Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Bennett Reimer [1] (June 19, 1932 – November 18, 2013) was an American music educator. He held the John W. Beattie Endowed Chair in Music at Northwestern University from 1978 until retirement in 1997, where he was chair of the Music Education Department, director of the Ph.D. program in Music Education, and founder and director of the Center for the Study of Education and the Musical ...
An example of philosophical research is a 1999 article by Bennett Reimer published in The Music Educators Journal: "Facing the Risks of the Mozart Effect." This article is a response to the practice of music educators who advocated music education because of its relationship to spatial task performance.
A. James Reimer (1942–2010), Canadian Mennonite theologian; Arthur E. Reimer (1882–1969), American political candidate for the Socialist Labor Party of America; Bennett Reimer, American musician; Birgitte Reimer (1926–2021), Danish actress; Brittany Reimer (born 1988), Canadian swimmer; Christine Reimer, Danish journalist
For example, Bennett Reimer was a student at Illinois who worked with Leonhard and Harry Broudy. Reimer later went on to supervise the dissertations of David J. Elliott and Paul Woodford. In 1986 Leonhard retired from his position at the University of Illinois.
David J. Elliott is a musician and academic. He is a professor of music and music education at the Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development of New York University, in New York in the United States.
Alex Tuch and Jiri Kulich scored for the Sabres (18-26-5), who lost for the fourth time in five games. James Reimer recorded 31 saves. ... and Nate Schmidt, Sam Bennett, A.J. Greer, Jesper Boqvist ...
The journal was established in 1963 by Charles Leonhard and Richard J. Colwell at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign as Council of Research in Music Education and obtained its current name in the following year.
PKS 1622-297 is a blazar [1] [2] located in the constellation of Scorpius.It is one of the brightest objects of its type in the gamma ray region. [3] It has a redshift of (z) 0.815. [4]