Digital Competences in Teacher Training and Music Education via Service Learning: A Mixed-Method Research Project
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
2.1. Method
2.2. Ethical Considerations
2.3. Sample
- (a)
- We were able to match 17 subjects (64.7% female, 35.3% male, mean age = 28 years; DT = 7.06) in the INCOTIC questionnaire.
- (b)
- We were able to match 11 subjects (72.7% = female, mean age = 30.36 years, DT = 7.85) in the “Music and ICTs”, “Uses of music”, and “USMUS” questionnaires.
2.4. Techniques and Tools Used to Gather Data
2.5. Procedure
2.6. Data Analysis Techniques
3. Results
3.1. Prior to the SL Experience
3.1.1. Knowledge of and Competence in the Use of ICTs in Music
3.1.2. Previous Experience with SL
3.1.3. General Expectations Regarding the SL Project
3.1.4. Expectations Regarding the Service Beneficiaries (High School Students)
3.1.5. Problematic Use of Technology with Respect to Adolescents
3.1.6. Prejudices and Stereotypes Regarding Musical Styles
3.2. During the SL Experience
3.2.1. The Contribution of SL to the Development of Competences Related to Citizenship and Social Responsibility
3.2.2. The Contribution of SL to the Acquisition of Academic Curricular Knowledge Associated with the Course Subject
3.2.3. The Contribution of SL to Sustainable Development via ITCs
3.2.4. Incorporating Digital Apps and Devices into the Process of Music Education
3.2.5. Preferences for Learning Course Content and Listening to Music
3.2.6. Stereotypes and Music Styles (or Apps) in the Teaching Process
3.3. After the SL Experience
3.3.1. Efficient and Secure Use of Digital Material for Learning Music
3.3.2. Training Needs and Requirements for Virtual Activities in the Music Classroom
3.3.3. SL and Changes in the Perception of Stereotypes and Personal Values: Motives
3.3.4. SL and Collaboration with Fellow Students
3.3.5. Satisfaction with the Use of the SL Methodology
3.3.6. SL and the Acquisition of Academic Knowledge Regarding the Course Curriculum and Digital App Preference
3.3.7. SL Personal Identity, Musical Styles, Personal Changes, and Academic Changes
3.3.8. Better Apps and Platforms for the Music Classroom: Frequent Use
3.3.9. Improved Apps and Platforms for the Classroom: Educational Value for High School Students
3.3.10. Digital Competences: Pre-Test and Post-Test
4. Discussion
4.1. Authors’ Development of Digital Competence
4.2. Impact of SL on Students
4.3. Acquisition of Musical Knowledge and Abilities
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Categories and Codes | N | % | Textual Utterances Contained in “Register of Student Reflections of Master’s Degree” (RF-MASTER) (Textual Quotes Have Been Separated from One Another by Slashes (/)) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pre-Test | ||||
Knowledge and competences regarding the use of ICTs in music | 18 | 3.34 | I learned to use Audacity intuitively, without any external help/The tool I most use is Sibelius; I learned to use it in a brief course, then in practice/Because I needed to, and by consulting the tutorials I found on the Internet/At school we had music computing as a subject: there I learned to use score editors and video editing programs/More recently, I’ve learned to use audio creation and editing programs, since I needed them in order to continue to give classes during lockdown/I learned to use them in music school assignments such as “music computing”. | |
SL | SL Previous experience(s) | 8 | 1.48 | Staging of an urban popular music story for an audience of secondary-level students, carried out with my colleagues studying toward a Master’s Degree in Musicology, each one of us playing their instrument and explaining in a theatrical mode/I don’t recall any concrete experiences with SL, but I find it quite interesting and important/In our conservatory we carried out a musical therapy project in which I participated. Thus, in the group, we experienced SL ourselves, acquiring the necessary knowledge to apply it in a hospital setting. |
General expectations regarding the SL project | 20 | 3.71 | To bring music closer to high school (secondary-level) students by adapting musical content to the technological reality we live with on a daily basis, managing to present it from a more attractive angle for them/Integrating “2.0 level technologies” to classroom learning from a critical perspective/Including technology in the classroom in an efficient manner, and not as a last resort/Providing a practical, real-life experience for students who are going to teach students/That is what perhaps generates the greatest degree of commitment to the project. | |
