At a Glance

Completion Time
6-7
Years
Courses
11
Credits Required
48

Online Doctor of Musical Arts (DMA) in Music Education

A respected leader in music education for generations, BU pioneered the online Doctor of Musical Arts degree. The program is designed for 21st century music educators who teach within and beyond the traditionally conceived school day, with populations that include early childhood, K-12, college, life-long learners, and in a variety of community settings. We encourage students to think creatively and critically, to be dedicated collaborators, and to work in multilingual and multicultural classrooms with students across the socioeconomic spectrum and with a range of abilities. We model and encourage self-reflection and an openness to continual growth.

BU is your opportunity to study with many of the nation’s most innovative thought leaders, policy akers, and researchers in music education. Immerse yourself in subjects that offer the potential to transform music education for you and your students. Engage with fellow music educators from around the world who will become valued friends and colleagues.

The degree consists of three components: coursework, qualifying examinations, and dissertation. You will prepare for advancement in the field of music education by develop- ing and honing scholarly expertise, sharpening proficiency in theoretical and historical analysis, developing a research specialization, and producing a dissertation of publishable quality that adds new knowledge, moving the field of music education forward. Your dissertation can become the basis for a scholarly article, series of articles, or book. Many of our doctoral students and their faculty mentors have co-presented at national and international conferences.

Curriculum

Help Redefine Music Education in the 21st Century

Degree Requirements

This collaborative online doctorate program prepares music educators for advancement in their field by developing and honing research skills, sharpening proficiency in teaching techniques, and producing a dissertation of publishable quality that introduces new knowledge designed to push the field of music education forward.

Application Requirements

Boston University’s graduate programs in music education have been created for the continuing growth of forward-thinking leaders and educators who serve as advocates for the importance of music in our lives, communities, and schools.

Closeup of man in a marching band playing the trumpet

Flexibility is Key

You’re eager to develop your scholarship, keep your musicianship sharp, and continue your teaching career. This is where online learning comes in. We’ve designed this program for you to be an important member of a small, academically rigorous online doctoral program without uprooting your family or leaving the work that fulfills you.

Applications for the Doctor of Musical Arts in Music Education online program are accepted once per year for a Fall term start. The application opens in September and has an early January submission deadline each year.

Looking over the shoulder of a violin player, focusing on the sheet music in front of her.

With a DMA in Music Education from BU you will:

  • Learn new techniques and strategies that can be applied in your classrooms
  • Collaborate with influential leaders in the music education profession
  • Participate in a weeklong residency on campus with faculty and other students
  • Pursue your scholarly interests and connect them to music education theories and your teaching practice
  • Advance your career and discover new opportunities
  • Complete your doctorate without uprooting your family or leaving the work that fulfills you

This was the most challenging, yet most fulfilling academic work that I have ever done. I have learned so much as a student, music educator, and researcher.

Jennifer Gebczyk (CFA’22)

The DMA program in music education has allowed me to finally combine everything I am passionate about: music, music education, culture, and history. My inquisitive nature was rewarded and my intellectual abilities both challenged and celebrated by the wonderful teachers in this program. I have a better sense of self and I grew as a musician, a teacher, and a citizen

Lily Grant (CFA’23)

The topics we covered in classes and the discussions I’ve had with fellow students and faculty have helped me to grow into a more empathetic and aware educator. I have shifted the way I approach topics in almost every class I teach. I hope I have become a better teacher that helps their own students approach any subject with a critical eye and ear and ask hard questions that lead to deeper understanding

Genevieve Karki (CFA’23)

Roger N. Williams (CFA’22)

Online DMA in Music Education

Illustrated portrait of Roger N. Williams

Coming out of a postcolonial society where, in the early days, it was a privilege to even get an education—it just means a lot to me to see that students have access to music education within their schools

Read full article
Sheet music visible on the screen of a laptop in a classroom

Completed Dissertations

Below is a selection of completed dissertations from 2024 graduates of the online Doctor of Musical Arts in Music Education at Boston University that demonstrate the breadth and scope of topics and research methods used by our DMA candidates: 

Dr. Esteban Adame – The Role of Self-Efficacy Beliefs in the Development of Jazz Improvisation Among Secondary Level Instrumental Music Students

Dr. Stephanie Cole – A Mixed Methods Investigation of Audiation-Based Teaching in Beginning Band

Dr. Rita Gentile – An Exploration of Wisconsin Choral Educator Preparation for Supporting Adolescent Singers

Dr. Josh Jordan – Exploring Middle School Band Directors’ Perceptions and Practices in Inclusive Music Education: A Case Study on Competencies, Resources, and Universal Design for Learning     

Dr. Mary Ann Lanier – Synergies of Listening: Bakhtinian Dialogism in and Through Collective Free Improvisation

Dr. Alice Tsui – Our Voices Matter and We Are Golden 我们是金的: A Music Educator’s Reckoning with Homeplace in the Music Classroom

Boston University is regionally accredited by the New England Commission of Higher Education (NECHE).
Boston University holds accreditation by the National Association of Schools of Music (NASM), an organization of schools, conservatories, colleges and universities with 615 accredited institutional members.
Boston University has been ranked as one of the best national universities by U.S. News & World Report.

Recent News

BU COM Professor Wins Andrew Carnegie Fellowship

Boston University College of Communication Professor Ayse Lokmanoglu won the prestigious fellowship this past week, becoming one of 24 in the 2026 cohort. What will Lokmanglu’s research focus on? As an emerging media studies professor in the College of Communication, Lokmanoglu’s work focuses on how we think about the internet, particularly images, in politically tense […]
Read More

Why Business Leaders Need AI Fluency, Not Just AI Tools

Most managers can use AI. Very few can lead with it. That’s the gap that’s about to define the next decade of business careers — and it’s wider than most leaders realize. McKinsey’s 2025 Superagency in the Workplace report found that 92% of companies plan to increase AI spending in the next three years, yet […]
Read More

Digital Communication Strategy: The Skills Modern Leaders Need

The job of a communications leader looked very different five years ago. The channels were the same — paid, earned, shared, owned — but the speed, the scale, and the tools weren’t. Today, generative AI is writing first drafts, predictive models are choosing audiences, and 23% of ads at the most recent Super Bowl involved […]
Read More
Area of Study