I practice a song until I think I have the skill that is developed with it. I don't try to master it before I move on, just be able to play it well enough. I wouldn't spend a whole week on just one.
Moving on to a new piece regardless of how you play the current one sounds a bit pointless.i don't see much value in just being able to say you got to the end of a book, if you can't actually play the pieces well.
I usually work on two pieces at a time, and it usually takes me a couple of weeks to get pieces up to a level where i am happy with them enough to move one. Sometimes i keep at a piece that i like for a bit longer.Moving on to a new piece regardless of how you play the current one sounds a bit pointless.i don't see much value in just being able to say you got to the end of a book, if you can't actually play the pieces well.
I don't think I'd say that it's pointless to try to perfect some of the songs in the lesson book, to bring them up to performance level. The old adage is that you fight the way you train. When you hit "real" music you'll be practicing it the same way you've been practicing all along.
True, I just wouldn't linger around over a glitch here or there in that music but would once working on repertoire. I mean linger on Row Your Boat, come on ! And I'm speaking of the lower grade books here, mostly level 1 and part of level 2 books. Level 2 in Alfred's books you at least get Fare Well To Thee or
Does anyone return to method books later on for sight reading practice?I had thought that practising sight reading would mainly involve having a large volume of pieces to practise with, and that method books would be good for this.