Student Learning Outcomes
Faculty
Chairperson: Mary C. Breden
Professors: Mary C. Breden, Mark Saya, Virginia Saya
Associate Professor: Paul W. Humphreys
Assistant Professor: Michael Miranda
Objectives
The purpose of the Department of Music is to provide quality music instruction
both for students who wish to pursue music as a career and for students who
wish to enrich their lives through non-career oriented study and performance. Students and
faculty work together to foster aesthetic involvement and creative and
scholarly inquiry that support a
vital community of music learning. Instruction emphasizes a personal approach.
Through the presentation of diverse musical programs, the department also
sustains and enriches the cultural vitality of the University and its surrounding
communities. The work of the department further supports the goals of Jesuit and Marymount education by
strengthening the socializing influence of music both within the University and
the world at large.
The Department of Music offers the Bachelor of Arts in Music degree, the
requirements of which can serve as an excellent foundation for students undertaking
advanced studies in preparation for such careers as musicology, composition,
ethnomusicology, music librarianship, and pedagogy-oriented teaching. In
addition to meeting all general University admissions requirements, students
who wish either to major or minor in Music must meet specific Department of
Music entrance requirements.
Loyola Marymount University
and the Department of Music are accredited by the National Association of
Schools of Music.
Student Learning Objectives
Students majoring in Music should be able to:
• Develop physical coordination and technical skills required for specific musical
activities (conducting, singing, instrumental performance)
• Apply essential principles of music theory and form to the study and evaluation
of musical scores (critical skills)
• Display familiarity with musical notation in performance and original composition (creative skills). Students majoring in Music should know:
• The historical evolution of Western music as evidenced by style periods,
performance practices, and representative composers and their works
• The varieties of music as a cultural phenomenon seen in its interrelationship
with belief systems, life-ways, and language. Students majoring in Music are
presented with the opportunity to value:
• The power of music as an expression and reflection of human emotion and responsiveness
• The experience of aesthetic engagement that allows for deep identification
with music
• The synthesis of perspectives— physical, technical, analytical, historical—that
leads to a cultured musical sensibility and artistic performance.