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517038

research-article2014
IJM0010.1177/0255761413517038International Journal of Music EducationZhukov

Practice Article

International Journal of

Exploring advanced piano


Music Education
2014, Vol. 32(4) 487­–498
© The Author(s) 2014
students’ approaches to sight- Reprints and permissions:
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reading DOI: 10.1177/0255761413517038
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Katie Zhukov
The University of Queensland, Australia

Abstract
The ability to read music fluently is fundamental for undergraduate music study yet the training of
sight-reading is often neglected. This study compares approaches to sight-reading and accompanying
by students with extensive sight-reading experience to those with limited experience, and
evaluates the importance of this skill to advanced pianists and the type of strategies they use
when sight-reading. Analysis of 74 survey-interviews highlights the importance of sight-reading,
and indicates underdeveloped sight-reading skills and a substantial lack of experience in sight-
reading and accompanying in advanced pianists. Significant differences in accompanying practice
emerged between the groups with no/little and extensive sight-reading experience. The analysis
of a number and the type of strategies used during sight-reading suggests individual approaches
and distinct paths in the development of the skill. The findings emphasise the need for a new
approach in the development of sight-reading curricula for higher education.

Keywords
accompanying, piano sight-reading, sight-reading strategies, survey-interviews

Introduction
In higher education, students are expected to be able to read and comprehend vast amounts of text
during their study. Similarly, in undergraduate music study the ability to read music fluently is
taken for granted. Yet many institutions do not test prospective students’ sight-reading skills during
the entry audition process or provide any training in this area. For example, none of the 27 institu-
tions offering undergraduate music degrees in Australia teach sight-reading (Zhukov, 2010).
Research has shown that good sight-reading skills accelerate the learning of new repertoire
(Lehmann & Ericsson, 1996), which in turn could have a flow-on effect on the entire educational
experience, graduate outcomes and preparation for the workforce. In the absence of formal

Corresponding author:
Katie Zhukov, The University of Queensland, 19 Haldane St., Graceville, QLD 4075, Australia.
Email: k.zhukov@uq.edu.au
488 International Journal of Music Education 32(4)

sight-reading training, what do advanced piano students think about the importance of this skill,
what is their typical skill level and experience, and what type of strategies do they use during sight-
reading? Is there a difference in approach to sight-reading between students with extensive sight-
reading skills and/or accompanying experience to those with limited skills/experience?

