Course participants generally bring various interests and rich experiences related to multiple music education/pedagogy contexts: the formal schooling system, the studio, and the wider community. This course presupposes that music education and music education research practices are socio-culturally constructed and reflect a range of discourses, perspectives, and assumptions. Participants are introduced to different research approaches and exemplary studies. They can develop an in-depth, critical understanding of how these approaches might be used to investigate relevant, contemporary topics in music education. Such issues include but are not restricted to, music education as praxis, psychological and developmental processes, music education in a pluralistic/bicultural society, narrative pedagogies, music education as critical pedagogy, dialogic and relational pedagogies, aesthetic experiences in the arts, music education as a decolonising practice, and music education and technological change. Participants are encouraged to build on their interest in potential research topics relevant to their futures as music educators.