Marik, I don't have time atm to do this conversation justice. We are missing each other big time and that is due to background. I hope to be able to clear up just this one thing....
I thought the question was about bad teacher, rather than bad student...
The scenarios I was thinking about were things that occur here in the West, in N. America (maybe Europe too - dunno), and probably not where you are. Some examples - all of transfer students:
- a student who was superficially and poorly taught, the "teacher" going through grade level pieces, teaching them superficially, maybe by imitation, maybe with the student copying what he hears in recordings; student might not really read, be winging it, not know notes or what chords are - but has played more advanced music
- a student started off self-teaching, some of the above
- an adult who has been listening to classical music for years and so has an advanced amateur ear; or the adult has played another instrument, maybe without instruction, maybe with instruction (which may likewise be shoddy), and now starts piano
These students will have holes and weaknesses, esp. in fundamental areas, and those holes may not be readily apparent. They are not "bad students" - just poorly taught students or students who are missing things. The teacher who takes on students who have been properly taught with good foundations, in order to work on more advanced things, is used to building on those skills - he assumes that they are there. This is not a teacher who will know how to build fundamental skills, find and patch holes.
It's like I taught grade 2 public school, and my students learned the concept of what addition and multiplication were. A physics professor relies on the fact that his students understand and can manipulate numbers. He is an expert in his field of physics, where the physics lead in areas such as engineering, but he is not an expert in learning processes, the building of basic first concepts. They are both very different specializations. In the same way the advanced music teacher relies on what the first teacher built in the student, and takes this for granted.
I don't know if you have taught transfer students from such scenarios. You have only written about observing performances. These things may be quite foreign to you.
I suspect that Louis was seriously mistaught in his first years, and that is why he is up in arms as he is. Often his generalizations are too broad and sweeping, which may be a communication problem, but in this area I have my own experiences and observations. Had I known this was not straightforward, I would not have helped hijack the thread.