Background
Sight-reading of music means the performance of music from a score without prior rehearsal of
that music (Gabrielsson, 1999). It is a complex skill that relies heavily on reading the score, and
generating and executing corresponding motor responses (Lehmann & Ericsson, 1993). Research
into sight-reading of music has been fragmented. Hodges (1992) reviewed sight-reading studies
conducted mostly in the 1970s and 1980s. There were few new studies on sight-reading in the
1990s, but several recent publications reflect the renewed interest in sight-reading among research-
ers and educators (Hodges & Nolker, 2011; Kopiez & Lee, 2008; Lehmann & Kopiez, 2009;
Lehmann, Slodoba & Woody, 2007, ch. 6).
A model of skills involved in sight-reading (Kopiez & Lee, 2006) suggested that expertise in
sight-reading was acquired by the age of 15 and determined by innate ability and practice of spe-
cific skills. While skills such as inner hearing (audiation) and visual pattern perception tended to
apply to music sight-reading in general (Gromko, 2004; Hayward & Gromko, 2009; Kopiez & Lee,
2008), the best predictors of sight-reading ability for pianists included instrument-specific skills
such as speed of trilling (Kopiez & Lee, 2008) and working memory capacity (Meinz & Hambrick,
2010). The pianists found sight-reading particularly challenging: they must read two staves of
music simultaneously, in different clefs, and co-ordinate playing different notes in both hands. This
uniquely pianistic challenge tended to result in more errors occurring in the left hand (Betts &
Cassidy, 2000), which has been recently explained by a longer gaze at the upper staff (right hand)
than the lower staff (left hand) during sight-reading (Drai-Zerbib, Baccino & Bigand, 2012).
The existing research on sight-reading tends to focus on three main areas: eye movement, struc-
tural perception and teaching strategies (for reviews see Hodges & Nolker (2011), Lehmann &
Kopiez (2009) and Wristen (2005)). The eye movement studies used complex equipment to moni-
tor eye movements of expert and novice sight-readers and concluded that good sight-readers look
further ahead than poor sight-readers (Goolsby, 1994; Truitt, Clifton, Pollatsek & Rayner, 1997).
While this concept appears to be self-evident, teaching is not easily implemented in a typical piano
studio: simply encouraging the student to ‘look ahead’ would not necessarily result in improve-
ment in eye-hand span (the distance of looking ahead from the notes being played). Banton’s
(1995) experiments established that better sight-readers are less reliant on visual feedback when
playing, i.e. they tend to look down at their hands less frequently than weaker sight-readers.
The studies focusing on structural perception when sight-reading reported that good sight-
readers tend to see larger ‘chunks’ of music than novices who read individual notes (Goolsby,
1994; Penttinen & Huovinen, 2011). In particular, perception of larger rhythmic structures resulted
in better flow of playing (Halsband, Binkofski & Camp, 1994; Waters, Townsend & Underwood,
1998). However, it is still unclear if teaching chunking techniques can have a positive effect on
sight-reading: Pike and Carter (2010) reported no significant differences between treatment and
control groups in their experiments of teaching pitch and rhythm chunking to enhance sight-
reading of undergraduates.
The studies devoted to the teaching of sight-reading were diffused (Gudmundsdottir, 2010;
Hodges & Nolker, 2011; Lehmann & Kopiez, 2009). No studies have been replicated and few use
similar approaches. For example, Hodges and Nolker (2011) stated that “No specific topic… has
an extensive cohort of studies that collectively provide overwhelming support for the usefulness of
Zhukov 489

this approach” (p. 81). Similarly, while Wristen (2005) suggested that pedagogical approaches to
improving sight-reading need to include collaborative playing, chunking and systematic study of
music theory and history, she reminded that “These approaches have not typically been verified
through research” (p. 44). The lack of clear directions in teaching of sight-reading skills tends to
result in its absence from a typical piano lesson. Recent research of instrumental teaching in
Australian higher education (Zhukov, 2008) found that tertiary music teachers tend to neglect this
area, assuming that students either have this ability or they do not. Similar attitudes were reported
in a large study of American college pianists (Kornicke, 1995) where sight-reading was included
in fewer than half of subjects’ lessons.
Various strategies have been proposed as useful for improving sight-reading skills: looking
ahead/reading ahead of playing (Penttinen & Huovinen, 2011), shadowing/silently pressing the
keys prior to playing (Kostka, 2000), accompanying experience (Lehmann & Ericsson, 1996),
improving rhythmic accuracy (Gudmundsdottir, 2010) and understanding of the musical structure
(Thompson & Lehmann, 2004). Three of these strategies (experience in accompanying, rhythm
training and knowledge of musical style) appeared to be most promising from a pedagogical
perspective.

Accompanying and sight-reading.  Accompanying is a specialised skill that requires a synchronisation


between perception and production and involves good anticipation of what is to come (Palmer,
1997). Accompanists and répétiteurs tend to have highly developed sight-reading skills because
they often have to learn new repertoire in a very short time and to play their own part while scan-
ning another instrumental/vocal part at the same time (Lehmann & Ericsson, 1996). Experience in
accompanying and especially the amount of accompanying repertoire have been found to be better
indicators of sight-reading ability than the quantity of practice undertaken by students (Lehmann
& Ericsson, 1993, 1996). This suggests that providing experience in accompanying and increasing
the amount of accompanying repertoire could have a beneficial effect on sight-reading. Such an
approach was shown to be effective in a study by Watkins and Hughes (1986) where university
non-piano majors improved in rhythmic accuracy of sight-reading after a 10-week experiment that
involved accompanying of a tape-recorded soloist.

