A Merry Musical Christmas: Piano Advent Calendar

25 days, 25 Christmas piano activities to bring in the
Christmas season 

Now available for free download on my Freebies page is a Christmas advent calendar activity to use with your piano students during the month of December.

This fun activity will encourage good practicing skills as students count
down the days until Christmas with a Christmas practicing activity each day
of December. It includes a variety of activities to practice sight reading,
performing, technique, theory and more.

Print the colorful numbered cards with the activities on the backs, and each day students have a short activity to do to help bring in the Christmas season!

Once each activity is completed they may tape or
glue the card to their blank calendar, filling up the days and counting down until
Christmas! You may want to decide on a prize they receive when the whole
chart is filled out, or a very small treat to go along with each day’s activity.

Merry Christmas!

The Building Blocks of Piano Incentive Program

Sometimes our students need a little extra motivation to get their practicing done each week. We as teachers also hope to train well-rounded musicians who not only can play some fun repertoire, but have a good knowledge of music theory, great technique and also some foundational keyboard skills to use in creating and composing their own music. I have created a fun incentive program to help motivate students to practice consistently in each of these categories. I created this program with my 6-year-old son in mind, as he loves building with Legos!

This incentive program focuses on four elements of piano lessons to help students become well-rounded musicians. Builders (Muscle Builders, technique exercises, etc.), Pieces (repertoire), Creativity (improvisation, composition, etc.), and Theory.

 

Students earn blocks for daily practice of assigned “projects” in each category! They keep track by coloring in blocks on their practice chart (included), then are awarded for their practicing. Students can keep track of their progress with the printable building blocks by “building” something with them in their student binder.

Download includes Weekly Project Assignment Sheets (with practice chart), Building Blocks of Piano chart to hang in studio, Practicing Progress Charts to keep track of each student’s progress, printable building block pieces and building sheet for student binder, and Master Practicer certificate.

This is the part I am really excited about! You can opt to award each colored practicing block with an actual Lego or other brand piece. Students fill up a jar throughout the semester, and at the end of the semester they get to keep the Lego pieces they earned!

Just so you can get an idea of how long it would take to fill up a jar, pictured here is a 22-oz jar filled with a variety of blocks. This size jar would be filled up with daily practice (meaning all 7 days) in each of the four categories within six weeks. It would take longer for only 5 or 6 practice days per week, and for occasionally missing days or not practicing in each of the categories.

I really like this set of Lego pieces (LEGO Bricks & More Builders of Tomorrow Set 6177
); not a bad deal for 650 pieces!
Here are a couple of samples – first the Weekly Project Assignment Sheet, where you can assign an activity in each of the four areas. Students color in the blocks for practicing done. At the end of the semester, students who have earned a set number of blocks (you decide!) get this Master Practicer certificate! You may even decide to award those students with a studio party, including watching The LEGO Movie
or another fun activity of your choice!

The Building Blocks of Piano incentive program may be purchased here, or in The Teaching Studio Store.

Price: $10.00

Happy building – and practicing!

 

New Item in the Store: Piano Pirate Incentive Pack!

Well folks, it’s been awhile! I want to introduce my adorable son, Oliver! He was born promptly on his due date, and is overall a pleasant, sweet little boy. We sure do love him!

I’m also excited to share something new with you that I have been busy working on! I have decided this summer to teach my son James piano lessons (we shall see how it goes, with me being his mother and all 🙂 …. can’t hurt to try!). I of course wanted to keep it fun and low-key, especially since he’s out of school for the summer and we are always in need of fun things to keep us busy. And we’ve been sort of into pirates lately at our house – Tinkerbell & Peter Pan, the Swiss Family Robinson (great movie, by the way!). So, I created a fun pirate-themed incentive plan to use for his piano lessons, and I think it would be awesome for YOUR studio to use as well!

My favorite part about this incentive packet is the awesome treasure map! I had a lot of fun making it. It includes eleven destinations (for eleven weeks of lessons), is music/piano-themed, and ends on the “X marks the spot” where a fun treasure is waiting! And it looks pretty awesome enlarged and hanging in your studio.

Basically, students get points each week for assignments practiced and such, and as they earn points they move along on the treasure map. Each week they should be able to arrive at one of eleven destinations, where they have a chance to open your studio treasure chest and pick a fun prize. At the end of the eleven weeks, you can have a bigger treasure chest waiting with a fun end-of-the-semester prize of your choice. My son is really enjoying it and is so excited when he gets to put his stickers on the map and get closer to each destination!

So what does this incentive pack include? You get the awesome treasure map. You get two 14-page student “pirate assignment books” to use for the entire eleven weeks. These include space to write down weekly assignments in different categories, and a section to mark off practicing done on each part of the lesson. Each week’s page includes a fun picture of the destination on the map for that week. One book is for beginners, and includes songs, muscle builders, workbook (theory), and games/activities, and the other is for more advanced students and includes sections to write down repertoire, technique, and theory. Also included are some cards with good habits that piano students should have, and instructions for a way to implement those into the lesson for the student to earn “pirate piano points.” And there are, of course, ideas and suggestions on how to use all of this and how to make it a super fun program! I’ve done all the work for you, all you need is to get a couple of treasure chests and some prizes and you will be set!

