I do teach students efficient practice methods. I even give them ways to practice in their journal on a week to week basis - even from beginning students doing 3 note songs on the treble clef. It's a tie between doing a moderate amount of practice... and using their practice time efficiently by practicing in the right way.
Of course I don't mean that you don't do such things, I was repeating what you said. Practice method is such an important issue to discuss which I feel not enough teacher do, HOW to practice rather than constantly WHAT to practice.
I do ask students how much they've practiced and I feel that while I am a piano teacher - I understand that other things can get in the way at random times preventing them from practicing - and by that I use it as a way to judge their commitment to piano.
This is a natural process we as teachers go through but I feel that we want to stop doing it. There is no need to ask how much they have practiced if you merely go through the work during the lesson, how much they have practice will reveal itself unavoidably. So instead of asking about the amount of practice I tend to ask things like what they have got up to, or what parts were challenging etc. Rather than use the word "practice", how much did you practice, what did you practice, did you practice enough etc. This seems a subtle difference but it makes a large difference vs students who struggle to practice on their own. Those who don't practice don't get a chance to say they didn't practice and give excuses as to why, we merely do work in lessons.
If a kid tells me that they were playing games on their iPad 6 nights a week and couldn't practice, then I know they're not committed. If a student tells me they couldn't practice during the week because they had a Major assignment that was due and a couple of tests - I can give them the benefit of the doubt that while they intended to practice, they couldn't because they probably had genuine tasks that had a higher priority.
This idea of commitment I think needs not our input as a teacher unless of course the student is fooling themselves (eg: They do no practice but think that they do as much as they can). We need a lot of patience with these students because if we call them up on their commitment due to lack of practice we are simply not going to help them at all become more committed, we want them to be relaxed in lessons not feel tense if they didn't practice, to feel safe if they are a failure because we are working together at this at the same level, not the teacher dragging you up.
..a good teacher doesn't usually expect that a student from week to week will achieve exactly 'this pre-determined task being completed'.
We of course would love that they complete tasks that we set for them and then more. I would say a large majority of my students complete everything I set for them and always come to the next lessons with more questions and enjoy reporting what they experienced during the week practicing alone. This is a great situation to be in. What I am more concerned about in this thread are the students who really struggle to practice, those who would give up because we keep telling them they are not practicing enough, those whos parents think they are not enjoying the piano because they are not practicing enough. It is these troubled students this thread is really honing in on. The vast majority of students really work hard and enjoy working with a teacher, but even then those students too need to learn to be inspired to do work not because they have to answer to someone but because they take pride in their work and enjoy that responsibility.
Some of them might be feeling down on themselves because they know they could have squeezed an extra 20-30 mins during the week doing practice instead of watching Netflix, or playing bloody Minecraft; students need to see that if they put in the effort, then they gain an appreciation for their instrument and this in turn nurtures their love for the instrument - that there is a sense of satisfaction gained from putting in the time and effort into piano practice
Exactly. It would be great if these younger students who could easily lose hours a day from computer games learn to take more responsbility with other activities which are not just about having fun. That is a tough ask though because as we know the mentality of kids is attuned to play. When I was a younger teacher I would explain all sorts of tools to struggling students who didn't practice much, tools they could use to become more disciplined, the analogy that "what gets written gets done" and going through all sorts of ways to do that (eg: timetabling, goal setting, musical journal keeping etc). I never converted one student to become more disciplined that way, certainly never for the long term.
So I found that just being patient with those students and not tearing them down for not practicing enough, not telling them off, not explaining they could do so much better if they did more at home. We just do the work in the lesson. Get through as much work as we can, then observe how much work we did get through together and then commend the student for getting through that work and maintaining focus in the lesson. High praise during lessons I think is important for these struggling students.
A good teacher also congratulates a student on their progress based upon what they have achieved in a week. If they can play a piece moderately well in the lesson, but come back and play it proficiently and confidently (but didn't finish learning a 2nd piece), we still congratulate them for progressing. Any teaching expecting a student to do a pre-defined set of work from week to week is kidding themselves.
Yes it is natural to commend your students on the work they achieved on their own. The thing I feel though is that if they are feeding off those comments it is not a good situation, they need to want to do it ultimately for themselves and not to please anyone else. This is the subtle difference I was trying to present and I feel that it makes a large difference. Yes we can have effective lessons with a student only working hard to satisfy others, but what about the other side, where there is no satisfying anyone else but yourself and your own sense of value.
Nowadays, in wealthier groups of students - you find they do Yoga on Monday, Horse riding on Tuesdays, Basketball on Wednesdays, Swimming on Thursdays, extra Math Tuition on Fridays... no bloody wonder they don't have time to practice regularly. I personally think with some students, it's showing them how awesome piano can be, and if they see that - they will BEGIN to put in the time to make it a priority. I will admit, since I teach students who do 2 instruments (usually piano to begin with, then a string instrument in Year 3), I find they usually drop one for the other. Luckily for me, it is usually that they drop their string instrument for piano... but in the rare case, they go for the string instrument over the piano. I guess for them, they seem to have found a love for their other instrument that piano couldn't satisfy, and they sadly enough just don't usually have time to properly practice both.
Yeah those poor overworked students I have come across it is really tragic. I can remember one girl I taught she did an activity every single day and did swimming at a state level. She would often just cry in our lessons because she was exhausted and expected so much of herself because of the constant pressure on her, it was quite confronting! What can you do with these poor overworked students? I usually spend a little time just chatting to them because I don't want to put a huge work load onto their shoulders, what is the point in that, I don't want to be a contributor to their mental breakdown. I make sure the weekly targets seem very easy for these students something you should do for all struggling students.
