.....What do you think of this though???
I like observing other teachers work but this one is very strange and wasting time. Even though it is a small snippet it is a good example of what we should avoid imo.
The teacher is lightly supporting the student hand, so it is not like the student cannot move at all, but even asking the student to play while you hold their hand is too restrictive no matter how lightly you hold it should not be done. This is not to say you cannot touch your students playing mechanism at all but if you must do it make it an extremely brief moment, the longer you hold their body the less they understand. This method looks like the teacher is acting as training wheels and does not want to see the student do it completely on their own.
The lesson here much too slow and also extremely boring because there is no teacher student interaction, just a horse being forcefully lead to water. When she is trying to get the little girl to play two notes chromatically she misses key word directions like PUSH DOWN for the first note, PUSH OFF for the next one. Takes a few second to say it and the student will remember it and it will make them play with correct sound thus the technique can be more easily found. Why spend minutes teaching such simple things with ineffective word guidance is beyond me.
I can clearly remember when I was a child (3-5) learning piano and my father would take my hand try to move it, I hated it and it didn't make much sense to me. If I used some muscular movements of my own it would be restricted by the hand that was holding mine and it did not resemble playing the piano even if it looked correct, looking correct doesnt mean that it is feeling correct and the feeling is what the student learns from and remembers. If I totally relaxed I didn't know what I was doing, all I felt was someones hand moving my fingers.
This teacher is teaching out of "A Dozen a Day" which had many pieces of extremely basic level. These are meant to introduce to the student how to articulate (eg: Accents, Legato, staccato) and how to play some of the more simple bulding blocks of music (scales, chords, arpeggios etc). This teacher wants to transfer such exact movements with such easy exercises, it seems strange to me (like trying to squeeze out every last drop of information from a simple piece or trying to get blood from a stone!). It also makes the student think that "Oh is this how I have to do it all the time?" which is of course not the case.
So it is a waste of time and an extremely slow boring lesson to try to make something look correct and masterful when the content is below grade level. A dozen a day can also be played quite musically without perfect technique. I can remember when I was a young child one of my teachers tried to make me play Dozen a Day with flowing movements and I hated her for it and went against her wishes. I thought that making the hand move flowingly looked stupid (and still to this day hate it when I see unnecessary flowing movements). To expect these movements from A dozen a day just takes the cake.