Nov 21, 2024  
Course Catalog 2023-2024 
    
Course Catalog 2023-2024 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

About the Bachelor of Music Degree


This program of study, completed within four years, leads to a Bachelor of Music with concentrations in 42 areas of private study, the Oberlin Conservatory of Music transforms talented undergraduate musicians into disciplined professionals.

Advising for Bachelor of Music Students


For a conservatory performance major, the principal applied study teacher is normally the student’s faculty advisor. For all other conservatory majors, a faculty member from the major department or program is normally assigned as advisor.

arrow Questions about advising in the Conservatory of Music may be directed to Conservatory Student Academic Affairs.

Conservatory English Language Proficiency (ESOL) Requirement


All entering undergraduate students for whom English is a second language will be placed in an ESOL course based upon their Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), International English Language Testing System (IELTS), or Duolingo English Test (DET) score and evaluated for language proficiency during the first week of class. Students may also be asked to take Oberlin’s ESOL placement test, regardless of their TOEFL, IELTS, and/or DET scores. Students are not required to take the general conservatory writing assessment typically administered during Orientation. Adjustments to initial ESOL placement will be based on an assessment of language proficiency and/or supported with documentation of completed college-level ESOL coursework.

Notes:

  • ESOL 120  is a prerequisite for MUTH 101  and MUTH 131 , which are the gateway courses to the aural skills and music theory requirement sequences respectively.
  • ESOL 130  is a prerequisite for MHST 101 .
  • Students who complete the ESOL sequence through ESOL 140  will fulfill the conservatory writing requirement for graduation.

Types of Study Within the Bachelor of Music


Students wishing to declare a specific path of study must do so before graduation. Majors, minors, or integrative concentrations may not be declared after a student’s degree is conferred, even if all the requirements were met before graduation.

Major Study


Requirements for each major are described in the Oberlin College and Conservatory Course Catalog each year. 

Students are responsible for compliance with the major requirements as stated in the course catalog in effect when they first matriculate at Oberlin, unless action by an appropriate faculty body specifically directs otherwise. Unless so directed by the faculty body, the student may elect to follow either the requirements in effect when entering Oberlin or those in effect in any subsequent year; however, the student must follow one complete set of requirements. Unless the student notifies the Office of the Registrar to the contrary, the registrar’s office assumes that the student will follow the requirements described in the course catalog for the year the student entered Oberlin.

Major requirements generally consist of course requirements and non-course requirements (such as committees, hearings, portfolio submissions, departmentals, recitals, etc.), which vary by major and by concentration.

Any student who returns to Oberlin to complete a major after more than four semesters away may be required to follow the requirements in effect at the time the student reenters Oberlin. These requirements may be altered as necessary in individual cases by the departments or programs. The completion of a major is included on the transcript.

arrow See majors available to students pursuing a Bachelor of Music degree.  

arrow See specific degree and credit requirements and the recommended distribution across years of study for completion of various majors.  

arrow Declare a major administered by the conservatory.

Change of Studio Within a Major


Any student in a multi-studio department who wishes to request a change of studio must first schedule an appointment with the Conservatory’s Associate Dean for Student Academic Affairs to discuss the rationale for such a request. If a possible change seems warranted, the associate dean will instruct the student to meet with the current teacher to attempt to resolve any conflicts. If both the student and teacher agree that the teaching relationship cannot continue, the teacher will sign the change of studio form. The student will take the signed form to the Office of the Associate Dean for Student Academic Affairs. The Associate Dean will make every attempt to place the student in another studio on a space-available basis. Students should not approach another faculty member with a request to change into their studio until the above steps have been completed.

Studio changes normally take effect at the beginning of the academic year; mid-year studio changes are not typically possible. Studio change requests for the next academic year must be made by June 1.

arrow Visit the Conservatory Student Academic Affairs web page for information on requesting an appointment.

Major Status


In addition to enrollment status, which is determined by the number of credits completed towards graduation, the conservatory recognizes major status, which is determined by the requirements completed towards the major in a given semester. Major status for each major is defined in the relevant section of the catalog.

Individual Major


An individual major leading to a Bachelor of Music degree may be designed with a concentration in a single conservatory department or among two or more conservatory departments. In some cases, Arts and Sciences courses may be an integral part of a student’s conservatory individual major.

Examples of possible concentrations include liturgical music, Suzuki violin pedagogy, and fortepiano. Programs of study for an individual major must be based on teaching and course resources available at Oberlin or at other schools with courses transferable to Oberlin. Private reading courses may not be planned for key areas of the major and only a small amount of course credit central to the major may be earned away from Oberlin.

arrow Learn more about requirements and guidelines for the individual major.

Honors


Honors programs within the Bachelor of Music degree are limited to the Honors Program in Performance: Piano Concentration.

arrow See the catalog page for the performance major with a concentration in piano for additional information.   

Minor Study


A student may not pursue a minor in the same subject area in which they have declared a major.

Bachelor of Music degree students in the Conservatory of Music are eligible for a minor area of study in the conservatory and/or the College of Arts and Sciences (with the exception that students enrolled in the conservatory may not pursue a minor in music).

Minor requirements generally consist of course requirements and non-course requirements (such as committees, hearings, portfolio submissions, departmentals, recitals, etc.), which vary by minor.

The requirements that apply to a student are those published in the most recent edition of this catalog at the time the student submits the declaration form; however, any student who returns to Oberlin to complete a minor after more than four semesters away may be required to follow the requirements in effect at the time the student reenters Oberlin. These requirements may be altered as necessary in individual cases by the departments or programs. The completion of a minor is included on the transcript.

arrow See minors available to students pursuing a Bachelor of Music degree.  

arrow Declare a minor administered by the conservatory.

Interdivisional Minors


Interdivisional minors allow both Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Music students to deepen and widen their understanding of music by learning about it in a variety of contexts and disciplines. Students can complement their major study with an academic experience that encompasses depth of study in a well-established field with an experimental curriculum in an emerging area. Interdivisional minors are declared using the same process as departmental minors. The completion of an interdivisional minor is included on the transcript.

arrow Declare an interdivisional minor.

Integrative Concentration Study


Integrative concentrations are educational pathways that connect course work from a range of disciplinary perspectives with experiential learning opportunities such as high-quality internships. Integrative concentrations have two overarching goals:

  • enhancing student learning by enriching student’s academic learning with direct practical engagement; and
  • helping students explore meaningful career options.

Integrative concentrations are designed to deepen the interplay between ideas learned in the classroom and experiential learning. Toward this end, students are required to reflect on the relationship between the course work (theory) and the experiential learning (practice). This “integrative” requirement is met by completion of a learning portfolio.

Integrative concentrations thus include three components:

  • Curricular 
  • Experiential 
  • Integrative

Integrative concentrations do not replace majors. They are open to undergraduate students in both the college and the conservatory. The requirements that apply to a student are those published in the most recent edition of this catalog at the time the student submits the declaration form; however, any student who returns to Oberlin to complete an integrative concentration after more than four semesters away may be required to follow the requirements in effect at the time the student reenters Oberlin. These requirements may be altered as necessary in individual cases by the departments or programs. The completion of an integrative concentration is included on the transcript.

arrow See integrative concentrations available to students pursuing a Bachelor of Music degree.  

arrow Declare an integrative concentration.