Social media and academic vocal art: Hybrid careers, audience engagement, and pedagogical transformation
Abstract
The rapid expansion of social media has fundamentally transformed the professional landscape of academic vocal art, reshaping career trajectories, modes of audience engagement, and pedagogical expectations. Within the framework of the attention economy, digital visibility, algorithmic selection, and sustained online presence increasingly function as significant factors of professional recognition alongside traditional stage performance. While these processes have been widely discussed in relation to popular music and informal learning environments, their implications for academic vocal education remain insufficiently explored, particularly within the context of Kazakhstan. This study investigates how social media and digitalization influence academic vocal art from pedagogical and institutional perspectives. Adopting a qualitative research design, the study combines semi-structured interviews with five vocal art academics working in higher music education institutions in Kazakhstan and a qualitative content analysis of vocal art curricula from four universities and conservatories. The research focuses on educators’ perceptions of social media, the emergence of hybrid career models, and pedagogical challenges associated with digitalization, as well as on the extent to which themes such as digital competencies, career development, and audience engagement are reflected in formal curricula. The findings demonstrate that educators perceive social media not as a temporary trend, but as a stable professional environment shaping contemporary vocal careers. Interview data indicate a clear awareness of hybrid career models in which stage performance remains central, while digital reputation functions as a parallel form of professional capital influencing visibility, opportunities, and professional mobility. However, curriculum analysis reveals a structural lag between rapidly evolving professional demands and relatively stable educational models. Digital competencies, social media literacy, and audience-oriented skills are either implicitly addressed or entirely absent from formal curricula, forming a “hidden curriculum” dependent on individual initiative rather than institutional strategy. The study concludes that vocal pedagogy should not replace traditional artistic training, but rather extend it through the critically framed integration of digital competencies. By positioning digitalization as a pedagogical resource rather than a threat, academic vocal education can more effectively prepare students for sustainable careers within contemporary attention-driven cultural environments.