And you assume/believe he couldn't play it with the conventional sheet music?
There is zero assumptions he can't stand sheet music it makes him highly anxious and he refuses to use it. You need to realise that there are different approaches to learning and we as teachers need to be able to be flexible enough to manage it. When dealing with autistic students you should also appreciate how different they approach learning and as teachers we have a lot to learn from that!!
Even non autistic students can have the NEED to learn differently and it is something to embrace and celebrate rather than trying to assimilate it to conventions. It is akin to forcing a fish to climb a tree and if it can't it is thought to be a failure and slow learner, it is however the test itself which is the failure!!
I've converted many to learning sheet music appropriately so don't get me wrong. But there are those who indeed do not want to use it and must connect to music in other ways.
So they're completely dependant on falling notes, thus being the absolute opposite of what it takes to 'learn' something. They only reason people do these types of videos is because it means that a single person has to play it many, many, multiples of times just to learn the pieces - thus boosting their YouTube views. That's the only reason most people make them.
You have talked straight past my point that people need to learn in different ways. As a sight reader I am dependant on the sheets, someone who uses falling notes is depending on the falling notes, there's no different in terms of dependence. You also gain memory through doing both.
No... it's not. I've had many people who have tried to play many pieces of music through the 'falling notes', and generally most times their fingering is bloody awful, they can't actually play it as fluently as the video, it's heavily fragmented where they'll be able to play a single bar or 2 in time, but it's got a jillion pauses in it, and a lot of the time these videos are done by people who can't properly notate the music anyway (i.e. those who usually create musescore arrangements).
Again you have quoted me and talked past my point. People do indeed use the falling notes and connect to the piano differently to conventional sheet music. The fact that it can be done wrong is totally irrelevant, you can read and use sheet music wrong too! Fingering and appropriate practice methods can be taught through the falling notes, more recent innovations to it for example has the finger numbers attached to the falling notes and has students playing logical sections at a time. My autistic student enjoys watching people's actual hands playing with the falling notes and gets all the fingers correct, many others do just the same.
Then the problem is I have to undo all their bad habits, and show them how to play the piece properly.
Because you don't know how to teach through the falling notes medium doesn't mean it's wrong, even if a student reads sheet music there will be much to correct and improve upon.
Nice analogy... poorly thought of though.
Support your unsubstantiated claim, you are just saying this with zero evidence. There are plenty of reputable rote learning schools of music, how do you think music was played before sheet music too for thousands of years? Wake up.
There's a difference between learning by ear and the 'falling notes'.
Wrong, you can just listen to the falling notes too, why are you being so illogical?
If you hear something and you try and work it out by ear, it involves a process of trial and error in figuring out the notes until you get them right - and in doing so you are trying to process and work out the pitch of the notes faster, and with more accuracy over time. This is a skill.
This is ONE definition of what playing by ear means. It can also be used in combination with other skills, it is for instance used in sight reading all the time, why is it harder to sight read while playing on a silent piano? Obviously the ear controlling the playing is a large factor. Once more you talk past my point it's so much easier responding to people like that right? Lol
If I point to a note and tell you to play it, followed by the next note, and the next note without any reference to fingering, and tell you to do it several hundreds or thousands more times... THIS IS NOT LEARNING!!!
People learn in many ways and visually watching someone then reproducing it is a valid way to learn. You contort the process into something with zero understanding of the process so you are providing your own biased and erroneous assessment.
I don't want students to jump through hoops... I just want to give them the gift of being able to read music.
So you are saying they must learn how to read sheet music and if they can't or won't they are utter failures and should give up piano? That's your hoop right there.
That is what we are - educators. We are trying to give them independence - we are trying to give them tools they can take to other pieces of music they haven't studied with us.
Falling notes can do exactly this too.
The greatest joy in my job is when someone comes back after a couple weeks holidays, or during the week - they say to me 'I learnt this song all by myself' without any help from me in that particular piece.
Falling notes can do this as well.
Why? This way I know I am teaching them... they are not copying me - they are doing independent thought and practice... THEY are the ones learning.
They are copying what's in the sheet music. No one can learn without copying the example of something otherwise we need to recreate the wheel at all times. You can learn independently with practice with the falling notes too.
You need to realise that a teacher should LEARN from their students as well. All I am seeing from you is a stringent one direction type of learning, it's sheet music or the highway.
That's what makes a good teacher.
A good teacher adds to their pedagogical understanding and views many ways in which different people may learn. If you have a solitary preference for teaching with sheets that's fine but you then can't say other ways are wrong such as the falling notes that makes you highly close minded and the opposite of what defines a good teacher.