It might confuse people to think, why am I talking about targets and goals that the teachers set when I was talking about the student working of their own volition. In fact we can suggest how much to do that is fine so long we don't overstep the mark and constantly have the students realize they fall short from what we ask for. We should suggest what to do but it always should be manageable and not something they need to put a huge amount of work in to complete. We must be wary to give a small enough task during the week that they can easily complete, this then sets them up perhaps to do even more work than was asked, this is a situation you want to get these students into. To actively choose to do more than what was asked, but that can only really occur if you really give them less work, it is a handy tactic to use for struggling students to CHOOSE to do their own amount of work.
... I find some students like the 'concept' of learning the piano, but usually don't like it after a year because they can't play Fur Elise by then, and realise that piano isn't something you just instantly pick up. You see, because of YouTube - there are videos of 5 year olds playing Bach & Mozart. We've saturated them with videos of what can be done, but they can't understand that these are rare cases that almost no normal student can really achieve.
Taking inspiration from other people and working from other peoples achievements, something that I really try to avoid in lessons. I have had beginner students who bring to me such difficult music for themselves and insist they learn it. This is a different problem I feel than those who don't want to practice. I can see some sort of connection that they lack practice because they think the work they have been set is not at a high standard. They find that they struggle with this easier work and thus feel demoralized and don't want to practice because others do much better than themselves. That isn't something that takes much effort to break down, just needs a little bit of therapy in the piano lesson haha, in saying that though I have had one particular student who couldn't get over the fact that little children were playing many levels higher than they were and gave up eventualy because of that, what can you do?!
I don't think it is really a vicious cycle. Lack of energy causes lack of practice - fine; that's a given... but as I said - a good teacher knows the difference between the inability to find time to practice, and the inability to want to find time to practice.
I mean if you are exhausted you will not practice much and then if the teacher complains you are not practicing enough then it makes you more tired each time you think about practicing because there is so much mental pressure surrounding the whole situation. If parents are on the students back to practice more, if the parents start feeling annoyed that they constantly have to tell the student to practice, this all creates a bad learning environment which really will absorb energy from the student and lowers the propensity to do work. That is the vicious cycle I observe.
I teach in Perth, and I swear - the people here are Sports crazy. It's sad that because of a 3-day lockdown we had to cancel the ANZAC ceremonies; but despite that - all the sports games are still going on this weekend (albeit without crowds).
We teach in the same area, I'm sure you have also had many sport students miss classes because they have some sporting event, or need to change times because sports is more important. lol.
I genuinely think it's a matter of priorities. We try to pitch why Piano is awesome compared to every other instrument they could learn, every sport they could invest time in... and against every single school teacher lobbing homework at them every day of the week.
I take a lot of interest in their other activities and enjoy chatting to them about it and seeing what they do in that. Two brothers I taught last week won awards at the state swimming competitions and were showing me all their awards. I don't ever find myself talking about how good piano is, never once. Personally I find no need to tell my students that they need to find that themselves. I guess I am a little different to most teachers because I also hate reading the scientific reports of how good piano is for the brain. I cant stand it when I have new students and their parents are like, we want our child to learn the piano because we have heard how good it is for their brain development etc etc. For me I think that is NOT a good reason to study the piano.
A good teacher will tell students why they should practice and nurture as early on their need to practice to show them that they can progress and achieve higher and higher goals if that is the path they want to achieve. A good teacher doesn't dictate what a student should do from week to week and demand that their goals should be met... but a good teacher can see when a student is applying themselves in a single half hour lesson... but refuses to put in any effort in the other 167.5 hours we don't see them.
Yes there is nothing wrong with explaining the benefits of practice, how to practice, how to become more effective at practice etc, these all can be demonstrated in lessons we have through action and result. I feel we do need to talk about the benefits of practice so that the students are aware of such things. We do need to be wary with those students who struggle to practice on their own since we can talk about all these benefits and advantages but they might never do it and thus feel a failure they can't observe it or it gives them reason just to not care since it is some ideas that is not a part of them and out of reach, just an imagination. I have had this sort of stalemate with students so I wonder how is it we make the benefits of practice become apparent to them intrinsically, and I try to demonstrate that through action more so than verbalise it.
Some students are not honest with me about their practice so I constantly tell them that they need to be honest with themselves, they don't need to trick me or their parents or anyone else that they have done an amount of work, they need to be honest with themselves and be able to tell themselves truthfully what has been done. From my ~50 one on one students students I teach each week I would say I currently have around 10% who practice poorly and need a lot of help in that department. They are all at different levels of non practice and improvement. I encourage the parents not to pressure these students to practice (which might feel like the opposite thing to do) and give me time to work with them.
It really is a challenging situation which extends beyond the piano education. Lack of practice and motivation to do work has a macroscopic effect on the students life. I used to tutor maths and science to school students too and dealt with a lot of D grade students. It was not that these students were not smart but they fell behind and then couldn't catch up thus another vicious circle popped up, they fell behind, they tried to catch up but couldn't, it demoralized them so they fell behind even more. Piano can feel the same way as we constantly progress. Sometimes with these struggling students it can be an idea to go back to work they did in the past, it should feel easier for them the 2nd time you go through it and feel a lot less stressful. Making these students feel relaxed and notice they can get through work effectively during lessons really can change their perspective especially if they have a teacher who walks besides them rather than one which drags them up.
Cheers for your input PP.