the field of classroom music teaching

Authors

  • Rhiannon Simpson The University of Melbourne

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5429/2079.387(2025)v15i1.6en

Keywords:

music education, life course analysis, popular music education, life course trajectory, reversibility

Abstract

This paper uses theoretical concepts associated with Life Course Analysis to explore factors which may influence a professional musician's decision to gain – or elect not to gain – formal music teaching qualifications in Australia. Such an exploration is prompted by calls from Green (2008), Wright (2017), and Powell et al. (2017) to redress the historical absence of popular musicians from the field of music education, and to curate teacher cohorts with an understanding of skills and knowledges associated with popular musicianship. In this paper COVID-19 is positioned as a ‘period effect’ which may prompt popular musicians to consider gaining teaching qualifications and enter the field of qualified music teaching. In doing so, the potential short and long-term impacts of the pandemic on the vocational trajectory of popular musicians is of focus.

Author Biography

Rhiannon Simpson, The University of Melbourne

Dr Rhiannon Simpson is a lecturer in Music Education within the Faculty of Education. Her research interests include informal music pedagogy, teacher agency, policy studies, and sociology. Her dissertation (2023) explored the ways in which Bourdieu's concept of 'hysteresis' and Schmidt's conceptualisation of 'policy-knowhow' lend insight into factors which impede/facillitate music teacher practice.

She was the recipient of the John and Eric Smyth Prestigious Travelling Scholarship (The University of Melbourne; 2019), the Ontario Graduate Scholarship (Ontario Provincial Government; 2020, 2021), and was awarded the David Sells Prize for Outstanding Student Presentation (Australia & New Zealand Association for Research in Music Education) in 2023. She has twice served as the invited keynote speaker at The Victorian Statewide Instrumental Music Teacher Conference, and regularly presents at international conferences. Rhiannon is the co-founder of INERTIAeducation; an organisation which encourages scholars to incorporate interactive digital tools within disseminated papers.

Rhiannon has been a member of IASPM Canada since 2019. 

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Published

22-05-2025

Issue

Section

Articles – Open Section