Come on over and visit The Teaching Studio Store, where this Piano Pirate Incentive Pack is now available for purchase! Or, you can purchase it directly from this post. I hope you enjoy! Anchors aweigh!

Piano Pirate Incentive Pack
Price: $10.00

Points for Prizes

Jenny Jones here. For the beginning of summer lessons, I wanted a fresh way to motivate my students to practice. Most were already in the habit of practicing everyday, though not always effectively. I felt like they were feeling in a rut, and I was feeling like I had lots of extra time on my hands, being done with school, and all. So I developed Points for Prizes.

How it works:

I made notebooks for each student with pages that look like this

 and inserts that look like this (with room at the bottom for special student-specific points-earning activities)

Each week I have them keep track of what they practice each day, with the charts on the right of the assignments, as well as the number of minutes at the bottom (PI, in the notes section, is for parent initials 🙂 just to keep things honest).
When they come to their lessons,  I have a chart for each student where I keep track of the points they’ve earned that week.

When they get to a hundred points, they get a sticker. When they get to 300 points, they start earning prizes.

The way I figured out the points  and prizes began with what my expectations are for their practice. I expect them to practice everything everyday. That’s why that is worth so many points. I also want them to spend lots of time at the piano. I think a lot of my most valuable time at the piano was “goofing off”, not playing what I had already played, but learning new things by sight reading, picking out things by ear, etc. This way I’m rewarding both good practice and lots of it. Once I knew what I wanted every student to do every week, I started assigning point values to those assignments. I decided that 70 points a week was sufficient and sustainable (we can’t have them burning out).

Then I had to decide how much the prizes would be worth. This was trickier, and I’m still trying to figure some of them out. At first, I decided it would be by cost to me. I was willing to spend x amount per student per week if everybody was achieving those 70 points. But the challenge is that the older students are, the more expensive they are to motivate. I’m talking about the 10 to 12 year olds. Anyone older than that isn’t really interested. Plus, there comes a point when they need to be internally motivated. I’m trying to build solid practice habits now.

Things I think are working:

*Motivating younger students–the 5 to 9 year olds are eating this up.

*The expectation–I was happy to find out that many of my students already were doing some of these things. By spelling everything out like this, they are starting to prioritize they way I’d like them to prioritize (“oh, you mean, if I practice everything every day, I get a bonus of 30 points?!” “you mean, it’s not enough to just play the piano for 30 minutes every day?”).

*My instructions–I’m learning to be very specific in how they should practice, which is what I should have been doing all along. With some students it isn’t enough to say, “Learn this for this week.” I have to help them find the hard spots, make a plan for how to practice those sections differently, and then do some practicing in the lesson where we learn just how many times it takes them to get something solid. Since I am rewarding them for good practice, they want to know just what it takes to get the reward, so they are very interested in creating the plans for good practice. It’s kind of win-win.

Things that I still need to figure out:

*Motivating older students–one parent had a great solution. She said there was a toy that her son really wanted that they were willing to buy for him, but that he would earn it via this points system. So I sent her the points information and told her what my expectations are and then asked her to decide how many weeks of good practice she thought this toy was worth. Hopefully it helps him! The problem is that at this age, the kids are starting to be doing things by internal motivation, and then this amounts to bribery instead of incentive. If they really don’t want to practice, they won’t.

*Group prizes–I want to have a pizza party at the end of the summer. At first, I was going to have it for everyone who got x or more points. But I didn’t want to exclude anyone, especially the very young kids who aren’t practicing that much anyway. So then I decided that I’d do a group effort. If, as a group, we get x points, then we can have a pizza party. But I’m not sure what a reasonable number is at this point. This could be effective for kicking in some urgency. I will have a poster that shows how close we are to the number of needed points. If, come the beginning of August, we’re not on target, then I know at least a few of them will start some crazy practicing in order to push the numbers up.

*Long-term effects–I don’t like a lawyerly kind of “payment” for practice. Also, I don’t know how to insert a bit of new excitement into the program every semester or so. Maybe new prizes showcased every few months. Or a twist that involves some group lessons and the attendant activities. Ideas?

SHHHH…Your Piano Teacher Thinks This is Practice: review and giveaway!

Today I am excited to tell you about a new practice resource made available by Andrea and Trevor over at Teach Piano Today (which, by the way, is an amazing resource full of fun and creative ideas for piano teachers…I am excited to peruse their website more and I’m inspired by their creativity!).

SHHHH… Your Piano Teacher Thinks This is Practice is a book with 88 fun, creative and sometimes random practice exercises and games that will “exhilarate, motivate, and inspire piano students to practice each and every single day… with no hassle, no struggle, no prodding, and no bribing!” (quoted from their website – sounds like a good deal to me!)

