Badges for singers

We had a badges session last week at the CETIS conference (here are some summary slides and my slides on some requirements). I’d like to reflect on that, not directly (as Phil has done) but instead by looking forward on how a badge system for leisure activity might be put together.

In the discussion part of our conference session, we looked at two areas of potential application of badges. First, for formative assesssment in high-stakes fields (such as medicine); second, for communities of practice such as the ones CETIS facilitates, still in the general area of work. What we didn’t look at was badges for leisure or recreation. The Mozilla Open Badges working paper makes no distinction between badges for skills that are explicitly about work and for skills that are not obviously about work, so looking at leisure applications complements the conference discussion nicely, while providing an example to think through many of the main issues with badges.

The worked example that follows builds on my personal knowledge of one hobby area, but is meant to be illustrative of many. Please think of your own favourite leisure activities.

Motivation

On returning from the conference, on the very same day as the badges session, it happened to be a rehearsal evening for the small choir I currently sing with. So what more natural for me to think about than a badge system for singing. The sense of need for such a system has continued to grow on me. Many people can sing well enough to participate in a choir. While learners of classical instruments have “grade” examinations and certificates indicating the stages of mastery of an instrument, there is no commonly used equivalent for choral singing. Singing is quite a diverse activity, with many genres as well as many levels of ability. The process of established groups and singers getting together tends to be slow and subject to chance, but worse, forming a new group is quite difficult, unless there is some existing larger body (school, college, etc) all the singers belong to.

Badges for singers might possibly help in two different ways. First, badges can mark attainment. A system of attainment badges could help singers find groups and other singers of the right standard for them to enjoy singing with. It may be worthy, but not terribly exciting singing with a group at a lower level, and one can feel out of one’s depth or embarrassed singing with people a lot more accomplished. So, when a group looks for a new member, it could specify levels of any particular skills that were expected, as well as the type of music sung. This wouldn’t necessarily remove the need for an audition, but it would help the right kind of singer to consider the choir. Compared with current approaches, including singers hearing a choir performing and then asking about vacancies, or learning of openings through friends, a badge system could well speed things up. But perhaps the greatest benefit would be to singers trying to start new groups or choirs, where there is no existing group to hear about or to go to listen. Here, a badge system could make all the difference between it being practical to get a new group together, or failing.

Second, the badges could provide a structured set of goals that would help motivate singers to broaden and improve their abilities. This idea of motivating steps in a pathway is a strong theme in the Open Badges documentation. There must be singers at several levels who would enjoy and gain satisfaction from moving on, up a level maybe. In conjunction with groups setting out their badge requirements, badges in the various aspects of choral singing would at very least provide a framework within which people could more clearly see what they needed to gain experience of and practice, in order to join the kind of group they really want.

By the way, I recognise that not all singing groups are called “choirs”. Barbershop groups tend to be “choruses”, while very small groups are more often called “ensembles”; but for simplicity here I use the term “choir” to refer to any singing group.

Teachers / coaches

Structured goals lead on to the next area. If there were a clear set of badged achievements to aim for, then the agenda for coaches, tutors, et al. would be more transparent. This might not produce a great increase in demand for paid tuition (and therefore “economic” activity) but might well be helpful for amateur coaching. Whichever way, a clear set of smaller, more limited goals on tried and tested pathways would provide a time-honoured approach to achieving greater goals, with whatever amount of help from others that is needed.

Badge content

I’ve never been in charge of a choir for more than a few songs, but I do have enough experience to have a reasonable guess at what choirmasters and other singers want from people who want to join them. First, there are the core singing skills, and these might be broken down for example like this:

  • vocal range and volume (most easily classified as soprano / alto / tenor / bass)
  • clarity and diction
  • voice quality and expressiveness (easy to hear in others, but hard to measure)
  • ability to sing printed music at first sight (“sight-singing”)
  • attentiveness to and blend with other singers
  • ability to sing a part by oneself
  • speed at learning one’s part if necessary
  • responsiveness to direction during rehearsal and performance
  • specialist skills

It wouldn’t be too difficult to design a set of badges that expressed something like these abilities, but this is not the time to do that job, as such a structure needs to reflect a reasonable consensus involving key stakeholders.