Expectations regarding the service beneficiaries (high school students) | 14 | 2.60 | If adolescents are able to grasp the fact that music’s significant influence is affected by a number of external factors, then they will be able to question a series of stereotypes associated with different music styles, or with other aspects of their musical preferences (fashion, social behavior, etc.)/I find that the fact of presenting a more personal, close-up project will have undoubted benefits for these adolescents, fostering their critical attitude toward aspects of which they are not yet aware, as well as from other perspectives that will doubtlessly enrich their personality/Thanks to the principle of reflection, SL should help students to reconsider their concepts and attitudes regarding music, so that they can acquire new perspectives they did not previously have. | |
Problematic use of technology in adolescence | 14 | 2.60 | It’s somewhat dangerous: adolescents often do not think of the possible repercussions of their acts/Special attention needs to be paid to these issues; adolescents, however, tend to lend more importance to social aspects than to secure use of the Internet/It is necessary to create an awareness regarding new digital and technological media so that we can use them to foster learning and education/I find that new technologies can be very beneficial, but they can also be highly harmful if [adolescents] do not know how to use them correctly. | |
Prejudices and stereotypes regarding musical styles | 28 | 5.19 | Classical music [is] more for an elite social class/When people think of Latino music, they associate it with people from lower classes. | |
During the Service-Learning Project | ||||
The contribution provided by SL | Developing competences related to citizenship and social responsibility | 40 | 7.42 | Moreover, relating it with competences related to citizenship and social responsibility, SL helps to improve them: on the one hand, it favors the inclusion of students who are using the same technology; on the other hand, the students help each other if someone has difficulties in using ICTs in class/I had never had the courage to use or even get near ICT resources or apps; this course has achieved that I now not only regard them as something totally viable, but it has even awakened my curiosity to the point of now envisioning to devote in-depth study to some of the tools we were presented with during the course, perusing the Web for information so that I can already start to read something about them/This is an enriching experience that helps us, on the one hand, thanks to what we learn; then, on the other hand, we are providing a service to the high school students who receive the service/It also opens a door, and it will continue to open more doors toward good collaboration between families, while providing a first contact and a collective action in the high school’s social environment/And the fact of being able to provide them with some of our knowledge is something very satisfactory for us/Helping to build communities that are stronger from a civic and social point of view. |
Acquisition of academic curricular knowledge associated with the course subject | 25 | 4.64 | The SL methodology provided us with a direct, interesting experience: we were able to enter in contact with the professional environment in which we will be working after finishing our Masters degree/It helps us acquire a more realistic vision of what we are studying: in other words, we go directly into a classroom with all its social and resource problems/It is being integrally applied along with the other methodologies we are working on/First we carry out a theoretical study that provides us with the knowledge we need to communicate to the high school students. | |
Sustainable development through ICTs | 27 | 5.01 | If we want to be more ecological, I would propose that we use e-books for reading, or read on recycled paper/Fostering an awareness in the students in our classes/I think it is very necessary, on a general level, to develop a greater awareness of energy consumption/Getting to know and use the apps that have been designed for these purposes, helping students in the classroom get to know them, and even designing new initiatives with the students. | |
Apps, programs, and digital platforms | Incorporating them into the music education process | 14 | 2.60 | But I have to acknowledge that I have discovered a vast range of useful tools for teachers to prepare and adapt classes according to the type of group; for the students, they nourish their learning; moreover, the teaching experience can be more variegated, more fun, and perhaps even more efficient/I find that this is one tool more, but we shouldn’t obsess over its use. It can serve as an incentive, and we need to know how to manage it, but educational activity should not be based on digital applications/I find it positive as a complement to certain activities, or in order to carry out activities related to electronic music or composition; still, this should only be a complement, without substituting the possibility of performing music live with real instruments or the human voice/I find that this is just one more tool; although we should not succumb to the illusion of believing it is the only one, our obligation as teachers is to be aware of our reality and that of our students, in order to position ourselves within it/I am in favor, as long as such digital tools do not become the only option for music education. There are activities that the ICTs cannot carry out for us in our place. |
