I would be interested to sometime see a video of this, if you were willing . As a matter of fact, as mario mentioned a while ago, it would be interesting for a lot of us to post videos if we could. I will be getting a video recorder quite soon.m1469
I see, well you know am not a qualified piano teacher, it is just that when i play for people, they say i wish i could do that and look haw complex it is. It is at this point that i try to convince them ,that it is not complex, and that they could learn the basic in five minuts. Unlike the teachers i have come across, who like to make the piano and music to be such a complex and bla bla thing, only to make them-selves seem more important.
So, yes, I am genuinely interested in learning more about the way you teach. If I can have my students truly learn how to read and understand the piano in 5-10 minutes, I am onboard.Thanks,m1469
I do see, zheer, how you could show people the basics in 5-10 minutes, but I am curious what happens in the days after that (and this has been my curiousity all along in this conversation). And it sounds like they are not enrolled with you as a formal student, so perhaps you don't know. If you do know, I would like to know too .Thanks,m1469
Like i said am not a piano teacher, but the first thing i try to do when i am asked to teach , is to convince him/her that learning to read and play music is very simple and that anyone can do it . So i promise them that it can be done in 5 - 10 minuts. Now you asked what happens in the day after, well the practical, ie how to sit, how to position the hand and how to beging the process of learning a simple melody.
Actually, it works very well with adults, too. I teach it the same way as far as viewing the entire staff as one entity, not two separate things. This is a philisophical point for me, as I think it is in their best interest to begin them seeing it this way. It aids in reading no matter how old one is. It also is a much more accurate concept of how the piano is represtented on paper.There is nothing inherently childish about seeing how the staff fits on the piano keys as I have shown in my second photo. And there is nothing inherently childish about identifying the notes on the staff with a magnet board (or drawing them in). The learning process does not have be done with games because the content is solid, though there is always some kind of magic trick involved when it comes to helping something click for the individual. It's just not as "fun" without the spinner (and this does actually weigh into the learning and absorption equation). But, then again, neither is any other "adult method" that I have seen.My primary goal is to get the indivual finding their way around the staff and piano, and seeing how the two relate, as fast and as efficiently as possible, no matter what age they are. This particular method of learning the "musical phone number" is the best way that I have found thus far in order to achieve everything I have in mind.I have found that learning the staves as two separate identities, while obviously possible, can cause problems down the road that must be solved by changing the individual's view of the staff into one entity anyway. So, I figure, why not start there ? It just doesn't make sense to me any other way, plus, the results have been great, and it's tough for me to argue with myself because of that. So I generally think, why not ? m1469ps -- you may have noticed, too, that the musical phone number only has three letters that do not directly spell a word (and one that people love to use in their acronyms) -- GBD FACEThe frist three all rhyme, too, which can help. But the rest is just the word 'face', so it's VERY easy for adults to grasp (especially adults because they know how to read), but it covers absolutely *everything*.
If I may ...I teach the way m1469 discribed above. However I have also taught the way zheer mentioned.Talking about the average student, I have found that most would prefer to count every single line and space until they reached the note they were asked to name. Despite them being additionaly shown how to work it out using only lines or only spaces. It took forever! So for some years now I stoped using what zheer mentioned and I must say I've seen quite a difference! I put more emphasis also on landmark notes like m1469 already mentioned- I find that this helps to makes the "identifying" a lot faster! And most students do "discover" that going from a space to the next line up that makes up the alphabet. In fact I had my 4 year old student the other day come with such an excitment to her lesson because she found out the alphabet "hidden" on the staff.
Yes, as I mentioned before, many of the ways I teach this stuff was inspired by Bernhard and other posters on this forum. I don't see myself changing the way I teach the names of the white keys any time soon.I did add one thing to this "method" that I have found to be quite useful. Here is the order that I go in :C (left of the 2 blacks)F (left of the 3 blacks)E (right of the 2 blacks)B (right of the 3 blacks)D (middle of the 2 blacks) Then here is the little addition that I made. I decided to try teaching the two middle notes of the 3 blacks at once, as though together they formed a single note called "GA" . I just have them press both notes together while they say "GA" and they go all the way up the keyboard and back down like this. Then I will ask them which note they think is "G" and which note they think is "A" and often they just guess the correct way. If they don't guess it correctly then I go ahead and tell them, but it seems to always make sense and stick immediately. I may then have them find these individually as they found the others before, but they don't seem as confused this way. Of course, we always have a review in the next lesson, and I send them home with a sheet that asks them to identify the notes on the keyboard in almost exactly the same way that I presented it in their first lesson.They do seem to learn this and have it stick within about 10 minutes (I have never timed it, but they always learn all the white notes in the first lesson along with various other things).Chocolatedog -- You may want to consider something like this for school :It is a bait box that I use to cart around many different things as I have one day that I travel to another town and teach there. It holds a lot of stuff and I have found a way to take with me a white/magnet board, a fold up staff that will sit on the back of the piano keys, and many, many more things including little percussion instruments and so on.Can you tell I like images ? m1469
I don't actually use middle C position (as a starting place for hand position or keyboard geogaphy) - remebering what it was like to learn as a young child, I don't believe in teaching that way. My first lesson always starts with the alphabet, beginning on lowest A and playing every note on the piano. We then move to crossing over hands and playing C and F up and down the piano and then C D E, etc. I teach them to cross over hands well before any other hand position. I find that this encourages lifting hands and wrists properly without trying to force any unnatural positions. I then teach about reading steps and skips before locating any specific note name to the symbols - I use no lines or only 1 line at this point. I do think middle C is an easy note to learn, though - both reading and finding it on the piano, so I tend to use this as one of the first notes for beginners (it is also the first reading note in most lesson series. I use a variety of these books, as I am still developing my own portfolios of music for beginners - I write something when a student needs something in particular. I have written all the pieces for the 2 to 3 year olds because the books are inappopriate.) It seems natural then to develop the concept of reading steps and skips either side of middle C - although the kids seem to find problems associating middle C with the staff - which is probably where presenting the grand staff as a unit is a better way to go. (I will experiment with this. ) For some reason, the kids seem to think there is an extra space between middle C and D - I don't understand why and it really holds up their reading.
