International Journal of Evaluation and Research in Education, cilt.7, sa.2, ss.100-108, 2018 (Scopus)
Democracy, a lifestyle as much as it is a form of government, begins to be
learned in the family. The youth observe and acquire the democratic attitudes
of their parents. The task of passing it on to the new generations and helping
them acquire democratic values is the mission of schools, namely teachers. It
is a commonly known fact that developmental level of countries shows
parallelism with the democratic attitudes of individuals. It is important to
understand the democratic perceptions and attitudes of teachers who are
responsible for positioning democratic structure and thus raising the
democratic level of countries. For this reason, the research aims to examine
the democratic perceptions and attitudes of music teacher candidates in terms
of some variables. Data collected using the democratic attitude scale was
analyzed using t-test, Kruskal-Wallis H test, and Spearman’s correlation
coefficient. Results showed that attitude scores did not change according to
gender, level of parents’ education or the year students were in. Scale scores
were negatively correlated with the amount of parents’ income. There was no
correlation between the students’ GPAs and the scale scores. Music teaching
requires a democratic environment intrinsically; therefore, the democratic
perceptions and attitudes of the music teacher candidates who will carry out
the music lessons in which they should maintain the democratic environment
must be determined. As aforementioned notions suggest, this study is of the
essence since the results will shed light on the academic staff in the
institutions that train music teachers