Preferences for learning the course content and for listening to music | 50 | 9.28 | I tend to use Spotify and SoundCloud. In terms of music styles, I listen to everything except for commercial pop and reggaeton/Spotify and YouTube for all types of music (classical, rock, trap, pop...). | |
Stereotypes and music styles in the teaching process | 12 | 2.23 | Prior to teaching the class, we should always inform ourselves in-depth about the subject or genre we’re going to be dealing with, so that we always have an idea about how to answer their questions and how to provide them with adequate information. A teacher should always be informed, mastering the subject they are going to teach in the classroom, and knowing how to manage the app that they’re going to use or teach their students to use/I’m against stereotypes, even more so regarding musical styles. Just like ICTs, they are one more tool for music education; the variety of styles provide us with different approaches and visions of musical reality. | |
Post-Test | ||||
Efficient and secure use of digital material for learning music | 28 | 5.19 | These apps and social networks can always be put into practice, provided that the students know how to use them safely/With didactic applications that gamify the content that is being treated/They can be used under condition that they don’t preclude important and enriching activities such as singing or instrumental practice/Digital material can be used with much success to promote musical learning in the classroom. Currently there is lots of information on websites and music archives where the student can have access to the specific content they are interested in. Moreover, there are many applications that encourage and promote musical learning. | |
Teacher training | Training needs and requirements for virtual activities in the music classroom | 20 | 3.71 | I think it’s essential to have good mastery of ICTs, since they are the students’ true vocabulary. Nevertheless, the way of using them should be something very personal/As a minimum, I think [a teacher] should know how to use a score editor with ease/Ongoing training is necessary, as well as institutional support for the teacher in terms of freeing them from certain duties so that they can devote more time to elaborating and studying the ICT subjects they’re going to feature in class/I find that it would be a good thing if there were an obligatory [university] course that would train future teachers in this area/A teacher needs to be well-trained in terms of digital competences in order to be able to carry out worthwhile virtual activities in the music classroom. |
SL | Changes in the perception of stereotypes and personal values: motives | 19 | 3.53 | Of course, this activity has helped me increase the visibility of many aspects related to styles and personality related to each one of them, and to the their inclusion in the classroom/[This activity has helped me] adopt another viewpoint to regard a methodology [SL] that is very interesting: for students as well as for teachers/Yes, because it is the application of my ideas on a real-life terrain, with real people/The practical application of the activity is enriching, but I think I was already aware of the value of working toward developing communities/Yes, I think I’ve become more aware of the real situation, in terms of how students interact with new technologies outside the classroom/I wouldn’t say that my attitude has changed, but [the activity] has reconnected me with the more social portion of my values. |
Collaborating with fellow students | 25 | 4.64 | The fact that a group of university students or experts in different areas manage to reach an agreement to use their experience to help younger students proves the value of collaboration among people and, precisely, can foment such values in those who have received the service/Yes, although we already had good rapport with one another previously; after this experience, it has intensified/I think the project was carried out in a moment when we, the students, did not know one another as well as we do now, and did not have the same level of trust and familiarity with one another. | |
Satisfaction with the use of the methodology | 20 | 3.71 | [We were able to] ascertain the real way new technologies are used in the class environment/To have survived the task of presenting a theme in front of a group of youngsters of that age/To have been able to see how they asked questions and to note that what we were transmitting was of use to them/The interaction between people of different ages and levels, learning from one another/[The importance of] the social service [we] provided. | |
