Sep 07, 2024  
2010-2012 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
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Music


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Purpose and Focus

The mission of the Department of Music is to provide a professional artistic environment that supports programs of excellence in the education of musicians. Courses in music are designed to prepare graduates for professional music careers in teaching, performance, and composition and to enrich the cultural experience of all university students.

The Department of Music offers many music courses that may be selected by non-music majors to satisfy university and College of Fine Arts requirements. In addition, university students may participate in Department of Music ensembles. Membership in the department’s instrumental and vocal ensembles is open to all university students by audition and/or consent of the instructor.

Accreditation

Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities
National Association of Schools of Music

Undergraduate Majors

Music — Bachelor of Arts
Music — Bachelor of Music

Areas of Concentration

Bachelor of Arts

The Bachelor of Arts in Music, with concentrations in Recital or History and Literature, allows the student to pursue music as a major within the context of a liberal arts curriculum. The BA curriculum offers an intensive study of music as both an intellectual discipline and a performance art. Students pursuing this degree enroll in the same classes, ensembles, and private lessons as students in the Bachelor of Music program but have the opportunity to enroll in a maximum of 25 elective credits in other disciplines as part of the degree Bachelor of Arts in Music.

Bachelor of Music

The Bachelor of Music degree is offered in the following areas of concentration:

Composition

The Bachelor of Music degree in Composition, with training in composition, orchestration, and arranging, prepares students for professional work in music.

Jazz Studies

The Bachelor of Music degree in Jazz Studies, with special areas of interest in instrumental and vocal performance and/or composition, prepares students for a professional career in the field of jazz.

Music Education

The Bachelor of Music degree in Music Education, with special areas of interest in instrumental, vocal and piano, prepares the student for a career in public school music teaching while earning Nevada teacher certification.

Performance

The Bachelor of Music degree in Performance, with special areas of interest in instrumental, vocal, and piano, prepares the student for a professional career in music.

All Bachelor of Music degrees provide thorough preparation for further study in music at the graduate level.

Admission to the Major

The Department of Music requires a minimum GPA of 2.00 overall.

Admission Policies

New freshman should refer to the university requirements for admission. Each music major enrolling at UNLV for the first time must audition in the primary performance medium (principle instrument or voice classification) and must qualify for admission to MUSA lower- division applied study as specified in the course syllabus for this medium.

Transfer Policies

Transfer students must have earned at least a cumulative grade point average (GPA) of 2.50 in transferable college credits and 2.70 in the area of concentration. Transfer students must also audition in the appropriate primary performance medium (principle instrument or voice classification) and will be placed in the appropriate level of applied study based on the audition.

All entering freshman music majors and transfers from other institutions must take the Music Theory and Music History placement examinations for assignment to the appropriate level of music theory and music history study.

Department Policies

Principal Instrument/Voice Classification

Each music major must declare, with the approval of the faculty of music, a primary performance medium (principal instrument or voice classification) or a primary and a secondary medium, depending upon the special area of interest selected. Each music major must audition in the primary performance medium and must qualify for admission to MUSA lower division of applied study. Those not qualifying must enroll in Applied Music for non-majors each semester until able to pass the audition. Applied lessons in the primary performance medium must be taken in sequence, beginning with lower-division applied music. Applied lessons may not be audited.

If a student chooses to change to another primary performance medium, the entire Principal Instrument/Voice Classification policy must be met for the new medium.

While enrolled in applied music lessons, each music major must perform regularly in studio and/or repertory class. Those enrolled in Applied Music III or above must perform on Convocation at the discretion of the instructor, but not less than once each semester.

Each music major, while enrolled in Applied Music for Majors, must appear before a departmental jury at the end of each semester for performance examination and grading recommendations. At the conclusion of Applied Music IV, the jury performance occurs before a committee representing the entire faculty of music. To advance to upper division applied study (Level V), the student must have successfully completed four semesters of harmony, sight singing, and ear training and have made satisfactory progress toward his or her degree (see Satisfactory Progress).

Composition students enrolled in MUSA 451, Private Study in Composition, must present their work before a jury each semester.

