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.
I am sorry, that you had such unpleasant experience. I did too and could agree with you before I started teaching with Soft Mozart. All of the software, which ever was developed before SM could be easily replaced with a teacher. SM – a very valuable tool, which makes any teacher's work more effective and professional.
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.
Disagree. I use computers and Soft Mozart for 5+ years in my class as well as many other piano and music teachers in private, public and music schools in USA, UK, Canada, Mexico, Spain, Costa Rica and Russia (-https://-https://www.doremifasoft.com/pianoclasses.html ). This system is WORTH making all the efforts, because it works like nothing else. Here what one public school music teacher said about it: -https://-https://www.doremifasoft.com/pipupiupskus.html
And then there are concepts you can teach with paper and a pencil anyway. Not really a need for using software.
Disagree. To play piano is not the same as to learn reading. Music notation is rather a spatial map, then literature. I think, teaching to play piano and sight-reading should be trained the way we are training pilots – with 'computer simulators'. Words and explanations are unable to train muscles, eyes and ears of learners to do what they suppose to as effectively, as computer system SM.
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.
I taught traditionally before and I state, that when I started teaching with SM, the lessons became many times more intense and productive. Even if I would have top restart computer ( I do not remember it happening often, though), students could learn with SM more, then with teacher in an hour.
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.
I think, teaching whole group the same thing is pretty dull idea. People are all different and have different pace in learning. SM teaches everyone individually even in group setting.