Rhythm training and sight-reading.  The ability to sight-read rhythms has been closely linked to over-
all sight-reading ability. Research found that rhythmic errors tend to outweigh all other types of
errors in sight-reading (Fourie, 2004; McPherson, 1994) and that training produces the greatest
improvement in the rhythmic aspect of sight-reading (Kostka, 2000; Smith, 2009). Smith (2009)
showed that traditional instruction and computer-assisted instruction produced a similar positive
effect on the development of rhythm sight-reading skills. While this study provides evidence that
training does improve rhythm in sight-reading, it recommends computer-assisted instruction as
supplementary to, and not a replacement for, traditional face-to-face teaching.

Musical style and sight-reading.  Musical style is a complex issue that involves analysis of all aspects
of the work from historical, structural and performing aspects. Sight-reading ability has been
linked to the understanding of musical language, such as the knowledge of style (Thompson &
Lehmann, 2004) and the perception of phrase structure (Sloboda, 1984). Research shows that
skilled sight-reading requires good pattern recognition and prediction (Waters et al., 1998): famili-
arity with the formulas characteristic of a particular style assists the player in anticipating the flow
of music when sight-reading.
490 International Journal of Music Education 32(4)

Table 1.  Participants’ demographics.

Accompanying group Rhythm group Style group Total


Male 4 6 10 20
Female 21 19 14 54
High school 2 10 8 20
Higher education 23 10 13 46
Private studio 0 5 3 8

The review of the literature suggests that development of good sight-reading skills in advanced
pianists needs to include opportunities for collaborative playing, rhythm-training activities and
study of musical styles.

Method
Participants in this study (n = 74) included students from three Australian universities (n = 46),
three high schools (n = 20) and a number of private studios (n = 8). There were 54 females (73%)
and 20 males (27%), with all subjects falling into the 15–25 age bracket (see Table 1). To achieve
a homogenous sample only advanced pianists of 8th Grade level and above were recruited (The
Australian Music Examinations Board classifies pianists of Grades 1 to 4 as beginners, Grades 5 to
7 as intermediates, and Grade 8 to Diploma as advanced). Age was not taken into consideration
since the study was not focusing on the development of basic music literacy but on exploring dif-
ferences in approaches to sight-reading among already proficient pianists. The students were ran-
domly placed into one of the three training groups or the control group: each training group focused
on one particular strategy as highlighted in the literature review above (accompanying, rhythm
training, and style training) and the control group had no additional input.
Prior to commencing the study students were asked to fill in a background questionnaire that
asked them to rate their sight-reading skills (5-point scale: very weak, weak, average, good, excel-
lent) and the importance of sight-reading (4-point scale: not at all important, unimportant, important,
very important). Participants were tested on their sight-reading before and after a 10-week training
period, and on completion of training interviewed about their sight-reading/accompanying experi-
ences prior to and during their participation in the study. This paper draws on the questionnaire and
interview data and explores participants’ approaches to and strategies for sight-reading by comparing
those who had extensive sight-reading experience with those who had little such experience.
The questions for student survey-interviews were formulated based on the review of literature.
The standardised interviewing approach was used instead of a self-report survey to eliminate typi-
cal survey errors, such as accuracy of measurement (Willis, 2005), with the same questions read to
every participant (Conrad & Schober, 2008; Stewart & Cash, 2006) (see Appendix 1). If respond-
ents hesitated or appeared unsure, further clarification of questions was offered to provide greater
accuracy of responses. If an answer to the question “How much previous experience in accompa-
nying did you have before the program?” was a laconic “A little”, this was followed up with further
probing questions, such as “What do you mean by this?” and “What did this involve?” Conrad and
Schober (2008) suggested that “standardizing meaning is more effective than standardizing word-
ing in making data comparable” (p. 186). Greater detail provided by the interviewees allowed the
author to analyse the data in a consistent manner that was highlighted as a critical factor in inter-
view studies (Hammersley, 2003).
Zhukov 491

Table 2.  Sight-reading experience coding categories.

