| 英文摘要 |
The researcher has observed that, throughout the instructional process, students demonstrated limited effectiveness in articulating their musical aesthetic experiences through writing. Most assignments merely provided plain and superficial accounts, failing to capture deeper, more nuanced descriptions of their experiential engagement with music. In an effort to enhance students’capacity to express their subjective perceptions and to deepen their personal aesthetic experiences, the applicant endeavored to move beyond conventional pedagogical approaches. By employing phenomenological methodology and its associated procedural steps in the design of both the curriculum and assignments, the emphasis was placed on students’subjective experiences and the reinforcement of their understanding of musical form. This approach seeks to foster students’active participation in the co-construction of aesthetic meaning, thereby achieving the pedagogical goal of cultivating their sensory experiential abilities. The objectives of this study are threefold: (1) To employ phenomenological methodology in the design of the curriculum and assignments, thereby guiding students to intuitively and profoundly comprehend the structural and expressive dimensions of musical works, to collaboratively engage in the process of aesthetic formation, and to ultimately enhance their sensory and perceptual engagement with music. (2) To develop assessment rubrics for assignments that integrate phenomenological principles, and to utilize a range of evaluative instruments—including multidimensional learning scales and course feedback surveys—to systematically assess student learning outcomes. (3) To propose research findings and pedagogical recommendations for integrating phenomenological methods into general education music curricula. Through this instructional research, the aim is to offer concrete, practice-oriented recommendations for embedding phenomenological research methods into the design and implementation of general education music courses, thereby providing a valuable reference for future pedagogical practice. |