Each year, the Ohio Music Education Association (OMEA) Professional Development Conference brings together thousands of music educators, researchers, and performers who are shaping the future of the field. In 2026, Kent State University’s Glauser School of Music made a powerful impression — not just through performances, but through research, pedagogy, and leadership.
Across three days, Kent State faculty and students shared insights on inclusive instruction, culturally responsive teaching, ensemble pedagogy, music learning theory, and performance practice. Their presence at OMEA reflects what defines Kent State’s approach to music education: practical, research-informed, and deeply connected to today’s classrooms.
For educators considering advanced study, this level of professional engagement matters — because it means learning from faculty who are actively contributing to the field.
A National Platform for Music Education Leadership
OMEA is one of the most respected professional development conferences in the country for music educators. Presenting at OMEA is a mark of professional leadership — it means your work is advancing the conversation around how music is taught, learned, and experienced.
Kent State’s faculty and students contributed across research, teaching, and performance sessions, reinforcing the university’s role as a thought leader in music education. From scholarly research roundtables to ensemble performances, Kent State was visible across the full spectrum of the profession.
Teaching, Research, and Performance in Action
Rather than focusing on one area, Kent State’s OMEA presence reflected the many dimensions of music education today. Sessions and performances aligned around several key themes:
Culturally Responsive & Student-Centered Teaching
Faculty and students explored how music educators can thoughtfully incorporate diverse musical traditions, examine cultural context, and design learning experiences that reflect and engage a wide range of students.
Ensemble & Performance Pedagogy
Presentations and performances highlighted approaches to teaching brass, choral, wind, and flute ensembles, along with student-directed learning models and meaningful repertoire selection.
Music Learning Theory & Research
Research roundtables and poster sessions examined reflective practice, student motivation, personality and ensemble membership, and music learning theory — demonstrating Kent State’s commitment to evidence-based instruction.
Community & Collaboration
Sessions emphasized the power of music programs to build connection, belonging, and community across generations, schools, and ensembles.
These themes are not abstract — they are the same challenges and opportunities educators face every day in their classrooms.
Why This Matters for Music Educators
When you pursue graduate study, you’re not just choosing a credential — you’re choosing who you learn from. Kent State’s presence at OMEA shows that its faculty are not only teaching future educators, but actively shaping the profession itself.
Their work at OMEA reflects a program grounded in:
- real classroom challenges
- current research
- creative performance practices
- and a deep commitment to student learning
That professional engagement directly informs what students experience in Kent State’s music education programs.
The Online Master of Music in Music Education Connection
Kent State’s 100% online Master of Music in Music Education (MMME) is designed for working music educators who want to grow their skills, expand their impact, and stay connected to the field — without stepping away from the classroom.
The program is practitioner-focused and offers:
- flexible, fully online coursework
- electives in specialized music teaching areas
- opportunities to apply learning directly to your teaching
- and guidance from faculty who are leaders in music education
Whether your goal is professional growth, leadership, or further academic study, the MMME program helps you align your passion for music with your future.
From the Conference Stage to the Online Classroom
Kent State’s presence at OMEA 2026 is more than a schedule of sessions — it’s a reflection of a community committed to advancing music education.
For educators who want to learn from faculty who are engaged, innovative, and nationally recognized, Kent State Online offers a pathway that connects scholarship, performance, and practice.
Because the future of music education is being shaped right now — and Kent State is part of that conversation.