Then there are other personal attributes, not directly related to singing, that are desirable in choir members, e.g.:

  • reliability of attendance at rehearsals and particularly performances
  • helpfulness to other choir members
  • diligence in preparation

Badges for these could look a little childish, but as a badge system for singing would be entirely voluntary, perhaps there would be no harm in defining them, for the benefit of junior choirs at least.

Does this cover everything? It may or may not cover most of what can be improved — those things that can be better or not so good — but there is one other area that is vital for the mutual satisfaction of choir and singer. Singers have tastes in music; choirs have repertoires or styles they focus on. To get an effective matching system, style and taste would have to be represented.

Assessing and awarding badges

So who would assess and award these badges? The examinations for musical instrument playing are managed by bodies such as the ABRSM (indeed including solo singing). These exams have a very long history, and are often recognised, e.g. for entry to musical education institutions. But choral singers are usually wanting to enjoy themselves, not gain qualifications so they can be professional musicians. They are unlikely to want to pay for exams for what is just a hobby. That leaves three obvious options: choirmasters, fellow singers, and oneself.

In any case, the ABRSM and similar bodies already have their own certificates and records. A badge system for them would probably be just a new presentation of what currently exists. The really interesting challenge is to consider how badges can work effectively without an official regulating body.

On deeper consideration, there really isn’t much to choose between choirmasters and fellow singers as the people who award choral singing badges. There is nothing to stop any singer being a choirmaster, anyway. There is not much incentive for people to misrepresent their choral singing skills: as noted before, it’s not much fun being in a choir of the wrong standard, nor in singing music one doesn’t like much. So, effectively, a badge system would have the job of making personal and choir standards clear.

There is an analogy here with language skills, which are closely related in any case. The Europass Language Passport is designed to be self-assessed, with people judging their own ability against a set of criteria that were originally defined by the Council of Europe. The levels — A1 to C2 — all have reasonably clear descriptors, and one sees people describing their language skills using these level labels increasingly often.

This is all very well if people can do this self-assessment accurately. The difficulty is that some of the vital aspects of choral singing are quite hard to assess by oneself. Listening critically to one’s own voice is not particularly easy when singing in a group. It might be easier if recording were more common, but again, most people are unfamiliar with the sound of their own voice, and may be uncomfortable listening to it.

On the other hand, we don’t want people, in an attempt to be “kind”, to award each other badges over-generously. We could hope that dividing up the skills into enough separate badges would mean that there would be some badges for everyone, and no one need be embarrassed by being “below average” in some ways. Everyone in a choir can have a choir membership badge, which says something about their acceptance and performance within the choir as a whole. Then perhaps all other choir members can vote anonymously about the levels which others have reached. Some algorithm could be agreed for when to award badges based on peer votes.

The next obvious thing would be to give badges to the choir as a whole. Choirs have reputations, and saying that one has sung in a particularly choir may mean something. This could be done in several ways, all involving some external input. Individual singers (and listeners) could compare the qualities of different choirs in similar genres. Choral competitions are another obvious source of expert judgement.

Setting up a badge system

The more detailed questions come to a head in the setting up of an actual badge system. The problem would not only be the ICT architecture (such as Mozilla Open Badges is a working prototype for) but also the organisational arrangements for creating the systems around badges for singers. Now, perhaps, we can see more clearly that the ICT side is relatively easy. This is something that we are very familiar with in CETIS. The technology is hardly ever the limiting factor — it is the human systems.

So here are some questions or issues (among possibly many more) that would need to be solved, not necessarily in this order.

  • Who would take on responsibility for this project as a whole? Setting up a badge system is naturally a project that needs to be managed.
  • Who hosts the information?
  • How is the decision made about what each badge will be, and how it is designed?
  • How would singers and choirs be motivated to sign up in the first place?
  • If a rule is set for how badges are to be awarded, how is this enforced, or at least checked?
  • Is Mozilla Open Badges sufficient technical infrastructure, and if not, who decides what is?
  • Could this system be set up on top of other existing systems? (Which, or what kind?)

Please comment with more issues that need to be solved. I’ll add them if they fit!

Business case

And how does such a system run, financially? The beneficiaries would primarily be choirs and singers, and perhaps indirectly people who enjoy listening to live choral music. Finding people or organisations in whose financial interests this would be seems difficult. So it would probably be useful for the system to run with minimal resources.

