Wuttke, Brian CSmith, Timothy2018-10-222018-10-222017https://hdl.handle.net/1920/11332This study provides a multivariate approach to the study music teachers’ beliefs about teaching dispositions. The participants were pre-service and in-service teachers in rural, suburban, and urban settings who taught or planned to teach instrumental music or vocal / general music (N = 2838). With this study the researcher sought to explore whether dispositional beliefs were stronger with more pedagogic knowledge and classroom teaching experience and whether teaching area or locality mattered. Results suggest few statistically significant differences and no practical differences between levels of experience, teaching area, or locality. In fact, mean scores on 87 statements pertaining to dispositions of reflective, caring, responsible, authentic, and responsive showed that ratings actually decreased with the acquisition of pedagogic knowledge and classroom teaching experience.152 pagesenCopyright 2017 Timothy SmithMusic educationDispositionsIn-Service Music TeachersMultivariate AnalysisMusic Teacher EffectivenessPre-Service Music TeachersTeacher EffectivenessDeveloping Dispositions Among Pre-Service and In-Service Music TeachersDissertation