Coding Category Definition Examples


0 None No sight-reading “I didn’t have any sight-reading…”
“I didn’t do any sight-reading at all…”
1 Little Minimal sight-reading “I only did sight-reading before exams, but it was so
easy – only two lines…”
“We would run through sight-reading quickly the week
before a piano exam…”
2 Moderate Moderate sight- “I have in the past tried sight-reading things just to play…”
reading “I used to open a volume of Beethoven Sonatas and just
read a page…”
3 Extensive Extensive experience “I sight-read a lot. It’s something I do regularly, not sight-
in sight-reading over reading exercises but reading new musical material that is
a substantial time and a little easier than my level of playing…”
amount

Seventy-four interviews were recorded using a digital recorder (H2 Handy Recorder, Zoom
Corporation, Japan), transcribed verbatim and reduced to a short summary prior to analysis
(Seidman, 2006). Participants were questioned about their sight-reading and accompanying experi-
ences prior to and during participation in the study, and their sight-reading strategies. The responses
ranged from describing total lack of such experiences and/or limited participation to reporting
regular and even extensive activities in these areas. The data suggested that the responses could be
coded using a scale of 0–3, with 0 representing no experience and 3 extensive experience (see
Tables 2 and 3 for examples).
To examine the number and type of strategies used when sight-reading, the subjects’ comments
were coded under individual strategy categories and the totals added for each person. The 18 dif-
ferent categories reported in interviews were grouped under five subheadings:

•• Pitch (key signature, accidentals, clef, tonality/modulations);


•• Rhythm (time signature, rhythm, counting);
•• Structure (melody, scanning for difficulties, structure/patterns, harmony/chords);
•• Motor skills (visualising playing/fingering, shadow playing, separate hands, speed/tempo);
•• Expression (mood/dynamics, style/title, listen to recordings).

To establish the reliability of the author’s coding process, another researcher from the same univer-
sity was trained in the usage of codes by listening to several interviews together with the author and
discussing the coding of sight-reading and accompanying categories, and of the sight-reading strat-
egies. Student interviews also contained questions on the structure and content of the training
programs, student perceptions of progress made and their overall rating of the program in which
they participated: these questions were deemed not relevant to the particular focus of this paper.
The second researcher was then asked to code alone seven randomly selected interviews (approxi-
mately 10% of the total data) by listening to the interviews and entering a number in each variable.
The Microsoft Excel file was sent to the author and the numbers correlated to the author’s scores
of coding of the same interviews. Spearman’s rho, typically employed for correlation of nonpara-
metric values, was used (Heiman, 2011), with correlations in different categories ranging from .89
to 1.00, ρs < 0.01 (see Table 4). The correlations indicate the high level of agreement between the
492 International Journal of Music Education 32(4)

Table 3.  Accompanying experience coding categories.

Coding Category Definition Examples


0 None No accompanying “No, never.”
experience “None.”
1 Little Minimal accompanying “Once or twice only…”
experience “Not very much…”
“I’ve tried but it didn’t work very well…”
2 Moderate Accompanying “I’ve accompanied my music class friends, like violin and
experience of moderate cello, for class performances…”
amount and over “Years and years ago I use to accompany beginner ballet
moderate period of time classes, but not very much. I’ve always loved playing
piano duets with friends but there is never anyone to
play duets with. So, small amount…”
3 Extensive Extensive experience “I’ve accompanied my five brothers and sisters from
in accompanying over the age of 12. Then their teacher got me to accompany
a substantial time and for other students. Then I accompanied for a Saturday
amount morning program for 8 to 9 years, learning new,
moderately difficult repertoire every week…”

Table 4.  Category-specific inter-rater reliability.

Category Spearman’s rho


Prior sight-reading .97*
Prior accompanying .89*
During sight-reading .90*
During accompanying .99*
Sight-reading strategies 1.00*

*Correlation is significant at the 0.01 level (2-tailed).

author’s and the second researcher’s coding of data, and demonstrate the reliability of the coding
process (Asmus & Radocy, 2006).

