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Access to Music Education with Regard to Race in Two Urban Areas
Authors:Karen Salvador  Kristen Allegood
Institution:1. University of Michigan-Flint, Flint, Michigan, USAksalvado@umflint.edu;3. Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, USA
Abstract:This quantitative study examined access to school music instruction with regard to race in two urban areas: Detroit, Michigan, and Washington, DC, in 2009–2010. We found significant differences in the provision of music instruction between schools with high and low proportions of nonwhite enrollment, in categories including curricular offerings, extracurricular offerings, and resources. In the Detroit area, only 31 percent to 60 percent of schools with high percentages of nonwhite students offered any music instruction at all. We contrast our findings with those of a National Center for Educational Statistics report to demonstrate how regional and national averages can obscure information that should guide policy, such as the influence of location and racial demographics of schools on the provision of public school music instruction. The article concludes with a discussion of the implications of using flawed data in the creation of policy and suggestions for more comprehensive and accurate data collection and analysis.
Keywords:access  demographics  music education  race
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