I like my lessons. I feel happy whenever I see her. I dunno what you mean by traditional lessons or what but from my experience (I changed teachers often during my beginning stage) = Lessons are practically all the same. 1 hour lesson. Play exercises, play pieces, assess progress, work on something etc... What's important is you're in the same wavelength with the teacher. You must have same goals. You must respect each other. You have to enjoy each other's company. The student (esp adult students) must be able to know the teacher's strength and weaknesses, so s/he knows how to maximize their learning time.
Of course, there's a point in your life where you have to leave each other. My former teacher is very good. At first I didn't like but I realized I have to discipline myself and accept her "plan" if I want to learn more about the piano. But her forte is teaching Beginners to Grade 2 level and sadly, we find ourselves doing the same things. The learning stops. (Former teacher and I are still on very good terms - no hard feelings. Leaving each other always happens)
My new teacher is actually former teacher's former teacher. She's good at teaching intermediate to advanced students and I learn a lot from her. She's great. What I like about her is that she's very open-minded (even if she's already 85 and I'm in my early 20s) and welcome suggestions from me. She can spot problems and can easily tell if I have a wrong way of playing or simply nervous.
I also look for resources in the uni library and I share them with her. I photocopied some parts of Jane Magrath's book so have some "advice" regarding intermediate pieces she's not familiar with. Since she doesn't have access to uni library anymore, she's happy whenever I bring such resources because it refreshes her knowledge.
My belief is that student should also actively participate on how the lesson would be done.
I don't expect my teacher to know all that; she's just human. But what's good about her is that she can teach pieces she's never played before. Sometimes, she'd have difficulty understanding an unfamiliar piece on the spot, so what we do -
we learn and discover this new piece together. And this is a good experience for both of us.
Of course there are bad teachers out there and so many students complain about them. But this "bad" teacher may be good for some. Maybe you just need someone else. Why don't you find another teacher?
It's always easy to complain. As students, it's our responsibility to help our teacher teach us and because they cannot read our minds at the time. I study Modern Languages at the uni. Do teachers teach everything? No. They can guide us as much. Students should help themselves learn.
As for for flawed traditional systems - well, all systems are flawed anyway. You have to think of way to make it work for you.
As for your question "Does anyone else feel limited by traditional lessons?"
No, I don't. Actually I dunno what you mean by traditional. Because my teachers - in piano or in something else - at home or abroad - are all old-school. They just mix teaching methods depending on the class.
As for classes where I don't learn anything, I just ditch the class (even uni classes). Who cares what others think? Who cares if I got delayed studying? I prefer not to waste my time on teachers and classes that will not teach me anything. So I don't have many bad memories with teachers.
PS: i'm not saying my teacher is perfect. neither are my lessons. but we can always work to make it better.
