Hello,
I have really benefited from the comments and suggestions everyone has said! Anda, that's great that you have someone who is so interested in what you do, that she will actually stay near you to watch how you teach people...it sounds like she will be a great teacher someday!

I currently have only one student, a 12-year-old boy (actually he's my brother

); I will hopefully be getting two more students in September. All 3 are/will be beginners. For the 12-year-old, I just have him use my own practice routine on a MUCH smaller scale (obviously on a smaller scale, as I am the teacher and he is the student!). Since he is my brother, I am withing hearing range of each of his practice sessions and am able to make adjustments to his practice and assignment accordingly. This is the regular practice routine:
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-Warm up with Technic book. Play 3 times with metronome. Gradually work up tempo to 76 beats per minute.
-For each piece:
-Day 1 of practice: Divide piece into 4-measure sections. Practice each part slowly, no mistakes, 1 time right hand, 1 time left hand, 3 times hands together. Then, whole piece slowly as well as possible 3 times.
-Day 2 of practice: Whole piece slowly, counting to self, but always counting 3 times. Whole piece moderate tempo to see if there are trouble spots. If so, stop on each spot and play it perfectly 3 times in a row at a moderate to should-sound tempo. Whole piece moderate tempo, as well as possible 3 times.
-Day 3 of practice: Whole piece moderate tempo 3 times. Whole piece should-sound to see if there are trouble spots. If so, stop on each spot and play it perfectly 3 times in a row at a moderate to should-sound tempo. Whole piece should-sound, as well as possible, without stopping on mistakes, 3 times.
-Day 4 of practice: Whole piece should-sound as well as possible without stopping. If trouble spots, play whole piece again and stop on each spot, then play each spot perfectly 3 times in a row. Whole piece slowly 1 time. Whole piece moderately 1 time. Whole piece should-sound 3 times.
-Day 5 of practice. Piece should be well-learned by today. If not, continue with the above practice plan to work out any trouble spots. If learned, review by playing should-sound 3 times.
-Play a review piece for fun.
Note: Don't worry if you can't finish everything in one day [which he tends to try to do]--you're not supposed to be able to! The assignment is for a WHOLE week, not just one day.
Note about tempo: If a piece is supposed to be played at, for example, 100 BPM, slowly (see practice plan above) would be around 60 BPM; moderately would be around 80 BPM; and should-sound (the tempo it should be at--what it "should-sound" like) would be 100 BPM.
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Assignments usually contain music from the following: Lesson book, Technic book, Performance book, Theory book, Notespeller, Piano Explorer (a music magazine; student reads it and then we talk about it, listen to recordings of the highlighted composers and instruments, etc.), Hymn book, as well as any recital music he is working on at the moment. I'm working on writing a practice plan for recital music but it hasn't been finished yet; for now he just uses his regular practice plan for recital pieces, but more in-depth and for a longer period of time.
Practice required is 30 minutes a day, 5 days a week. I have him write how long he practices in a designated section on the practice assignment sheet.
I only teach a 30-minute lesson, so there is just way too much to try to cover in every lesson. I usually try to write the following week's lesson plan as soon as this week's lesson is over, so I can write it based on how things went this week. I don't cover the same parts of the assignment every week, so I move things around depending on how much time is needed for a certain concept or piece, and how much of the previous week's assignment we went over. Whatever we don't go over at the lesson just gets bumped to the beginning of the next lesson.
I try to expose my students (no matter the level) to good music. I get lots of recordings at the library and then play one every few lessons and we talk about it. For beginners I just ask them to tell me a word that describes the piece. The discussion about the music will get more complex as I get students who are intermediate or advanced level.
I plan to incorporate sight-reading, ear training, harmony, improv, transposition, jazz, music history, and other areas of music, into my lessons as time allows. Obviously not everything can be covered in every lesson (unless lessons happen to last all day!), but hopefully all these areas of study will be covered in some depth over the lessons.
Wow, now that (I think) was my longest post ever on ANY music forum!

Now that I've given you all the details of what I do could someone offer suggestions (constructive criticism)? I'm new to teaching and so I rely a lot on other people's help!
Thanks!
~Lauren~