Any thoughts?Ed
What you say makes sense. However pragmatically from a student's or parent of a students perspective, you should want the best most experienced teacher that is available.
Also, I don't agree that it doesn't matter how good a teacher is.
A bad teacher can cause a lot of damage ranging from promoting bad habits that take a lot longer to unlearn if the student is fortunate enough to eventually get a competent teacher, to not recognizing problems that can lead to injury, to not being able to communicate the beauty and joy of music, etc.
A better way to obtain teaching experience is to study piano pedagogy, and work with experienced teachers as an assistant/apprentice. Rushing into teaching when you don't know anything, and using a trial and error method doesn't help students, and doesn't help the confidence and reputation of young teachers.
What do you consider enough experience to teach? A grade 9, a grade 10, an ARCT, a degree, a masters?
I had a teacher who had all of the practical qualifications but absolutely NO personal skills and no ability to relate to children. Does the practical experience make her a better teacher than someone who has their grade 8 but is able to explain and relate to kids? No way.
For my daughter, I will be taking her to somebody who can instill a love of music, not necessarily someone who has a masters or an ARCT for that matter.
But I am curious to see what everybody figures is an appropriate level to teach.
One of my best teachers could not play well herself.
Also, it is often the case that the greatest pianists aren't great teachers too - they happen to do the correct things by instinct and have trouble translating how the correct method can be learnt to mere mortals.
What does concern me is the number of people who teach without the required experience or knowledge of music or technique. They could seriously damage a student who otherwise might turn out to be very good,
I think Eddie is 17