Results
Student rating of own sight-reading skill showed normal distribution of skill from very weak to
good (see Figure 1), with only one student out of 74 (<1%) rating their skill as excellent. However,
the participants were unanimous in rating sight-reading as ‘Important’ (33%) and ‘Very Important’
(67%), with zero scores in the ‘Not at all important’ and ‘Unimportant’ categories.
SPSS version 18 non-parametric statistical tests were used to analyse the data (Heiman,
2011). In order to obtain an overview of sight-reading and accompanying skills, participants’
responses were initially grouped into two large groups: no and little experience, and moderate
and extensive experience. The results indicated that for pianists with advanced playing skills a
surprisingly large number of subjects had no or little prior sight-reading and accompanying
experience (see Figure 2): 56 out of 74 participants had no or little prior sight-reading experience
and only 18 had moderate-extensive experience; 41 had no or little accompanying experience
and 33 had a moderate-extensive amount of accompanying experience. While extra
Zhukov 493

Figure 1.  Self-rating of sight-reading skill (n = 74).

Figure 2.  Summary of sight-reading and accompanying experience (n = 74). SR, sight-reading; Acc,
accompanying.

sight-reading naturally increased during the participation in the main study with 12 additional
pianists sight-reading regularly, this did not translate into increased accompanying activity: in
fact, seven fewer participants accompanied regularly during the study than before. This could
simply be due to the additional workload associated with participation in the sight-reading study
or other circumstantial factors.
To investigate differences between the previous sight-reading groups in accompanying experi-
ence variables, the Kruskal-Wallis tests were performed. The results indicated significant
494 International Journal of Music Education 32(4)

Figure 3.  Summary of sight-reading strategies.

differences between the groups in prior accompanying experience, H(3) = 16.85, p = .001, and in
accompanying during the training, H(3) = 14.11, p = .003. These findings support the hypothesis
that the level of prior sight-reading skills affected subjects’ participation in accompanying activi-
ties, with better sight-reading skills leading to greater participation in accompanying.
To establish which of the four groups significantly differed on these variables, follow-up Mann-
Whitney U tests were performed. The results showed a significant difference in prior accompany-
ing between no prior sight-reading and extensive sight-reading groups (U = 56.00, p < .001), and
between little prior sight-reading and extensive sight-reading groups (U = 58.50, p < .001), with
more reports of accompanying in the extensive sight-reading group. The findings support the link
between sight-reading and accompanying.
While a greater uptake of extra sight-reading was to be expected during participation in the
sight-reading training program, it was surprisingly low across the sample. The subjects appeared to
continue in their habitual mode: Extensive sight-readers continued to sight-read much new mate-
rial and little sight-readers to read little. This was supported by the results of a Mann-Whitney U
test, with a significant difference between the little sight-reading and extensive sight-reading
groups (U = 88.00, p < .001), with more reports of sight-reading during training in the extensive
sight-reading group.
The overall participation in accompanying decreased during sight-reading training study; how-
ever, subjects with higher prior sight-reading skills continued to be more active in accompanying than
subjects with limited sight-reading skills. A Mann-Whitney U test showed significant differences in
the amount of accompanying during training between no prior sight-reading and extensive sight-
reading groups (U = 61.5, p < .001) and between little sight-reading and extensive sight-reading
groups (U = 75.00, p < .001), with more reports of accompanying in extensive sight-reading group.
In terms of strategies used when sight-reading, the subjects’ main focus was on pitch (36%),
rhythm (28%) and structure (20%), with less attention to motor skills (11%) and expression
(5%) (see Figure 3). While differences between groups in the overall number and the type of
strategies used when sight-reading were expected, with extensive sight-readers perhaps utilis-
ing fewer strategies overall (more automatic procedures) and paying more attention to
Zhukov 495

structural and expressive elements of music instead of notational basics that weak sight-readers
tend to focus on, no statistically significant differences were found across the sample. This sug-
gests that approaches to sight-reading are very individual for pianists, and the lack of formal
training in sight-reading reported by many subjects in interviews tends to lead to distinct paths
in the development of this skill.

