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Ph.D. (Voice Pedagogy) student Kathy Price tutors George Brahler, undergraduate voice performance major.
Ph.D. students Matt Schloneger (Voice Pedagogy) and Jeremy Manternach (Choral Pedagogy) calibrate an ambulatory phonation monitor.
Below: Snapshots of the Vocology Lab.
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School of Music Vocology Laboratory

The School of Music Vocology Laboratory is an integral component of our programs in choral pedagogy and voice pedagogy, both of which offer opportunities to explore
ongoing dialogue among musicians and voice science experts, in addition to honing superb teaching, conducting, performing, and musicological skills. The Lab affords state of the art resources for research-based
approaches to real world singing contexts, and
has both stationary and mobile capabilities.
The stationary lab contains space for acquiring voice data in a controlled environment, along with work stations for individual and small group tutoring. Among its equipment
and resources to date are: KayPentax Computerized Speech Laboratory (CSL 4500) hardware and software; Electroglottography (EGG) hardware and software; 5 PC laptop computers equipped with
Multi-Speech, Voce Vista, digital editing, and other software programs; 2 Ambulatory Phonation Monitors; An array of high quality, condenser microphones (AKG and Shure), both head-mounted and free standing, with both omnidirectional and
cardioid polar patterns; a professional Tascam DA1 Digital Audio Tape (DAT) recorder; a portable Edirol R-09 stereo field recorder; 10 iPods equipped with iTalk Pro and condenser microphones; 3 Digital Video Cameras; Voce Vista software license for KU students and faculty; Sound level meter; and a library of
resources, including books, journals, DVDs, videotapes, and anatomical models.
The Vocology Lab is situated in a suite of research facilities in the Division of Music Education and Music Therapy. This location permits flexible and creative expansion, as needed, for particular
research projects. A fully-equipped recording studio, a Continuous Recording Digital Interface (CRDI) equipped room, and both large and small research areas are in the suite, most linked by
two-way mirrored interfaces.
The Vocology Lab also provides flexibly equipped mobile configurations for use in voice studios, choir rehearsal areas, and both public and private school music classrooms. Graduate students
in choral and vocal pedagogy, along with KU faculty, regularly use such mobile configurations for field-based, singing voice data acquisition.
Upon approval of a graduate faculty advisor and the University Human Subjects Committee, graduate students in vocal and choral pedagogy may design and carry out investigations that require laryngeal
examinations. Such examinations are performed by cooperating laryngologists from the KU Medical Center and the Kansas Voice Center.
In each of these ways, the Vocology Laboratory supports KU School of Music graduate students and faculty who are engaged in examining and contributing to the professional knowledge base of choral conductors
and voice teachers.
Our emphasis is upon habilitative voice, that is, exploration of ways that voice teachers and choir directors with deep knowledge of vocal anatomy, physiology, and acoustics can investigate
and implement teaching and rehearsal protocols that contribute to efficient, healthy vocal production among their students.
The technology and research capacities available through the Vocology Laboratory can never take the place of
inspired, musical voice teaching and choral conducting by highly experienced practitioners. But they can play a significant role in enabling voice teachers and choir directors to fulfill one of the most
ancient injunctions about
working with the human beings in their care: "First, do no harm." Current availability of highly sophisticated tools and resources can help voice and choral
pedaogues by assisting them to gain evidence-based knowledge of how human voices actually work and function in various singing contexts, rather than relying solely upon bequeathed anecdotal or metaphorical
understandings that may or may not be
accurate. Throughout history, voice teachers and choir directors have employed available technologies and resources to assist their teaching, from the humble
mirror to printed charts and scores, the piano, the choir riser, and the personal computer. At KU, twenty-first century technologies and understandings join that historied tradition.
For more information about the Ph.D. and M.M.E. emphases in choral pedagogy and voice pedagogy, visit
Choral and Voice Pedagogy at KU. Should you have further questions,
please contact Dr. James F. Daugherty, Associate Professor of Choral and Vocal Pedagogy and Director of Graduate Studies in Music Education & Music Therapy (jdaugher at ku.edu).
Above: Recent lecture by visiting Prof. John Nix (University of Texas, San Antonio); Dr. John Stephens, Chair of the KU Voice Division and Dr. Stan Felix, recent DMA graduate, chat with Prof. Nix;
Dr. Genaro Mendez and students gather to try out some software.
Below: Choral Pedagogy Graduate Student Jeremy
Manternach and Undergraduate Voice Performance Major Olivia Bentzen view EGG equipment; Some of the attendees from the MEMT, Voice, and Choral Divisions reflect upon a point made by Prof. Nix; Drs. Daugherty and Mendez during a break.
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