Can we start over and agree to be more respectful of each other and share ideas? I'm willing to do that. I use piano suite software and have also used a few others as supplements. Where is soft mozart available and please share more about it.
very good! So tell us specifics of "soft mozart" please. Where do you get it? Do you start begginners with it? Give us some details.
I had a computer set up in my studio a couple of years ago. The kids were very excited and keen to use it. They use computers for everything these days. I had a few websites set up for them to play ear training games, history games, orchestra games etc. I used Finale to help develop note naming (this was VERY popular but also VERY time consuming) and of course composition. I decided though, in a half hour lesson, there just wasn't the time to put aside for work on the computer, so I brought it upstairs and that's what I'm typing on now!!I even had my own website where kids could interact with one another (and me). After the initial excitement wore down, nobody used it. Now and then I wonder if I should put the computer back. But I haven't yet.
I just found out about Soft Mozart this week, and am interested in how it works. I think I would need to actually see it work, are there any demonstrations on it here in America? I only have one computer, and it's in the next room. I use it sometimes for ear training for my advanced student, but he has an hour long lesson. I would love to have a studio like Jay, and have a waiting room, and activities on the computer ready for the early birds. That is my dream someday.
The teaching I've done using computers has made me a little jaded. For groups of students, public school, it's a pain in the butt.
Getting all the software set up, making sure it works right on all the computers, all that effort doesn't pay off, except that you can say you taught with technology.
And then there are concepts you can teach with paper and a pencil anyway. Not really a need for using software.
And with computers you have to have a backup plan because they will stall out on you at some point. With the tightness of time in a 30 minute lesson, having to restart a computer or troubleshoot it isn't practical.
At two schools, college level, I have seen a teacher do a group piano class using a special projector that allowed him to show fingerings to the whole class at once. That was effective I thought. And then of course the ear training software students can use on their own. I think that's useful.
How long does it take for a student to be able to read a normal piece of music, not on the computer? I know this will vary with each student, but on an average, for let's say a ten year old.
Are you limited to just what SM has in the computer, or can you vary the music, and put your own in?
Do you have to keep buying more software to add music?