International Journal of Learning and Media, MIT Press
Abstract
Abstract. While rhythmic video games like Rock Band have enormous
popularity, little attention has been paid to these types of games for their potential
for music education. This is a missed opportunity, as the music concepts central to
the comprehension of traditionally notated music, we believe, are embodied in
rhythmic games’ notation system, including models of metric hierarchy,
subdivision, and pattern identification. Furthermore, the game’s alternative
notation serves as a novice-friendly method whose lessons can be applied to more
traditional forms of notation, affording learners a way into more formal practices.
To investigate these possibilities, our study identified 26 youth from an afterschool
club with little to no prior experience with rhythmic video games to
engage in Rock Band over the course of nine months. Analyzing the learning
using a sociocultural framework, we sought to understand the relationship
between players’ familiarity with the Rock Band notation and competence with
traditional music concepts. Findings suggest that the ways which music is
represented in Rock Band provides players with a “doorway in” to more formal
music practices through heightening players’ interest and abilities in music.
Implications for connecting out-of-school learning to the goals of the classroom
are discussed