A classmate told that to my choir professor (his excuse was he forgot). She was upset, but more sad about it. She said that coming in and telling her that was very inconsiderate and disrespectful. When she was a student, her teacher made her leave if she hadn't practiced, no matter the excuse. She feels that if you want to be taught, you have to put in your part of the practicing. Not practicing means that you don't care enough about it.
I tend to agree with her..........
It is a point of view, and one held by many.
I usually forget the international nature of this forum. I ought to precede my postings with this: my views reflect aspects of teaching students from a tiny part of the UK; the nature of teachers' students and their parents will not often be the same. I might try to tidy up the wording and add it to my signature.
The first priority of the parents of the kids I teach is this; they must be happy in their lesson and enjoy it. Yes, they want their children to learn and will not continue to pay for lessons if this is not happening, but this learning
must be acquired happily. Luckily, this reflects my view, so we are a cheerful bunch.
I do not understand this 'respect' thing. We hear much in the UK about 'mutual respect between teachers and pupils'. Why should I respect my pupils? Apart from staying alive, being rather pleasant and keeping out of trouble, what have they achieved that I should respect? I keep my respect for those individuals who earn it, through courage or recognisable achievement.
I adore my pupils. I love spending time with them. They could ask me to do anything legal and I would refuse only if it were impossible. If that is 'respect', then so be it. It merely means that I use the term in a different context.
Why should my pupils respect me? How can they possible even
begin to comprehend my achievements as a pianist and piano teacher? They have as much understanding of that as an ant has of the construction of the Taj Mahal. They are fond of me and enjoy coming; I can see that in their faces and hear it in the warmth of their greeting, but respect me? What for? I only see them for 30 minutes a week.
To us piano teachers, a piano lesson whips by in 30 minutes or so, to be followed by the next, then the next....... An individual lesson is no big deal.
This is completely different to the family whose child is having the lesson. Often, the whole evening has to be structured around it, especially if substantial travel is involved in our rural area. The family mealtime may need rearranging; travel arrangements may need to be made for other children doing other activities; last-minute (sometimes the only

) practise has to be crammed in. Around here, 20-25 minutes each way for travel usually has to be added to the lesson time.
All this is a big deal to the family involved. Imagine how they feel if a child emerges unhappy from the lesson, after all that has gone into setting it up. That is
before they start remembering that they pay for it; resentment can kick in quite quickly at that point.
Here are another couple of thoughts for the senders-home, being-sad, being-cross responders to an insufficiently-practised child. Here in the UK, upset a young child and a teacher does not send home a child determined to do better next time in order to avoid 'punishment'; he sends home a child fearful of the next meeting and even less inclined to approach the cause of the fear.
Upset a hormonal teenager here in the UK and you will get either: a hissing, spitting harridan who marches out to her parent\s announcing that he\she is giving up the piano, or: a silent, sulky, withdrawn, uncooperative child who marches out to her parent\s announcing that he\she is giving up the piano.
Here is Steve's method of avoiding doing murder to a child that appears not to have done enough practise. I think, "Hey ho" to myself, give the kid a huge smile and, if the relationship is right for this, a big hug and repeat what I did last week. We usually manage to have a good time.

Later edit:
I have just had an idea. How about this for the insufficiently-practised? "Next week, I am going to record your playing and let you listen to it." It might not work the first time, but on subsequent occasions I wonder if the kid might think, "Ouch. I am not going through that again. Better do some practise."
