Yes. If you require the kind of analytical aptitude an engineer needs, at best you'll get engineers when you wanted performer/composers.MaryAnn wrote:What astonished me was that the difficulty of the analysis of the piece reminded me of an undergraduate level engineering course, even maybe a lower level one. I couldn't believe this particular degree (I am NOT commenting on anyone's DMA that is here!!!!) had a D in it. So I asked about the difference. I had thought it would have the same intellectual requirements as the PhD. Apparently it has a different purpose.
An anecdote along the side:
I have a natural science background but also got to see the inside of a landscape architecture program. This is a design field, a kind of work that's bit hard to describe, similar to visual art in a way - but it isn't art in the sense of personal expression, and of course it's much more rigidly constrained by functional requirements, and in the end, not many people have what it takes to do it well.
It also overlaps a little with civil engineering - they learn to do grading plans, though in our jurisdiction anyway they can't sign them, and I imagine the object is really just familiarity with grading plans. The instructor who was responsible for that course work included some remedial optional instruction on fractions. She had worked out a sort of visual diagrammatic approach that she'd probably seen used elsewhere in the instruction of landscape architecture students, who sure respond to diagrams but were in some cases helpless in the face of a fraction. This was a five year professional program.
My impression was that spelling aptitude was also much lower than average, characteristically, and it would be easy to conclude that these individuals met a pretty low intellectual standard. But their design aptitude also resided between their ears, i.e. intellectual. That's where their professional competence would be proven in the end, and again, it's an exceptional faculty that you can't get from reading books or anything.
I expect music performance and composition is somewhat similar - actually my impression is that stereotypically musicians come off much better in terms of literacy and mathematical abilities, but anyway it is somewhat immaterial to their professional competence.
(PS on the grading plans - the instructor was teaching that wrong, having at some point learned a misconception about storm rainfall charts that conflicted with reality and with textbook drain pipe sizing.)