Acquisition of academic knowledge of the course curriculum and digital preferences | 30 | 5.57 | I think we learned the course content in a better way, since it was something we had to teach ourselves. Thus the assimilation of the course content has been more efficient than if we had passed an exam or written a term paper/I’m convinced that whatever we truly experience in real life always leaves profound traces, because it provokes many different emotions in us; that is why the SL experience involves an entirely significant learning of the course content/I think [our] emotional implication leads to an improved assimilation of the content/It has helped us try out our skills in a real-life work environment, with situations that can occur in our day to day experience and that we will have to solve by using the best didactic resources/A total awareness of the learning method [was achieved], since we have put it into practice/I have not noted a significant change compared to a more traditional methodology. | |
Identity and musical styles: personal and academic changes | 22 | 4.08 | Anything that helps us become better teachers is good/I am no longer afraid of discovering new apps. | |
Added value | Frequent and/or improved use of applications or platforms for the music classroom | 90 | 16.70 | Audacity: easy to use, free software, it boosts motivation/Canva: easy to use, free software, boosts motivation for creating posters, [resulting in] creative and attractive presentations/Kahoot: easy to use, free software, boosts motivation, makes use of technologies in a school environment/Musescore: easy to use, free software, boosts motivation, the students appreciate the content; it is not indispensable but it can be a useful tool; one can work in a practical way with music and its diverse elements. Involvement and encouragement of social action involving youth. |
Improved apps and platforms for the classroom: educational value for high school (ESO) students | 15 | 2.78 | Versatility for working in different contexts and with different tools/As it turns out, they are very intuitive and easy to use/Those that have a graphic presentation are ingenious and attractive for high school students/It is a way of collecting opinions and surveying the level of a group’s general comprehension of a subject/The app’s overall design and intuitive interface make it more attractive and easier to understand for students. | |
Total | 539 | 100 |
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Tool | Before the SL Activity | During the Activity | After the SL Activity |
---|---|---|---|
“Digital competences (INCOTIC)” | N = 23 Sex: 60.9% female and 39.1 male Age: X = 28.78 DT = 8.26 | N = 22 Sex: 63.6% female and 36.4 male Age: X = 25.68 DT = 3.33 | |
“Register of Student Reflections of master’s degree” (RF-MASTER) | N = 22 63.64% female Age: = 28.5 DT = 8.48 | N = 23 60.86% female Age: X= 28 | N = 16 62.50% female Age: X= 28.44 DT = 7.09 |
“Digital competences in the area of music” (“USMUS”; “Music and ICTs”, and “Uses of Music”) | N = 22 63.64% female Age: = 28.5 DT = 8.48 | N = 16 62.50% female Age: = 28.44 DT = 7.09 | |
Self-evaluation | N = 21 Sex: 66.7% female and 33.3 male Age: X= 27.95 DT = 6.87 |
Name of Tool/Survey | General Characteristics | Reliability |
---|---|---|
INCOTIC 2.0 [30] | Self-evaluation of digital competence. The tool is made up of 32 items on a 1–5 Likert-type scale, from 1 = “totally disagree” or “I don’t know how to do it”, to 5 = “totally agree” or “I know how to do it without hesitation”. The items are organized along the following dimensions: international proficiency (5 items), technological proficiency (5 items), multimedia proficiency (4 items), communication proficiency (5 items), attitudes and expectations (13 items) | The tool’s total reliability is α = 0.821 in the pre-test and α = 0.892 in the post-test |
USMUS [31] | Self-evaluation of knowledge and use of digital technologies in relation to music. The questionnaire is made up of a total of 8 items on a Likert-type scale with 4 response categories ranging from 1 (Not at All) to 4 (A Lot). The items are organized along the two following dimensions: Knowledge (4 items) and Use (4 items) | The tool’s total reliability is α = 0.779 in the pre-test and α = 0.827 in the post-test |
Adaptation of the questionnaire “Music and ICT” [32] | A questionnaire about knowledge, use, and attitudes toward digital technology in the area of music. The scale is made up of 26 items with 4 response categories (not at all, superficial, broad, and in-depth, or: never, sometimes, often, and always). It is made up of the following dimensions: Security (3 items), Improving Digital Competence (2 items), Factors that Exert an Influence on Resources (13 items), Digital Resources (8 items) | The tool’s total reliability is α = 0.893 in the pre-test and α = 0.667 in the post-test |
“Personal Identity” and “Surveillance” dimensions from the “Uses of Music” questionnaire [33] | The “Personal Identity” dimension is made up of 7 items; the “Surveillance” dimension is made up of 3 items. All of them are Likert-type with response categories ranging from 0 (“Totally disagree”) to 10 (“Totally agree”) | The tool’s total reliability is α = 0.893 in the pre-test and α = 0.167 in the post-test |
