Robert Duke
Director of the Center for Music Learning
Robert Duke is the Marlene and Morton Meyerson Centennial Professor
in Music and Human Learning, University Distinguished Teaching
Professor, Elizabeth Shatto Massey Distinguished Fellow in Teacher
Education, and Director of the Center
for Music Learning. He is the founder of the National Forum
on Research in Motor Learning and Music, a research collaborative
devoted to the study of motor skill development and procedural
memory consolidation.
A former studio musician and public school
music teacher, he has worked closely with children at-risk,
both in the public schools and through the juvenile court system,
and he directs an active research program in motor skill learning
and procedural memory at UT.
Dr. Duke has served on the editorial
boards of the Journal of Research in Music Education, the Bulletin
of the Council for Research in Music Education, Psychomusicology,
and other publications, and he has directed national research
efforts under the sponsorship of such organizations as the
National Piano Foundation and the International Suzuki Institute.
He lectures frequently on the topics of human learning, systematic
observation and evaluation, and behavior management, presenting
workshops and teaching demonstrations throughout North
America. He is the author of Scribe
4 behavioral analysis software, and his most recent
books are Intelligent Music Teaching: Essays on the Core Principles
of Effective Instruction and The Habits of Musicianship:
A Radical Approach to Beginning Band, which he co-authored
with Jim Byo of Louisiana State University. The Habits
of Musicianship, released in the spring of 2007, is
distributed online cost-free through the Center for Music
Learning.
Read reviews of his book Intelligent Music Teaching on Amazon.com
This biograhy was drawn from the The University of Texas at Austin website |