Do you have a plan or schedule for what you do in your piano lessons? What about preparation and/or evaluation of the lesson? If you do plan and prepare, do you have separate plans for each lesson or one for all your lessons with a certain student? Or are you more spontaneous and teach in an improvising manner?
I don't know

. I have sat down and figured out what my "curriculum" would be with the intent of checking in with myself for each lesson for each person, in order to guide myself along. But, to be honest, I am changing things so constantly and I myself keep learning new things (that I want to teach), that it's really difficult to be able to measure my effectiveness as a teacher against a list of 'subjects-to-be-covered' that I made a year ago.
So, my plans have become much more localized. I plan my lessons for the day, however, there are certain subjects that I have taught enough to have a mental outline (a kind of ongoing, mental curriculum) of what I am going to be doing and build the day's lesson on that. Once I get in the situation though, I teach it always slightly differently then I had before.
Just yesterday I planned certain things about one of my student's lessons but once the lesson came, I could not have foreseen what ended up happening. Basically, he learned a bunch of concepts in about 10-15 minutes that it actually takes a lot of my other students to learn in weeks and maybe even months. I am not sure what made this happen, exactly. Some of it has to do with the fact that I had slightly altered the way I teach the subject. Some of it has to do with his age and demeanor. But, these subjects are ones that I have taught a number of times and have the information readily available in my head, so I constantly am watching for the "window" of opportunity when I can present the topic and that is just different with everybody.
After I taught this fellow yesterday, I wanted to write down exactly what I did so in the future, all of my other students would be able to learn as quickly as he did, too. But, I realize that his success is directly related to his individuality, and I can't just bottle up that one lesson and reproduce it with others. It will be different with the next ones because they are their own persons.
I have realized clearly though, that a great way to evaluate my lesson with this boy yesterday (and with all of my students) would be to have recorded it. I am quite sorry I don't have a camcorder yet. A camcorder would be greatly helpful in allowing myself more spontaneity during the lesson without worrying about trying to remember it all for "next time" after the lesson is done.
From now on, a new part of my lesson plans with certain subjects is to always video record these lessons.
Always in need of improvement.
m1469