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Music therapy pre-internship education and training: support for a methods-based approach

journal contribution
posted on 2025-03-10, 16:24 authored by Susan C Gardstrom, James Hiller, Annie Heiderscheit, Nancy L Jackson

As music therapists, music is our primary realm of understanding and action and our distinctive way of joining with a client to help them attain optimal health and well-being. As such, we have adopted and advocate for a music-focused, methods-based (M-B) approach to music therapy pre-internship education and training. In an M-B approach, students’ learning is centered on the 4 music therapy methods of composing, improvising, re-creating, and listening to music and how these music experiences can be designed and implemented to address the health needs of the diverse clientele whom they will eventually encounter as practicing clinicians. Learning is highly experiential, with students authentically participating in each of the methods and reflecting on these self-experiences as a basis for their own clinical decision-making. This is differentiated from a population based (P-B) approach, wherein students’ attention is directed at acquiring knowledge about the non-musical problems of specific “clinical populations” and the “best practice” music interventions that are presumed to address these problems. Herein, we discuss both approaches, identifying the limitations of a P-B perspective and outlining the benefits of an M-B curriculum and its relevance to 21st-century music therapy practice.

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

40

Issue number

1

Page range

14-22

Publication title

Music Therapy Perspectives

ISSN

0734-6875

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Language

  • eng

Affiliated with

  • Cambridge Institute of Music Therapy Research (CIMTR) Outputs