Emily Langerholc2024-09-11T10:24:19-05:00

Emily Langerholc

Emily Langerholc is a music educator who actively explores connections across a wide variety of music makers and musical traditions. She is currently in her 18th year of teaching music in public schools across Florida. She has taught middle school band, chorus, adaptive general music, and high school music history and currently teaches elementary general music. She is passionate about the inclusion of popular music at all levels of the academic music curriculum and is also a specialist in woodwind instruction.

She is currently a doctoral student at the Center for Music Education Research at the University of South Florida. Her research interests include popular music in K-12 settings, musical imagery in families, and technology’s influence on music preference. She holds prior degrees from the University of Central Florida and the Florida State University. Her interest in the overlap between academic music and popular music began in her undergraduate years, having written an Honors thesis about parallels between French composer Erik Satie and alternative rock band Sonic Youth. In her master’s degree program, she began compiling prominent examples of music theory concepts heard in popular songs.

In 2016, she started the Rebel Music Teacher blog to continue compiling songs for this project. She hopes to keep making connections between popular music and academic music through her writing and her teaching. Her work gained notoriety on social media, even getting an inadvertent shout-out during Lizzo’s Hot Ones interview in 2022. Guide to Teachable Features in Popular Music is her first book. When she is not teaching, writing, or practicing, she spends quality time with her family & friends or comfort-watches Gilmore Girls for the hundredth time.

Find Emily:

eBooks by John Doe

Posts by John Doe

Musicast Episode 10: Scott Sheehan- The Future of Music Education

Scott Sheehan, the next president of the National Association for Music Education, sits down to talk with Marissa and Kevin about COVID teaching and what comes next, post-pandemic. [...]

Research to Practice: Developing Musicianship

The potential for growth when teachers listen to each of their students, help them develop their own musicality, and engage an entire group of them in active listening is just…well, the possibilities are endless. [...]

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