I have a 5-year old girl student. I just started teaching her and need some help.
Does anyone have any ideas to make a 5-year old hyper girl to focus and make the lesson productive?
I do little games during lesson to make her little more motivated but that lasts for 3 minutes and the lesson is 30 minutes long.
HELP ME PLEASE !!!
I have also found that a planned routine that includes some physical movement can help. In the beginning of the lesson try standing up and jumping some simple rhythms... "quarter--quarter---half note..." or "Ta ta ti ti ta" whatever system you use. This helps to get rid of some of that excess energy those little ones have. This is productive as it places the entire body into the rhythm. Have music playing in the background or use rhythm tracks from the keyboard.
Another thing the young ones love is changing the sounds on the keyboard... this can make all the difference in the world. Sometimes a nice synth sound or vibes --- is fascinating to them. This can be a reward... play it right on the piano sound... and you can pick the next sound we use... again... completely productive.
Kids love to color... draw notes on the dry-erase board... have her color in the quarter notes.. and leave the half and whole notes empty... teach her to draw a treble clef or bass clef... these are all very productive.
Match pitches on the piano... THIS IS GREAT... play it and have her sing the pitch back... be happy when she get's it right.
Clap rhythms and have her identify them... keep it simple.
Play major and minor chords... and have her identify them as happy or sad. Teach her to recognize her intervals... a P4 is "here comes the bride" -- a M6 is "my bonnie lies over the ocean" etc. ear training is awesome.
Try to get her into a pattern of success... no matter how small.. and keep building on that.
I have been there...

lol.
The mean strict thing... I just can't do it...so I don't try. I have always been a firm believer in "you catch more flies with honey than with vinegar." That has worked for me for 20 years.