The school requires that faculty - including private instructors - have at least a master's degree. Any student who takes lessons through the school will be studying with someone who has a master's or higher, so they extend that requirement to instructors outside of the school as well, I guess to ensure that teachers have the same level of education (if not the same level of teaching, which I realize is not always the case just because they have a graduate degree) as the faculty at the school. The only person not required to have a master's is the staff accompanist. If the school has faculty for an instrument - piano, voice, or string bass, for instance - students study with a faculty member. But it's a community college and they don't have the resources to hire instructors for all the main instruments. My former teacher, the one who just moved, had a DMA, and he was through the school. He was the only one who taught at my level - the other three teachers
could teach my level, since they all have a Masters, but they specialize in beginning and intermediate students, mainly the ones who are doing the piano proficiency for the major. The depatment chair recommended that I check elsewhere first for a teacher who specializes in teaching advanced students, such as at a local university or even private teachers, but if I get desperate I'll talk to those other teachers at the school.
Thanks in advance for any help you might be able to offer!
