Publication Details
Abstract
This article examines how modern digital and pedagogical technologies, when integrated with the pedagogical, aesthetic, and musical legacy of the Jadid enlighteners of Central Asia (late 19th – early 20th centuries), can substantially enhance the development of musical thinking in higher-education music students. Drawing on the theoretical writings of Mahmudxoʻja Behbudiy, Abdurauf Fitrat, Abdulla Avloniy, and the musical-poetical output of Hamza Hakimzoda Niyoziy and Cho‘lpon, we designed an integrative instructional model that combines heritage-oriented source analysis with adaptive e-learning tools, digital score annotation, AI-assisted aural training, and project-based collaborative composition. A quasi-experimental study was conducted with 168 bachelor-level students across two Uzbek universities during the 2024–2025 academic year (n = 84 experimental; n = 84 control). Musical thinking was operationalised along six components — perceptual, analytical, intonational, structural, cultural-contextual, and creative-productive — and assessed through a validated 42-item test battery (Cronbach’s α = 0.89). Analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) showed statistically significant gains in the experimental group across all six components (F(1,165) range = 18.64–46.12, p < .001; partial η² = .102–.219). The strongest effects emerged for cultural-contextual (d = 1.02) and analytical (d = 0.91) dimensions. Findings indicate that coupling the humanist-enlightenment discourse of the Jadids with contemporary educational technology produces a measurable, transferable, and culturally grounded pathway for cultivating musical thinking in 21st-century conservatoire and pedagogical curricula.