Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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University Challenge
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Richard Tarleton
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostWhat are university finals other than "retrieval in accordance with competitive performance principles"?
Synthesis is difficult to evaluate in some disciplines - if only because of time limitations in a final exam. Note also a problem with application of simple taxonomies to performing arts. Someone may be brilliant at theory, yet boring as a performer, and vice versa. Some taxonomies only really work for "academic" subjects.
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What are university finals other than "retrieval in accordance with competitive performance principles"?
A certain rather talented teacher of A-level music managed to persuade a well-known string quartet to come and play through her students' efforts in the medium. One student produced an outstanding piece which was so much admired by the visiting SQ that they included it in several of their recital programmes. The student in question got a B on his composition mark and as a result failed to get an overall A* which was otherwise on the cards. No doubt a work of real talent failed to meet the A-level board's 'criteria'. You just can't examine composition. End of rant.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostMaybe slightly off-topic, but the assessment of composition, whether at A-level or university final level seems a complete nonsense to me
A certain rather talented teacher of A-level music managed to persuade a well-known string quartet to come and play through her students' efforts in the medium. One student produced an outstanding piece which was so much admired by the visiting SQ that they included it in several of their recital programmes. The student in question got a B on his composition mark and as a result failed to get an overall A* which was otherwise on the cards. No doubt a work of real talent failed to meet the A-level board's 'criteria'. You just can't examine composition. End of rant.
...and if that is true, the attempt to do so can cause considerable damage.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Back to UC. Yesterdays was a lively contest I thought, and very evenly matched.
I thought the orchestral score question was ridiculously easy...but then Mrs Ardcarp pointed out that a good general knowledge of classical music doesn't include score- reading. In which case Holst Planets (Mars) wasn't a bad guess. The guy obviously recognised a triplet when he saw one.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View Post...and if that is true, the attempt to do so can cause considerable damage.
But if "you can't examine composition", do you remove it from the Syllabus? Is there the same problem with Art Examinations, which are mostly based on students' creative work - and, if not, what can Music Examiners learn from their Art colleagues?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostBack to UC. Yesterdays was a lively contest I thought, and very evenly matched.
I thought the orchestral score question was ridiculously easy...but then Mrs Ardcarp pointed out that a good general knowledge of classical music doesn't include score- reading.
In which case Holst Planets (Mars) wasn't a bad guess. The guy obviously recognised a triplet when he saw one.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostPaxman is just reading it off a card in front of him, though, surely he knows no more than an average person does about advanced mathematics.
("Algebran" sounds like a cereal given to Mathematicians with constipation! Better than working it out with a pencil on a bit of paper, I suppose.)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Didn't he suggest Bolero for the triplet Wedding March?
working it out with logs.
Paxman is just reading it off a card in front of him, though, surely he knows no more than an average person does about advanced mathematics.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostThat rather re-inforces my theory that scientsts/mathematicians tend to know more about the arts than, well, vice-versa, if you get my drift. Certainly borne out by yesterday's teams.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI think that you're right there, ardy - and possibly a result of teenagers being encouraged to study Science, and "keep" the Arts "as a hobby" rather than "waste their time" following academic Arts courses. (And Arts-inclined students aren't similarly encouraged to do sciences, such as Astronomy, as hobbies or even for general interest.)Barbatus sed non barbarus
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostMaybe slightly off-topic, but the assessment of composition, whether at A-level or university final level seems a complete nonsense to me
A certain rather talented teacher of A-level music managed to persuade a well-known string quartet to come and play through her students' efforts in the medium. One student produced an outstanding piece which was so much admired by the visiting SQ that they included it in several of their recital programmes. The student in question got a B on his composition mark and as a result failed to get an overall A* which was otherwise on the cards. No doubt a work of real talent failed to meet the A-level board's 'criteria'. You just can't examine composition. End of rant.
I spent most of Friday with someone who does precisely that
You can also misunderstand what an exam is for and what it is examining
I've been paid handsome sums for pieces that would fail an A level exam
Composition is in danger of disappearing from music teaching as it is, let's not help it on it's way
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