Society for Education, Music, and Psychology Research
Doi
Abstract
[Abstract]: Buttsworth, Fogarty, and Rorke (1993) reported the construction of a battery of tonal
tests designed to assess intonation abilities. A subset of the tests in the battery
predicted 36 per cent of final scores in an aural training subject in a tertiary music course. In
the current study, the original battery of fourteen tests was reduced to six tests and
administered three times throughout the academic year to a new sample (N = 87) of
tertiary music students. Three research questions were investigated. Firstly, it was
hypothesised that tests in the battery would discriminate among the different aural
classes at USQ, which were grouped according to ability level. The results from
discriminant function analyses provided strong support for this hypothesis. Secondly,
it was hypothesised that students should improve their performance on the pitch
battery across the three administrations. A repeated measures analysis of variance
failed to find evidence of overall improvement. Finally, it was hypothesised that there
would be significant differences on the intonation tests between musicians of different
instrumental families. Again, no overall differences were found. The results indicated
that intonation tests appear to tap an ability that (a) is not significantly modified by
training, (b) is more or less the same across different instrument families, and (c) is
related to success in music training programmes