One option might be to offer this as a service to one or more membership organisations that collects fees from members, or alternatively, as an added service that has synergy with an existing paid-for service. However, the obvious approach of limiting the service to paid members would work against its viability in terms of numbers. In this case, the service would in effect be advertising promoting the organisation. Following the advertising theme, it might be seen as reasonable, for users who do not already pay membership, to receive adverts from sellers of music or organisers of musical events, which could provide an adequate income stream. The nice thing is that the kind of information that makes sense for individuals to enter, to improve the effectiveness of the system, could well be used to target adverts more effectively.

Would this be enough to make a business case? I hope so, as I would like to use this system!

Reflection

I hope that this example illustrates some of the many practical and possibly thorny issues that lie before a real working badge system can be implemented, and these issues are not primarily technical. What would be really useful would be to have a working technical infrastructure available so that at least some of the technical issues are dealt with in advance. As I wrote in comments on a previous post, I’m not convinced that Mozilla Open Badges does the job properly, but at least it is a signpost in the right direction.

5 thoughts on “Badges for singers

  1. Excellent analysis for the “badges” concept! I cannot relate to the “singers” group however. Their needs and business case seems complicated and/or not well-defined, at least for someone ignorant, like me!

    To turn this question around, maybe I would first ask what groups would easily benefit from a (simple, initial) implementation of the badge system. And maybe I could suggest a couple:
    – open source programmers (in comparison / contradiction to similar ‘closed’ badges, such as Microsoft Certified XXX, etc.
    – amateur sport players (tennis, mini soccer, basketball), either on a personal or a team level (analogue to the badges a wii-sports player would get after practicing enough time and winning some plays)
    – doctors, who get badges from companies that provide medical equipment, for eg. surgeries, scans, etc.
    – and a surprise here: drivers, who get badges for being polite, good drivers, etc., through a collaborative exchange of virtual “thank you’s”, “honks” or “curses”, easily feasible with the forecoming near-field-communication and protocols for exchange of information between nearby cars.

  2. Thanks, Tasos! Perhaps I should have been clearer: singers want to sing with other people at a similar level who share both taste in music and availability. Choirs often want new reliable members who are at least good enough to fit in. I am suggesting badges could help with clarifying some of the information relevant to those points — and of course to a whole lot of similar areas including your amateur sports players, which I think is a very similar case.

    The point of my post is just to work through an example in more detail, and to end up with that list of questions that needs answering. It would be good to see more detailed analyses — of the cases you list, or others — covering the same ground, or better, answering some of the questions where that makes sense.

  3. Very useful and you raise a number of important points.

    Technically, such a system is relatively easy, but creating a recognised, stable and sustainable, authoritative, credible and desirable method of badging people’s achievements will require the greater part of the work.

    As you know, we’ve started to think through and develop a technical implementation of Mozilla’s open badges system for a university setting. It’s clear, even at this very early stage, that any kind of real-world implementation will be tentative, careful and risk averse in how it impacts on existing methods of assessment and awards. In this context, work needs to be done (perhaps it has/is?) to identify how badges can be made wholly compatible with the status quo. How can badges improve what we already have?

    Institutions will not and cannot disrupt the existing mechanisms of awards. This requires sanction from government. HEAR is a good example. It’s taken several years, many pilots and direction from HEFCE to make changes to this area. I can see universities at first offering badges for anything that is not already assessed and perhaps using badges to re-present aspects of the HEAR in a way that is meaningful to certain communities where badges are already valued (computing?).

    Having said this, I think that universities and other stable, well recognised institutions are better placed than many other organisations to be badge issuers and to tackle the practical implementation of a badges. It has always been part of their ‘business’ and they know it well.

    Elsewhere on your blog, someone mentions the importance of badges for self-esteem. I had not thought of this before, but it is an important point. It may be that in a university context, badges are a worthwhile motivational aid to achieving the larger award of a degree. That is, they have more value pedagogically than anything else.

  4. Thanks for your thoughtful comments here, Joss.

    I’m sure we agree that we need to understand just how much of the status quo needs to be supported for traditional status-givers to use the new idea of badges as a mechanism. Equally, we probably agree that to get universities on board, two possible approach would be
    1. to do what you suggest and get them to use badges for non-mainstream stuff (as you’ve mentioned the HEAR, that would be Section 6.1) while not affecting the mainstream
    2. try to replicate the degree awarding system as closely as possible, but graft on badges as a means of learner presentation.

    Happy to discuss the implications of these approaches with you or anyone.

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