Music major students' perception toward Chinese higher education curriculum in employability preparation

PurposeWith a focus on undergraduate music major students in China, the study sought to examine how higher music education institutions prepare professional knowledge, professional skills and soft skills in relevance to music students' employability.Design/methodology/approachThe quantitative s...

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Main Authors: Wang, Yu Guo, Wang, I. Ta
Format: Article
Published: Emerald 2024
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/45831/
https://doi.org/10.1108/ET-05-2023-0171
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spelling my.um.eprints.458312024-11-12T07:48:25Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/45831/ Music major students' perception toward Chinese higher education curriculum in employability preparation Wang, Yu Guo Wang, I. Ta M Music PurposeWith a focus on undergraduate music major students in China, the study sought to examine how higher music education institutions prepare professional knowledge, professional skills and soft skills in relevance to music students' employability.Design/methodology/approachThe quantitative survey engaged 359 music students from five music institutions in Western China to report their perceptions toward music curriculum related to employability. The current study examined whether their perception varied based on their gender, location, school, educational background and professional option purpose.FindingsPerception differences in the music curriculum were observed across gender, schools, educational background and professional option purpose. School differences were the most significant among all five factors, followed by professional option purpose, educational background and gender. The location difference was insignificant among the five factors. There were insufficient opportunities for community and industrial engagement in higher music education.Originality/valueThe current study provides an insight into the higher music education curriculum for employability preparation in current China. This is one of the limited empirical studies in Western China to investigate music students' perceptions of professional knowledge and skills and the soft skill line with employability. The findings can serve as a reference for prospective employees in the music industry, policymaking and curriculum design and future research. Emerald 2024-02 Article PeerReviewed Wang, Yu Guo and Wang, I. Ta (2024) Music major students' perception toward Chinese higher education curriculum in employability preparation. Education and Training, 66 (1). pp. 35-53. ISSN 0040-0912, DOI https://doi.org/10.1108/ET-05-2023-0171 <https://doi.org/10.1108/ET-05-2023-0171>. https://doi.org/10.1108/ET-05-2023-0171 10.1108/ET-05-2023-0171
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic M Music
spellingShingle M Music
Wang, Yu Guo
Wang, I. Ta
Music major students' perception toward Chinese higher education curriculum in employability preparation
description PurposeWith a focus on undergraduate music major students in China, the study sought to examine how higher music education institutions prepare professional knowledge, professional skills and soft skills in relevance to music students' employability.Design/methodology/approachThe quantitative survey engaged 359 music students from five music institutions in Western China to report their perceptions toward music curriculum related to employability. The current study examined whether their perception varied based on their gender, location, school, educational background and professional option purpose.FindingsPerception differences in the music curriculum were observed across gender, schools, educational background and professional option purpose. School differences were the most significant among all five factors, followed by professional option purpose, educational background and gender. The location difference was insignificant among the five factors. There were insufficient opportunities for community and industrial engagement in higher music education.Originality/valueThe current study provides an insight into the higher music education curriculum for employability preparation in current China. This is one of the limited empirical studies in Western China to investigate music students' perceptions of professional knowledge and skills and the soft skill line with employability. The findings can serve as a reference for prospective employees in the music industry, policymaking and curriculum design and future research.
format Article
author Wang, Yu Guo
Wang, I. Ta
author_facet Wang, Yu Guo
Wang, I. Ta
author_sort Wang, Yu Guo
title Music major students' perception toward Chinese higher education curriculum in employability preparation
title_short Music major students' perception toward Chinese higher education curriculum in employability preparation
title_full Music major students' perception toward Chinese higher education curriculum in employability preparation
title_fullStr Music major students' perception toward Chinese higher education curriculum in employability preparation
title_full_unstemmed Music major students' perception toward Chinese higher education curriculum in employability preparation
title_sort music major students' perception toward chinese higher education curriculum in employability preparation
publisher Emerald
publishDate 2024
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/45831/
https://doi.org/10.1108/ET-05-2023-0171
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score 13.214268