Hey, guys just a few quick questions.
Is it me or do adult male students have the most trouble with rhythms? So far, I'm 2:1.
1) I have an adult transfer student who I am not sure fully understands eigth note rhythm\subdivision. On one piece, his eigth note rhythm is fine. In another one, it is completely off, along with his tempo at various places in the piece. He also has one other piece where the eigth note rhythm is off. I've been giving him tons of different tips on how to get the rhythm (counting out loud, clapping, metrenome- which he reminds me constantly that he hates... sigh, sometimes I wish I could be a two year and say "shut-up!" insteand of "keep trying, you'll get it.", just practicing playing eigth notes, just playing the problem measures,ect) and he keeps insisting that he has learned the piece and can't relearn it. Should I just give up and start fresh with another piece or keep doing the old piece until he gets the correct rhythm? I don't think he understands eighth notes and the only reason his other piece has the correct rhythm is because he has just "memorized" the correct rhythm. (Hopefully this makes sense.)
2. I have another adult male student who is also having problem with eighth notes and tempo. He is a beginner that I started with. When he counts out loud his rhythm is mostly correct, when he doesn't it is wrong. I was wondering about how long it should take an adult student to learn instinctively how to play eigth notes with out me forcing them to count out loud, clap, and do many other exercises.
Right now, I'm making him practice snapping to a song on cd and doing that for me each lesson, which hopefully will help with his tempo. Any suggestions about this would be appreciate. Especially, if someone has suitable physical exercises that an adult wouldn't feel stupid doing.
3. Lastly, I just want suggestions for my next question. I'm need to teach an eight year old about sixteenth notes. I would like suggestions about what worked and didn't work for you, or really simplified ways to do this so that an eight would understand the concept easily. Thanks.