Discussion and conclusions


The review of sight-reading literature has provided “less than compelling evidence about how best
to assist students in acquiring music-reading skills” (Hodges & Nolker, 2011, p. 81). While theo-
retical models and predictors of sight-reading skills have been developed recently (Kopiez & Lee,
2006, 2008) and differences in approaches by expert and weak sight-readers identified (Banton,
1995; Goolsby, 1994; Truitt et al., 1997), no proven pedagogical curricula has been developed to
date. This typical lack of formal sight-reading training is illustrated by the attitudes and approaches
to sight-reading reported by the participants in this study.
The results demonstrate a rather low level of sight-reading skills in advanced pianists: 45%
with very weak and weak skills, and 55% with average and good skills. Yet, all students held
the view that sight-reading skills were important/very important for their overall musical train-
ing. A surprising lack of experience in sight-reading and accompanying among a large number
of subjects was found, with habitual attitudes persisting despite active participation in sight-
reading training programs. While the literature has highlighted the superior sight-reading skills
of experienced accompanists (Lehmann & Ericsson, 1993, 1996), this study has demonstrated
a relationship between sight-reading skills and involvement in accompanying activities prior to
and during the study.
The survey-interview approach of examining student experiences in the development of
sight-reading skills utilised in this study has revealed substantial differences between real life
and research recommendations. The students had reported a disappointing lack of sight-reading
and accompanying experiences despite generally advanced piano skills. The findings suggest
that the take up of accompanying opportunities during degree study is linked to sight-reading
skills. While participation in collaborative playing has been proposed as a means of improving
sight-reading skills (Wristen, 2005), the examination of students’ experiences has shown that
considerable development of sight-reading skills is needed before students will feel comforta-
ble to attempt accompanying in the first place. The ingrained attitudes towards sight-reading
and accompanying seemed to persist despite new strategies and skills learnt while participating
in sight-reading training programs. This suggest that building students’ confidence in their
sight-reading ability might be a long-term process that should include formal training in skills
contributing to sight-reading and opportunities for accompanying easy repertoire of beginner
instrumentalists.
The lack of consistent trends in number and type of strategies used by different groups when
sight-reading emphasises the ad hoc approach to acquisition of sight-reading skills still evident in
piano teaching. Student strategies when sight-reading tended to focus on notational basics of pitch
and rhythm. While research has shown that perception of larger structures (Goolsby, 1994; Waters
et al., 1998) and understanding of musical style (Thompson & Lehmann, 2004) are beneficial to
fluent sight-reading, there appears to be little transfer of this knowledge, taught in music history,
theory and analysis classes in higher education, to sight-reading at the piano. This gap between the
theoretical knowledge and practical application highlights the need to develop new curricula for
sight-reading training that will facilitate the transfer by explicitly focusing on specific aspects of
pattern recognition in easy quick-study repertoire.
496 International Journal of Music Education 32(4)

This investigation of student attitudes has highlighted an urgent need for a more holistic view of
training of sight-reading skills in pianists: the future development of piano sight-reading curricula
for higher education needs to combine collaborative playing activities with training in rhythm and
style-specific pattern recognition. Many questions about music sight-reading and how to teach it
remain. By combining research recommendations with teaching practice and student feedback we
can hope to make sense of complex issues surrounding the development of music sight-reading
skills.

Funding
This research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit
sectors.

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Author biography
Katie Zhukov is a Master’s graduate from the Juilliard School of Music, New York, and has a PhD from the
University of New South Wales, Australia. She has been investigating the teaching of sight-reading to pianists
498 International Journal of Music Education 32(4)

at the University of Queensland and previously taught at the Sydney, Queensland and Western Australian
Conservatoriums. Dr Zhukov has published on instrumental music teaching in Psychology of Music,
International Journal of Music Education (Research and Practice), Music Education Research, Research
Studies in Music Education, British Journal of Music Education and Australian Journal of Music Education,
and presented papers at ISME, ICMPC, Reflective Conservatoire, Performer’s Voice, ASME and APPC
conferences.

Appendix 1
Survey interview
1. How much previous training or experience in sight-reading did you have before the
program?
2. How much previous experience in accompanying did you have before the program?
3. How much additional sight-reading did you do during the program?
4. How much accompanying did you do during the program?
5. Please describe your thought processes when sight-reading.

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