Absolutely. I think as a teacher, you need to implicitly trust your student in a certain manner. You need to trust that they will improve and observe their improvements, without being too pushy. Even better, you need to be able to get a sense of when a student understands they are improving and when they don't. Otherwise, you become that teacher who just has a tic where they repeat something ad infinitum which the student already understands.
I think if you become a pushy teacher who monitors everything and anything and jumps on everything that is not going right, you are going to make most students somewhat dread lessons rather than look forward to it. Some teachers may disagree with me but I really think that having a relaxed student is the number one priority for an effective lesson. The student should be excited to have the lessons, they should feel like it is a cozy space for them and the teacher to do some work in and debate ideas in. A teacher may never witness how a student really functions if the student is not relaxed.
Developing self efficacy in people who lack it, children especially, is one of the most challenging parts of education for a teacher since much of that is influenced by how one has been brought up. It certainly is not helped if you hound your students, they never will naturally develop a responsbility for their work and always work in fear they will dissapoint someone if they don't do well. Instead of hounding the students you try to excite them and get them to create their own bounds as to how much work they put into their practice. I have had to go so simple as to make students do non piano activities every day just to practice the idea of fitting an activity into the daily routine. A star jump when you wake up every day or something else crazy. I've even gone as simple as asking that a single bar of music is totally mastered for the next week. These may seem ridiculously simple but it does make changes to those who really need to start out taking responsbility successfully and somewhere as basic as it gets.
I like to see people fish for themselves but there are those who you are always dragging through the course. It can take years before there is a change you need a lot of patience as a teacher. Too many teachers are too impatient in this approach, if the student fails it's the students fault for not working hard enough or following the teachers directions. But how do you as a teacher make your students into more responsible creatures who care about their musical education? A students failure is totally the teachers fault, a students success is ultimately their own! That's harsh but we are servants being teachers, we should have no glory.