I had actually been considering reverting to teaching a fixed hand position, wondering if some of these earlier issues with staying on notes was caused by my avoidance of these methods. I do what you seem to do - I talk with the student about the most comfortable place to put their fingers, so they can reach all the notes in a phrase. (However, I haven't had them keep contact with the keys - although I have tried. I think one of the main problems with this 5 year old is that he has limited attention - he treats the piano like work, but theory like games.
Apart from keeping place with the notes, to support following the music, is there any other important reason for teaching the kids to keep fingers located on the keys? Thanks for you feedback.
What I was having issues with, though, is the concept that the grand staff is a continuous entity. I think in this way I am teaching the way I was taught - and thus the way I tend to think cognitively - not musically - when I am reading myself. If I slowed down my reading processes, I am sure I would be thinking "bass C", "treble A", etc (very simply put). I have tried to teach kids about the old 11 lines, but that doesn't seem to make sense to them - the way I have tried to present it, at least.
They seem to sigh with relief when we focus back onto one staff - so I didn't pursue that angle.
Maybe it's in the initial presentation of the lines - I introduce the lines by having 5 drawn on the floor that we stand in the spaces or on the lines and take steps up and down, before getting a little more random.
So, at what point do you start calling the bass and treble?
OR is this why you use the white board against the keyboard to see where the lines fit compared to the notes?
I understand what you mean, but surely keeping fingers on keys doesn't overcome posture problems? Isn't it possible that kids can keep fingers on the top of keys while resting palms on the fall board? When I have suggested to the young boy I have mentioned that he does stay in touch with the keys, this has been the result - and because I don't focus on 'wrists up, fingers bent' (I teach specific techniques, but general posture and watch for any ongoing problems in how the hand position develops), I have only encouraged him to give his fingers a home key - and he usually chooses to cross his fingers over. It's strange, but the younger kids seem to do that - I guess it's making more use of the middle, stronger fingers.
I didn't fully understand wht you meant by:"This is why I have made the commands of keeping contact with the piano very specific. If a teacher tells the student who is just learning to keep hands on the piano at all times, and then proceeds to manipulate the hand, whatever else it may be doing, it most certainly is not engraining a "proper technique," or at least not any quicker than how I have described above." Would you mind explaining a little more, please?
THanks again.
m1469, you will be happy to know that for my lessons yesterday, I made a board exactly like yours, a magnetic dry-erase board, drew the staff on it, and had my students put the magnets on the lines, and find the notes on the piano. I also made a clock, and had them spin to a note, then find it on both piano and dry-erase board. It was a huge success. It also has helped clarify, in my mind, what range of notes each student is comfortable with, and what we need to focus on next. I have one 9 year old who this really appealed to. She is definitely a game person, and though probably not the sharpest kid on the block, I think this is the way to reach her. The following student is a year older, and could probably do just fine with any gimmicks. That's OK, though, because she also responded to them, and when their lessons overlapped for a few moments, I had them testing each other while I went to the bathroom. They were totally into it. This second student is excelling so fast I can hardly keep up with her. She is 10 years old, and after 2 weeks I started teaching the her staff. By 3 weeks, I gave her a piece to practice (her mom helped her, and she came back by week 4 with it memorized, and the dynamics perfect (!!!!). My problem with her (not that it is really a problem) is that I need slow down and give her the basics of loose wrist, firm finger joints, etc.... this part she doesn't pick up quite as fast as reading music. It is fascinating having a student like this!Thanks so much for your tips - I have had a lot of fun with them. I think the dry-erase board will serve us very well in the coming months. I also taught GBD-FACE to one of my students - I'm curious how this will work!By the way, the older sister (13)of the younger girl comes the same afternoon. She arrived and said 'I forgot to practice'! I said 'I hate it when that happens' and then said 'OK, you can listen to me practice'. I did that for a bit, then decided I should probably teach her something, and we went over the same exact things we did last week. OH well, this is the way it will go, I guess. I can only hope that at some point she will decide to do it on her own. I was able to teach her different ways to learn new music, so, maybe it was helpful in some way. Thanks again for all your help,Piz
I write something when a student needs something in particular. I have written all the pieces for the 2 to 3 year olds because the books are inappopriate.)