What Kids Like About Piano Lessons
What kids like about piano lessons is, I believe, the one-on-one time with a caring adult. Making music is fun, but the real attraction is the interaction with the teacher. Thus there are aspects of piano lessons that children enjoy outside of the music teaching itself.
The famed Shaw study points out that children have a rise in IQ simply by spending happy, useful time with a sympathetic adult. Kids like attention. And a creative piano teacher is nothing if not an attention-paying machine. We watch their fingers, their mood, their posture, and their skills.
A Half Hour With A Caring Adult
Think of a piano lesson as an educational and emotional spa for children. A piano lesson should have the relaxed, regenerative effects of a spa visit, if it is done correctly. It is easy to make learning the piano into drudgery. Many piano teachers have perfected this pointless specialty on countless millions of willing victims.
A better approach is to engage the child directly, at their emotional level. This is absolutely necessary to establish a teacher-student relationship that has aspects of both friendship and apprenticeship.
How Are They Feeling Today?
It is more important to greet the student and find out what their “weather” is like today. Don't leap into the next aspect of your method at the beginning of a lesson. I’ve found that very interesting avenues of conversation can be opened up by simple questions like, “What music have you heard lately that you like?”
A child might answer that they like the music to a commercial, or ask if you can play it. If you can, do so. If not, steer the conversation to some song that both of you know, but for which they show a demonstrable enthusiasm.
Find Out What They Want To Play
Many children will say they have a CD (or on their cell phone) with a track from a band. Have them play the song on their device and see if there is any recognizable portion you can figure out. Then play it for them, even if only with one finger. Then teach them that song, or a portion.
This “transparent” approach to a piano lesson does two things. First, it gives the child a musical experience with a song they like and will want to play. Second, they are party to a collaborative search for music, its arrangement, and performance. The teacher really acts more as a guide than an unstoppable, infallible master, demanding specific achievements.
Digressions Are Fruitful
There’s time enough for reading music and other pursuits. The child will be satisfied that they have had a few moments of interesting talk and playing the piano.
Perhaps there’s time enough for a tiny bit of reading music, which they will be willing to do now that they have had fun. Give in to the child’s mood. Then use that mood to help them find ways to enjoy the piano.
REFERENCES
Child’s Point of View
Don't Tell Kids How Hard the Piano Is
Number Sheets For The Piano
The Pillow and the Piano
What The Piano Means To Your Child
A Child’s Point of View
Finding A Child’s Piano Comfort Zone
Why Kids Need Freedom To Learn Piano
A Bill of Rights for Kid’s Piano
How Kids See The Piano
Inside A Kid’s Head During A Piano Lesson
Kids Don’t Care What’s In The Piano Book
Let The Child Appear To Lead The Piano Lesson
What Bores Children In Piano Lessons?
The Teacher Is More Important Than The Book
Strict Piano Lessons Don’t Work For Kids
The Piano Is A Child’s Thinking Machine
How A Child Sees The Piano Keyboard
Kids Like Holiday Songs On The Piano
I Want To Learn That Song That Goes…
Follow The Child’s Pace With Piano Lessons
Discipline and Repetition Don’t Work in Kid’s Piano
Every Child Learns Piano Differently
Funny Piano Lessons
Engage Kids With The Piano
How A Child Sees The Piano
What Kids Think In A Piano Lesson
What Is Soft Piano?
Freestyle Kid’s Piano
What Kids Need In Piano Lessons
Piano By The Numbers
Piano With Numbers Keys