“Register of Student Reflections of master’s degree” (RF-MASTER) | A questionnaire designed for teacher trainees made up of a total of 29 questions regarding different moments of the SL experience (before = 6, during = 7, after = 16) specifically about SL, responsible use of technologies, sustainable use regarding the protection of health, the environment, social conflicts, and interaction with other Internet users; stereotypes and musical styles; musical applications and platforms; digital material for musical learning; and training needs | |
Evaluation of university SL projects [33] | The questionnaire is made up of a total of 45 items featuring Likert-type response alternatives on a scale of 1 to 5, ranging from 1 = never to 5 = always. They are organized along four dimensions: phase prior to the SL activity (2 items), planning stage (21 items), phase of conducting the activity (5 items), and closure and multiplication stage (17 items) | The questionnaire’s total reliability was α = 0.951 |
Case Study—Data Collection | |||
Pre-Test | SL Activity | Post-Test | |
Quantitative Techniques |
| ||
Qualitative Techniques |
|
|
|
Data Analysis | |||
Quantitative analysis, emergent categories (Atlas.ti software) through thematic analysis + descriptive, inferential statistics (SPSS software) |
Access to Content | Anchor/Score Editors and Apps Related to Audiovisual Content |
---|---|
Makes suitable use of technologies in the school environment | Menti/Kahoot/YouTube |
Proximity and easy access | YouTube |
Flipped classroom | YouTube |
Playful activities | TikTok |
Sharing documents/ Follow-up on written assignments | GoogleDocs |
The competence of learning to learn Enhances creativity Encourages responsible use | Score transcription apps, music recording apps, music creation apps |
A complement that enables content to be learned more playfully and visually without precluding rigor | Smartphone |
Content is well-received and appreciated by students | Musescore/Mentimeter/YouTube |
Poster creation | Canva |
Creating and editing scores and rhythms | Incredibox |
Creating content | TikTok |
Creating musical patterns | Garage Band |
Creativity | YouTube/MadLips/TikTok |
Fun and entertainment | YouTube/MadLips/TikTok |
Listening to music | |
Easy to use | Audacity/Canva/Kahoot/MuseScore |
Gamification | MadLips/Learning Apps |
Youth are actively engaged and participate in social action | Spanish national SL network/ Musescore |
Improvising | TikTok |
Enhances motivation | Audacity/Canva/Kahoot/Musescore/Kahoot |
Creative, attractive presentations | Canva |
Suitable for homework | |
Enables students to work in a practical way with music and its elements | Musescore |
Free software | Audacity/Canva/Kahoot/MuseScore |
Work in groups (teamwork) | Youtube/TikTok/MadLips |
Variables | Pre (before) 1 | Post (after) 1 | Z (p) | r |
---|---|---|---|---|
USMUS N = 11 | ||||
Knowledge | 5 (3.8) | 9 (8.11) | 2.64 (0.008) | 0.80 |
Uses | 5 (2.7) | 9 (7.10) | 2.97 (0.003) | 0.90 |
Music and ICTs N = 11 | ||||
Security | 11 (7.14) | 14 (12.14) | 2.38 (0.018) | 0.72 |
Improving digital competence | 2 (1.4) | 3 (3.5) | 0.718 (0.472) | |
Resource factors | 27 (23.30) | 28 (24.30) | 0.297 (0.766) | |
Digital resources | 4 (3.13) | 12 (10.16) | 2.18 (0.029) | 0.66 |
Uses of Music N = 11 | ||||
Personal identity | 39 (31.48) | 43 (34.53) | 0.67 (0.505) | |
Surveillance | 16 (8.23) | 21 (18.25) | 1.74 (0.082) | |
INCOTIC N = 17 | ||||
Computer proficiency | 3 (0.806) | 3.80 (0.55) | −2.588 (0.010) | 0.62 |
Technological proficiency | 3.20 (0.85) | 4.20 (0.77) | −1.856 (0.063) | |
Multimedia proficiency | 4.250 (0.42) | 4.50 (0.64) | −0.278 (0.781) | |
Communicative proficiency | 3.60 (0.62) | 4.00 (0.54) | −2.280 (0.023) | 0.55 |
Attitudes and expectations | 3.69 (0.61) | 3.85 (0.51) | −1.708 (0.088) | |
Total scale | 3.47 (0.46) | 4.12 (0.44) | −2.391 (0.017) | 0.58 |
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Cuervo, L.; Bonastre, C.; Camilli, C.; Arroyo, D.; García, D. Digital Competences in Teacher Training and Music Education via Service Learning: A Mixed-Method Research Project. Educ. Sci. 2023, 13, 459. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13050459
Cuervo L, Bonastre C, Camilli C, Arroyo D, García D. Digital Competences in Teacher Training and Music Education via Service Learning: A Mixed-Method Research Project. Education Sciences. 2023; 13(5):459. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13050459
Chicago/Turabian StyleCuervo, Laura, Carolina Bonastre, Celia Camilli, Delia Arroyo, and Desirée García. 2023. "Digital Competences in Teacher Training and Music Education via Service Learning: A Mixed-Method Research Project" Education Sciences 13, no. 5: 459. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13050459
APA StyleCuervo, L., Bonastre, C., Camilli, C., Arroyo, D., & García, D. (2023). Digital Competences in Teacher Training and Music Education via Service Learning: A Mixed-Method Research Project. Education Sciences, 13(5), 459. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13050459