Piano Proficiency for Bachelor of Music (B.M.) Degree

Piano Proficiency

All undergraduate music majors must demonstrate piano proficiency as a requirement for graduation. The Department of Music will not approve a student’s Graduation Application until notification is received from the piano faculty that the student has passed the Piano Proficiency Examination. For students majoring in Music Education, the Piano Proficiency Examination is part of the student teaching endorsement. The Department of Music will not accept an application for student teaching placement until the student has passed the Piano Proficiency Examination. (NB: Music Education/Vocal students must complete two additional semesters of private piano instruction after passing the Piano Proficiency Examination and before beginning the student teaching experience. Students may not complete this requirement during the student teaching semester.)

Music majors must demonstrate satisfactory progress in their degree through concurrent registration in harmony, sight singing, ear training, and functional piano until these course sequences are completed. Accordingly, music majors enrolled initially in first-year music theory (MUS 201E) must concurrently enroll in Functional Piano I (MUS 109) and continue until the Functional Piano course sequence is completed. Functional Piano courses must be taken in sequence. A grade of ‘C’ or above is required in each Functional Piano course.

Transfer students and students with accomplished piano skills are placed in the appropriate Functional Piano course after demonstrating sufficient keyboard skills to the piano faculty. These same students may also choose a one-time opportunity to take the Piano Proficiency Examination (MUS 167) in lieu of enrolling in the Functional Piano sequence. However, if the Piano Proficiency Examination is not passed, the student is then placed in the appropriate Functional Piano course and must complete the sequence and retake the Piano Proficiency Examination.

When enrolling in Functional Piano IV (MUS 210), the student must also concurrently enroll in Piano Proficiency Examination (MUS 167). The Piano Proficiency Examination is separate from the Functional Piano course sequence. The sequence prepares the student for the Piano Proficiency Examination, but successful completion of the sequence does not exempt the student from the obligation to pass the Piano Proficiency Examination. However, students maintaining a grade of ‘B’ or above in each of the four Functional Piano courses are exempt from taking the Piano Proficiency Examination.

Members of the piano faculty administer the Piano Proficiency Examination during the Final Examination period at the conclusion of the fall and spring terms. The Examination is not scheduled at any other time during the academic term and no Examination is administered in summer.

Music History Placement Examination 

All entering freshman music majors and transfers from other institutions must take the Undergraduate Music History Placement Examination during the fall semester to evaluate students’ basic music historical literacy and competence and ensure that students enroll in appropriate music history courses. The date and time of the Examination will be announced each academic year. A grade of 70 out of the Examination’s 100 points is a passing grade. Students who pass the Examination may enroll, at their earliest convenience and on the advice of their advisors, in the MUS 341-343 sequence. A student who does not pass the Examination must enroll in MUS 131 before enrolling in the MUS 341-343 sequence. Students who show deficiencies in the essay portion of the exam may also be counseled to seek assistance with their language and writing skills.  

Recital Attendance

For each semester of degree residence as a music major, every student must enroll in MUS 100, for a maximum of eight semesters, and attend a minimum of 10 approved on-campus concerts and/or recitals each semester as a member of the audience. Students not fulfilling this requirement will not be approved for graduation.

Satisfactory Progress

To ensure satisfactory progress toward completion of the degree, students must register concurrently for harmony, sight singing, ear training, and functional piano each semester until these course sequences are completed.

Outcomes

Students successfully completing undergraduate degrees offered by the Department of Music will have acquired competencies sufficient to confidently enter the job market in their areas of concentration. Performance majors will be prepared to begin building careers as professional performers or private teachers. Music education graduates will have earned certification for teaching music in the state of Nevada and promise for success as school music teachers. All degrees in the Department of Music offer thorough preparation for success in graduate music programs.

Advisement

Entering music students will be assigned an advisor at the Orientation for UNLV. Freshman, sophomore, and transfer students are advised in the College of Fine Arts Advising Center. Juniors and seniors are assigned an advisor in the Department of Music. An advising list is posted in the Department of Music. Students are to meet with their advisor once per semester, at which time an advising sheet will be completed for the student’s department file. In the event a student has not been assigned to an advisor, he or she should contact the department chair to receive one.

Policies

  1. Variable elective credits must be approved by the student’s advisor.
  2. A minimal grade point average of 2.70 must be maintained in all music courses except where noted by individual degree programs.

 

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