Maybe I didn't express my idea perfectly by adding "even if she wasn't calm." Obviously she wasn't completely calm, but also obviously, she did maintain a respectable level of poise, which I thought could be pointed out to her. She didn't cry, as many children do in that situation, or run offstage without finishing, another popular solution. She stayed in place, kept trying, and eventually finished the piece pretty well, and went on to play a second piece. Another reason to make such a comment to a student, which perhaps I also failed to explain well, is to help her build a vision of herself as competent and calm in a crisis. People live up to the expectations of those they respect, and if she thinks her beloved teacher sees her as calm and capable, she will become even more so.
This is all great advice.
One other thing I would like to add here. Before we begin to make comments about the student and what we should or shouldn't say to her, we need to gain some sort of understanding about how the student feels about what happened. One of the ways we can do this would be through a series of questions that could get to the root of the students own perceptions about what happened, why it happened, how she felt about it, and what she can take away from the experience.
A typical, yet unfortunate, thought process after an occurrence like that might be:
What happened? I screwed up.
Why do you think you screwed up? 'cause I suck.
So, how did that make you feel? Like an idiot.
What did you learn from this? Nothing, except I hate piano, piano recitals, and people who make me do them.
Obviously, we'd like to gain a different result, so we may want to use a more subtle approach:
T - So, what did you think?
S - 'bout what? (I'm assuming here that you're dealing with a noncommittal teen)
T - About the recital.
S - It was horrible.
T - What was horrible about it?
S - I totally forgot what I was playing and I looked like a total idiot.
T - What makes you think you looked like an idiot?
S - I just sat there. I couldn't remember the notes or how to finish the piece. Everyone was just staring at me.
T - Ah, I can see how you might feel that way. However, you know what I saw?
S - What?
T - I saw someone come across a very difficult situation in life and deal with that situation with poise and grace.
S - What do you mean?
Etc., etc.
It is also possible that you could begin this conversation and find out the student already has a very healthy viewpoint about it all. She may say something like, "Can you believe it? I totally forgot what I was doing. Man that was nervewracking. All those people staring at me. I thought I would just die. But I figured, hey, I'll look a lot worse if I run out of here in tears so I figured I better just suck it up and finish. Good thing I pulled off that second piece without a hitch. By the way, I think I figured out what happened in that piece so I'd like to discuss that with you if that's OK."
Odds are most of us aren't that well adapted so we need a little help seeing the positive lessons that come out our negative experiences. The trick is to get them to identify those lessons internally rather than to have us come in and simply tell them what they're supposed to feel.
No idea if any of that made any sense. I was kind of in ramble mode there for a while.
Jef