I would agree that teachers are looked down upon.
I think the systems a little messed up, including how teachers are taught. In reality it seems to be more learning on the job rather than being taught. And you can teach and be a teacher without any training at all. Not that training is always great.
The teachers who are still performing attract more students if they're out successfully performing. Not that they can teach necessarily, but they appear to know what they're doing more than someone who doesn't perform. A performer is at least a model for a student, wether they can teach or not. I think a lot of performers can be successful at teaching or doing something like teaching that way. If they have plenty of students, if a few aren't learning, then they can blame it on those students and not their teaching ability.
And it still seems to be all tradition. I'm having a hard time thinking of any research studies, anything scientific, that explain about someone learning music. I imagine I could find a study of how music improves standardized testing scores though, but it wouldn't explain how music students learn, what good teaching methods really are, etc. ie How to teach and how to learn. It's not very professional as a field that way.
Haha. What's this? "But, how unblessed or unlucky is a student really whose teacher has nothing better to do in life than to be teaching ?"
Oh wait.... In case it disappears, I'll capture the whole post....
Education is probably my deepest passion, and one which seems to have a bottomless pit in terms of the aspects of an individual's life to be affected. Education, like people, comes in all sorts of different shapes and sizes, yet I believe there is a fundamental vitality about each individual and humanity in general being educated. I believe education is the very progress of our world.
In the spirit of education, with the desire to become more educated myself and to become a better teacher for my dear students, I have decided to start this thread as a form of awareness. An idea that struck me this morning as I was sorting and straightening my thoughts and motives for the day, is with regard to an interesting attitude and accompanying belief-system that has a kind of presence in the music world.
Generally, it seems that teaching is looked down upon. There are a number of aspects to that, but what I want to post about in this thread today is fairly specific. What I am currently struck by is how the 'importance' of a teacher to the student is portrayed. I observe that one of the "tricks of the trade" by teachers, whether teacher by trade or teacher as a side, is to "puff" oneself up as important, since s/he has much better things in life to be doing than teaching (this or that student, or in general). It is a trick of the trade to give the air of the student being lucky to glean a crumb from the all-important table of knowledge that this teacher sits at. I, in fact, believe that the teacher's time and knowledge indeed should be respected as precious and I, in fact, believe that students who are gleaning knowledge from that kind of table are truly blessed (what many would call "lucky").
But, how unblessed or unlucky is a student really whose teacher has nothing better to do in life than to be teaching ? I wonder why a teacher must portray that they have much better things to be doing in order for others to believe that what they are teaching is important ? It seems that students/families respect a teacher less if that teacher openly has nothing better to do than to teach -- or perhaps this is at least what teachers are afraid of. For example, the artist who travels the world and has little time nor inclination to teach is more sought after than the teacher who is grounded, dedicated to that teaching job and cares deeply about their students and their teaching. It is more "Romantic" to seek, as a student, the first and as a teacher to be the first. Isn't it ? That's a strange philosophy to me.
Philosophically, to me it seems that actually the student whose teacher doesn't have anything better to do (in a way) than to be teaching you is the most lucky. Either way though, what matters most is that learning is taking place.
As a teacher myself though, I often feel I am at a crossroads as to what path I should choose to take in terms of how I present myself to others. I do wonder though, how many of the individuals who feel they must puff themselves up and treat the student as unimportant to themselves, had teachers who acted the same way with them ? Personally, I don't thrive under those conditions. Did the great pianists really thrive as a result of a teacher constantly acting as though they couldn't care less about them as a student, or was it actually the opposite ?
Done. I think there are a lot of teachers dedicated to teaching who don't *want* to do anything else than teach. Not that they couldn't do other things. (Although at some point, bridges are crossed and they won't be able to do other things.)
What difference does it make what you are or how people see you? Just be yourself. As long as you've got students coming in, you're successful. Someone will always think something else.
You can always argue:
A teacher is less of a teacher because they don't perform much. They focus on teaching.
Or, a teacher is more of a teacher and is more dedicated because they focus on teaching instead of performing.
Or...
A teacher is less of a musician because they can't support themselves through performing and *have* to teach to earn a living.
Or, a teacher is more of a musician because they choose to teach as well as perform and you can only really *know* something if you teach it.
Or, a teacher is a less of a teacher because they perform -- They really want to be a performer but are only using students for income. They focus on performance but don't really focus on teaching or improving themselves as a teacher or their students.
You can go back and forth with all those and promote or negate things whichever way you want. There's no solution to it.
Add the money/business element into it and the teacher's probably going to spin it their way.
Or people will spin it their way for whatever reason, to make themselves feel good about what they do, because they believe things one way or the other, etc.
And then you can actually do things just for the money -- I've done that for teaching ("Music teaching *** -- Pay me, I'll teach you") and you still improve your teaching skills even when you're not being serious about it.
The real world is definitely different than the theoretical side of teaching and education.