“…Specifically, in the field of music, it has changed three key areas: the instruments and techniques that a number of music professionals use -from instrumentalists to DJs to producers to composers (Bell, 2013;Ruthmann & Mantie, 2017;Smith et al, 2017); the educational methodologies that are available for classroom music instruction (Green, 2002(Green, , 2008Waldron, 2013;Waldron et al, 2020;Waldron, 2018); and how, how often, and in what forms students experience music outside of school (Hone, 2017;Lamont et al, 2003;Temmerman, 2005;Youth Music & Ipsos MORI, 2019). But due to the way school music graduates are trained as classroom music educators in university music departments, teachers' experiences and their expectations largely derive from a traditional, Western art music (WAM) approach to music education (Bull, 2019;Bull & Scharff, 2017;Dwyer, 2016;Green, 1988;Philpott, 2010). Following this training, many music teachers have a worldview that treats the instruments, forms, and approaches of WAM as having priority over non-Western music and new technological/digital developments.…”