Budget cuts and music
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View Post
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Music was not taken seriously as a subject when I was at school. We had music lessons and the opportunity for individuals students to learn an instrument was there (there was also a school orchestra), so in retrospect this sounds amazingly progressive for a state school in the 1980s. Lessons tended to be about choral singing (which no one took seriously) or learning about the lives of the great composers (which interested me, at least, and may have sown seeds for the future). The problem is that learning an instrument/to read music is not easy and requires dedication: coupled with the fact that it is not a 'vocational' subject.
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DBS check permitting, I hope to be taken on as a volunteer classroom assistant in the local primary school in September. When the headmistress showed me round a couple of weeks ago, she was very proud of the fact that all the students learned to read music, and that there was a school orchestra. When she first came to the school, she had found that they had 10 unused violins in store, and immediately put them to good use. I had originally offered my time to help poor readers, but I may well help out with the music as well as with the reading, writing, and other subjects.
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Originally posted by Conchis View Postcoupled with the fact that it is not a 'vocational' subject.
so therefore is "vocational"
WHY do people misuse this word all the time ?
And to the link at the start
It's sadly what people have been voting "for"
I told you so, over and over again
So much nonsense and confusion about what studying MUSIC is about
Not good for the blood pressure i'm afraid
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Mr GG, your posts are always stimulating and interesting, but not always easy to understand. My dictionary says "vocation" is "a calling, a calling by God to his service". It appears to have a specifically religious dynamic. But surely, many musicians are passionate about music, but care little or nothing for God? If they said it was a "vocation", would they not simply mean that they did it because they liked it - and presumably, were good enough at it to not only enjoy it, but make a living out if it?
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostIt is a VOCATION
so therefore is "vocational"
WHY do people misuse this word all the time ?
And to the link at the start
It's sadly what people have been voting "for"
I told you so, over and over again
So much nonsense and confusion about what studying MUSIC is about
Not good for the blood pressure i'm afraid
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Originally posted by umslopogaas View PostIt appears to have a specifically religious dynamic.
What I think was one aspect in this case was the school attitude: the music teacher left so that was a convenient reason to drop music. If the English teacher had left that would have been a reason to … except in that case it wouldn't have happened. Music is seen as 'optional' in some schools.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by umslopogaas View PostMr GG, your posts are always stimulating and interesting, but not always easy to understand. My dictionary says "vocation" is "a calling, a calling by God to his service". It appears to have a specifically religious dynamic. But surely, many musicians are passionate about music, but care little or nothing for God? If they said it was a "vocation", would they not simply mean that they did it because they liked it - and presumably, were good enough at it to not only enjoy it, but make a living out if it?
APPLIED BUSINESS.
APPLIED ICT.
APPLIED SCIENCE.
ENGINEERING.
HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE.
LEISURE AND TOURISM.
MANUFACTURING
MR GG
It is a VOCATION
so therefore is "vocational"
WHY do people misuse this word all the time ?Last edited by doversoul1; 01-07-17, 18:39.
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Thanks all, for those clarifications. Clearly the English language, as usual, has enough flexibility to encompass more than one meaning!
I am aware that "vocational training" can, for example, mean a training in woodworking, which could lead to a profitable career that had nothing to do with deistic religion.
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Originally posted by umslopogaas View PostMy dictionary says "vocation" is "a calling, a calling by God to his service". It appears to have a specifically religious dynamic. But surely, many musicians are passionate about music, but care little or nothing for God?
Sadly, dictionaries appear to have gone out of fashion these days, not least on this forum, which probably explains why there is so much needless confusion around.
Music is no more 'a vocation' than supporting Tranmere Rovers but simply one of the Great Arts, arguably the very greatest of them all?
But then again one might be hopelessly biased in promoting that particular argument!
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Thanks PGT, I assure you that my Chambers English Dictionary has never gone out of style here, and is indeed very well thumbed.
I also own, thanks to my grandfather who was a book collector, "Dictionary of Classical Antiquites" and "Etymological Dictionary of the English Language". The former is particularly amazing, look up anything and you find many facts you never even dreamed.
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostSadly, dictionaries appear to have gone out of fashion these days, not least on this forum
Music could certainly be a 'vocation', for the religious and non-religious, for those able to earn a living out of it.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostNot necessarily, according to the OED which equates it with 'calling' (meaning 9) where vocare = to call. Thus: "The means by which a person makes a living; a profession, trade, or occupation". I suspect the feeling is that not many school students are likely to have the natural talent to make a living out of music.
What I think was one aspect in this case was the school attitude: the music teacher left so that was a convenient reason to drop music. If the English teacher had left that would have been a reason to … except in that case it wouldn't have happened. Music is seen as 'optional' in some schools.
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