thanks admedito...
hmm..... you doubt he can play well now?? (isn't that putting him down and doubting him? Although you're just being brutally honest right?) Yes, you're right. Honestly is key when you're the teacher..... do you have any advice for how i can spill out honesty to a 6 year old??? (apart from telling their parents....what can i exactly say or do.. to let them know the truth?)
thanks!
amy
Er - honesty about WHAT exactly?
I believe in honesty. I do not believe in brutality.
From a students perspective (yeah, that's me, I am intruding into your section again

): yes, I want to know what to DO next, work on pieces that are manageable in an acceptable length of time, and improve my piano playing. I would also want to know if progress is held back by a lack of skills or whatever that I can improve on OUTSIDE piano lessons.
In other words, I want to know everything that is relevant to progress and that
I have some influence upon.
So kidding yourself or the student (or the parents) on these topics is indeed very annoying (Ahmedito's case), because it wastes time. Well, you Ahmedito, realised after a while. Mistakes happen. What do you mean by " he is still too messed up", though? Have you given him up? How about getting him another teacher then?
My view on the six year-old is: a kid that young is not interested in processes that take six years, or whether they are the next Richter or not. I hope the parents aren't (primarily) either. So motivation will have to come out of enjoyment. Does the six-year old enjoy the music? If not, why, and could you change that? If there is enjoyment, there will be curiosity, if there is curiosity, there is eagerness to learn.
On re-inventing yourself - I am not sure this is necessary, as the
kid will be changing so fast at that age. A kid is likely to experience the "now that you are older we trust you are able to do this and that" all the time. Why not tell the kid (with a new piece, or even an old one): "I think you have now reached the stage, where we can go about this in a more advanced way...". Make it a challenge. Make it something the kid can be proud of.
And please, please: use REAL music. Play some Mozart, Schumann, Bach, Beethoven. The kid will be DYING to copy you.
Apologies, if I have misunderstood your problem. You might be better off reading the "how to teach young children" threads.

Egghead