In recent years, I have had a few new students (usually boys) who have learned, by rote,
some of the demo pieces on their electronic keyboards. By the time they come for lessons,
they are totally dependent on rote learning and using their ear, (the ear I encourage!).
They also use You Tube tutorial videos and learn songs from friends. Some play songs they
have heard on the radio or somewhere, entirely by ear.
The crunch comes when they resist learning to read. I have found that they easily
recognize patterns in music, whether melodic, harmonic, or rhythmic. And they tend
to read whole phrases. But learning individual note names and finding their place in the music
seem to elude them for a long period of time.
Part of the problem is that they get so much praise from their families and from kids at school because they can play such impressive pieces. And taking them through sequenced learning materials is a failure from the start, so I have learned to avoid that.
I'm not sure, though, that this is really a bad thing. They are able to enjoy the full keyboard right away, rather than being timid learners. They tend to compose a lot and remember what they have created. And they really love learning about famous musicians and the music vocabulary. I get much more feedback and dialogue with them.
I guess the compensation is that they play the piano A LOT at home, and usually come to their lessons enthused, if not necessarily cooperative. I usually let them do show and tell for the first 10 or 15 minutes, and then ask their cooperation with sight reading.
What has been your experience with this type of learners? Do you bang your head against the wall, like I do sometimes, wishing you could convince them that there's a much larger world of music out there, which they can access only by reading?