About 8 months ago I stopped working on technical exercises with my students. This change in my teaching coincided with change in my life, life being something I did not wish to waste another nanosecond of, and teaching is a big part of my life, besides being my primary source of income. Before joining this forum and reading Bernhard's diatribes on Hanon/Czerny etc. I had been debating the usefulness of these finger treadmills for some time. My own teachers, good and not so good, famous and not, had all prescribed some sort of drill regimen or routine. It wasn't until I began teaching regularly some years ago that I began to wonder why I put my students through the same mill....
BTW I am speaking of Hanon Book I, Czerny, Dohnanyi, Pischna etc, not Scales, Arpeggios, Chord Cadences (what music is made of) and the Etudes of Chopin, Liszt, Scriabin etc, which are pieces of music, not merely mechanical patterns.
My students range in age from 7 to 81. I was preparing my lesson strategies for my 9-10 year olds ( there are three, they can play Anna Magdalena/Kabalevsky op.27 and are moving ahead rapidly) and thinking "gotta start 'em on Hanon" when I thought of my past doubts about it and then I thought of that Bernhard cat on Pianostreet. Then I thought, "Why? We could use that lesson time for music! If their playing falls apart, put the drills back."
Eight months later exercises (they had done Book 1 of Burnam's "Dozen a Day" ) are not missed and technical ability is UP. Because the notes in their pieces are just that, not the notes in Hanon #13 or Czerny op.4007 #519 or whatever. It's true;
the notes in the drills have no relation to the notes in a piece of music. Hanon is good for Hanon. Nothing more. [/b]
Not only is technical ability up, so is "musicality" and student enthusiasm

. We work on scales (they now know most of them) and cadences, and they are learning much more repertoire than they were before, and isn't that the point? To play music, not drills? The Hanon is not missed by anyone. My older students never seemed to notice the omission, I never mentioned it.

I know many of you read Bernhard's opinion of exercises with skepticism or disdain. We were all taught to do them, we want to do the right thing, so we "eat our vegetables". Our teachers did them, they made us, and we want to be good so we do it too, it must be right, everyone else always has and we did so you know... gotta do it. And it's horrifying to think that time was wasted...
No. The drills are bread and water. The
music is the vegetables! I encourage all of you to ditch the drills, if you're skeptical then with one student maybe, as an experiment. I bet it works. It did for me. And if it doesn't work you can always put the drills back...
BTW I may still use the "Dozen a Day" Book I or parts of it with beginners in the future, they are fun and kids enjoy them. Then again, maybe not...