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The benefits of music workshop participation for pupils’ wellbeing and social capital: the In2 music project evaluation

The benefits of music workshop participation for pupils’ wellbeing and social capital: the In2 music project evaluation
The benefits of music workshop participation for pupils’ wellbeing and social capital: the In2 music project evaluation
This paper reports on the evaluation of the In2 music project in Darlington, England. The project ran for seven weeks from January–March 2020 and involved Year 6 pupils from four primary schools (n = 103) and Year 7 pupils from one secondary school (n = 90), working with Back Chat Brass, a professional brass ensemble. The aim of the In2 music project was to enable pupils to work with professional musicians to enjoy the benefits of group-based music, which include happiness and optimism. These emotions are strongly associated with social capital, which this study defines as the benefits that individuals and communities derive from positive interpersonal relationships. This evaluation asks if the In2 music project resulted in non-quantifiable changes that are associated with positive outcomes for pupil wellbeing and social capital. We explore our findings in relation to a policy climate of cuts to arts education, as shown by the stories in a special issue of Arts Education Policy Review. We argue that while political disregard threatens the development of social capital in economically deprived communities, funded interventions such as In2 can benefit some of the most vulnerable members of such communities.
Music education, policy footprints, pupil wellbeing, social capital, socio-economic deprivation
1940-4395
37-47
Ward, Sophie
325d0882-147a-4b0c-bc5d-41120cd1e3bc
James, Simon
4fc6ca3a-22cb-4166-94c6-9550e09d9009
James, Kate
5d4c07fe-1fa1-464e-83c5-983e9bf64c54
Brown, Chris
42bbe788-54bf-4081-8c18-ead8b554f0fd
Kokotsaki, Dimitra
437634d4-0e75-45ae-8fd9-efa2b95d5da4
Wigham, Jade
aac179e7-a66f-4ca0-8876-00178e96071a
Ward, Sophie
325d0882-147a-4b0c-bc5d-41120cd1e3bc
James, Simon
4fc6ca3a-22cb-4166-94c6-9550e09d9009
James, Kate
5d4c07fe-1fa1-464e-83c5-983e9bf64c54
Brown, Chris
42bbe788-54bf-4081-8c18-ead8b554f0fd
Kokotsaki, Dimitra
437634d4-0e75-45ae-8fd9-efa2b95d5da4
Wigham, Jade
aac179e7-a66f-4ca0-8876-00178e96071a

Ward, Sophie, James, Simon, James, Kate, Brown, Chris, Kokotsaki, Dimitra and Wigham, Jade (2021) The benefits of music workshop participation for pupils’ wellbeing and social capital: the In2 music project evaluation. Arts Education Policy Review, 124 (1), 37-47. (doi:10.1080/10632913.2021.1903640).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper reports on the evaluation of the In2 music project in Darlington, England. The project ran for seven weeks from January–March 2020 and involved Year 6 pupils from four primary schools (n = 103) and Year 7 pupils from one secondary school (n = 90), working with Back Chat Brass, a professional brass ensemble. The aim of the In2 music project was to enable pupils to work with professional musicians to enjoy the benefits of group-based music, which include happiness and optimism. These emotions are strongly associated with social capital, which this study defines as the benefits that individuals and communities derive from positive interpersonal relationships. This evaluation asks if the In2 music project resulted in non-quantifiable changes that are associated with positive outcomes for pupil wellbeing and social capital. We explore our findings in relation to a policy climate of cuts to arts education, as shown by the stories in a special issue of Arts Education Policy Review. We argue that while political disregard threatens the development of social capital in economically deprived communities, funded interventions such as In2 can benefit some of the most vulnerable members of such communities.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 25 March 2021
Keywords: Music education, policy footprints, pupil wellbeing, social capital, socio-economic deprivation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 483882
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/483882
ISSN: 1940-4395
PURE UUID: 268a4556-2a54-467e-bdd0-75c6116fec50
ORCID for Chris Brown: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9759-9624

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Date deposited: 07 Nov 2023 18:03
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:16

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Contributors

Author: Sophie Ward
Author: Simon James
Author: Kate James
Author: Chris Brown ORCID iD
Author: Dimitra Kokotsaki
Author: Jade Wigham

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