Hi!
Well, this is what happened since Sunday.
I am studying 2 pieces, 3 exercises from Duvenoy and have yet to know what Czerny's will i start. My professor assigned also technique exercises at 2 different keys (Scales and arpeggios, major and minor, plus parallel octaves scales, major and minor too...)
I have 1 to 2 hours study per day. Some days i can study 1 hour, other 2, some crazy days i simply do... well nothing, but i am trying at least to do the technical exercises. and maybe review what i learned back.
This is how i planning to manage this time:
Scales, arpeggios, and so on for 15 minutes, 5 in the key of G, ad 10 the key of E, that i am worse.
Then the exercises, Duvenoy are easier, i might do these first, then Czerny's... About 20, 30 min on this, maybe?
Bach (30 minutes): 10 minutes dedicated for reviewing what i have learned before, plus 10 for reading ahead. The Suite is easy to divide, since its separated in 6 movements, and also among the movements, there are repeated phrases. Though i can't read a complete movement in 20 minutes... I really suck reading...

So each day i want to read ahead and review what i've read. Do you think that's right? This was the way i did it when i was younger... sadly i've never developed my reading since i've stopped studying so many times.
Mozart, much the same as the Bach, but maybe lesser time, around 20 minutes total.
After this maybe i'll have some rest, and then redo something i'm into... Depending if i have the time, plus stamina to do it!
I might as well try to have some fun, and learn something really really easy and different like a rag or a more jazzy tune, or improvise a little bit. This as long as i don't have more things to learn, i don't know if it is good to learn more than the 2 pieces at the same time... I still have to read the Czernys and the Duvenoy, although these are way easier to read than the pieces.
I know this way (studying less than 2 hours) i will not advance very fast, but at least i'll keep on going. I prefer to advance slowly than not advancing at all...
So the question is, do you thing this is a good plan? Is it too strict, or is it wrong in any way?
Second question...
I have been hearing the pieces i'm learning. These previous days (at work, one or too times daily) i open the pdf file of a piece, and try to follow the music sheet. This seems to be helping me reading. Monday i advanced little, though i played a lot (around 3 hours!!!) . However Tuesday, i didn't play, and Wednesday i played around 30 minutes the mozart and i could advance some more or less the first page, and half the second (untill the harmony gets harder to memorise at compass 22.
So the question, when studying i find myself trying to interpret the music (do the right strenght, tempo changes, etc, has either herd on the record, or written in the staff). Also i play it slow but more continuously, since i have a more "defined" idea of the music. One thing's for sure, knowing the piece helps me to hear what i've done wrong, and try not to do it again...
I mean, what i feel is that i heard the music so many times that i am actually not reading it but... well remember it!

I don't think i am learning it by hear, i mean maybe while reading and hearing the music at the same time i am actually learning and analyzing it...
Is there some logic in this?