... how do you gradually increase the difficulty or gradually add new ideas?
Someone has ordered the ideas for me. I like that. I would think I was leaving something out without the method book.
With just using pieces, how can you look at so many to know the student is having a challenging, but attainable, step? And then with a lot of students...
I would guess you have a large list of pieces, graded by difficulty, and then you would have prepared speaking for the concepts they need to cover. Instead of the method book, the student goes through a path of pieces. Is that it?
What about a theory book? I would also think that a teacher teaching without method books might be doing more theory and ear training anyway though.
What about the idea of using a method book and other pieces? That's what I tend to do. I like how the ideas are already planned out and "baby stepped" in the method books, but they need some extra pieces, not just the method book.
I think I'm getting blurry on what "teaching with a method book" is and what "teaching without a method book" is.
Bernhard, how are the students getting the music? Do you supply it, is they buy it by the individual piece, do they have a few anthologies that have most of the pieces....?And you have your own library of all the pieces? Recordings too?
In the long run, people who don't use method books are pretty much the same peoplethat may end up writing one anyway. And they won't think there's anything wrong with buying them then.
I see. The student picking their own pieces would have a lot of impact on their motivation. What about students who only want to play one style of music though? I would be worried about them not getting a "complete" education in piano then. I always try to pick new composers and styles.