The format of the book is super fun, with cute illustrations on each page. It’s kind of like a top-secret notebook full of fun things to do; it is written in a fun and humorous way, and even includes a couple of notes to the neighbors, apologizing for the loud piano music and saying “the book made me do it!” This book seems like something I would have loved as a kid!

As I read through these exercises I found myself smiling and laughing at some of the clever and inventive ways the authors have come up with to encourage children to practice their pieces. Don’t just clap a rhythm…hop it on one leg! Call up a relative and give them a performance over the phone! Each exercise has students drilling measures, playing pieces in creative ways, identifying and practicing difficult measures, working on articulation, turning pieces into fairy tales, balancing on one foot while drilling rhythm, doing number games to determine number of repetitions for a section of a piece, coloring, cutting things out, etc. There will never be a dull practice day with this fun book.


(Here are some sample pages made available by the authors on their website.)

Not only are these exercises creative and fun, but most of them also encourage good and sound practicing techniques. I think that through doing these exercises students will not only have more fun with their practicing, but they will become better and more thoughtful practicers. This book is meant as a supplement to the student’s regular practicing. It is a perfect way to add a little excitement to the practice session.

I really think this is a fantastic resource and cannot wait to use it with some of my students. As there are 88 daily exercises in the book, I can’t help but think what a wonderful summer practicing program this would make! I LOVE that when you purchase the book, you are granted the right to make unlimited copies for your private piano studio. What a great deal!

Andrea and Trevor have been kind enough to offer to give away a copy of their book to TWO lucky Teaching Studio readers! To enter, please leave me a comment! Giveaway ends on Friday, May 1 at 11:59 pm Central time. Winner will be announced Saturday morning.

New Printable: Piano Point Card

I hope you all are having a wonderful evening! I have another free printable for you tonight…something super simple that has been a big hit in my studio.

I have often used some kind of practice incentive in my studio, the most effective (and simple) being some type of card where students can keep track of points earned for various activities. I used to give out points for things such as: reaching a weekly practice goal, passing off a piece, coming to lessons prepared, performing a piece, etc. Most recently, I decided to try out a fabulous idea that I read on Laura’s blog months ago.

Basically, I handed out a list of “Signs of a Good Student” at the beginning of the semester. I used many of Laura’s same items, and added or adapted others. Each week, students start out the lesson by choosing a “mystery card,” which has one of the signs of a good student on the back. During the lesson I watch to see if they did it, and if they did they get a point on their point card.

Students fill out the point card by placing a sticker on one of the keys. Once the keyboard is filled, they earn a prize. I have found this to be a great way to encourage good practice habits in my studio. I like that the card can take awhile to fill out (with students usually earning one point per week, and sometimes bonus points for various things), but also does not include too many spots for stickers that it is unattainable.

Download the point card here or on my “Printables & Downloads” page. Cut it in half and you’ve got two point cards. Enjoy!

What type of practice incentives do you use in your studio?

Teaching Tip Tuesday: Kids LOVE Stickers.

Teaching Tip #5: Kids LOVE Stickers

At times when a little more motivation is needed but you don’t want your students to only practice because they want to win a really cool prize, I have found that stickers work like a dream. They are inexpensive and with a large variety your student will never get tired of receiving them. Something about those cute little sticky circles have an almost magic effect on a young child – eyes light up and excitement mounts as they get to pick their own sticker (the ballerina and the pony go the fastest in my studio) and put it on the page in their spot of choice.

My young students get to put a sticker on the page of their piece when they pass it off. We pass off technique assignments with stickers. I use them to show on a picture of a keyboard which notes are needed in an arpeggio. Sometimes after a really good lesson a student gets to pick one to put on their shirt. You get the idea. We love stickers in my studio! Sometimes I even give them to teenagers or adults – because let’s face it, old people love stickers too!

p.s. If you want some really cute music-related stickers, check out the Music for Little Mozarts sticker book, available on Amazon.com. They are super cute!

Studio Idea: have a sight reading competition!

I hope everyone is having a great weekend, and for those in the U.S., I hope you do lots of fun fireworks or something to celebrate the 4th! I myself am having a grand time visiting my in-laws in Eastern Oregon – I sneakily (or not so sneakily) wrote this post a few days ago and post-dated it. I love technology 🙂

Here’s a little idea I have (but have not tried yet) – why not have a sight reading competition in your studio?

You could challenge each student to keep track of their sight reading – either by how much time they have spent or how many lines or pieces they have sight read each week. Keep track on a big, colorful chart in your studio and at the end of the month (or however long you decide the competition will run), the winner gets a prize. If you teach a lot of advanced students, you could challenge them to sight read pieces from the piano literature of the great composers (and maybe get in on the fun yourself!)

I think this would be a wonderful way to motivate your students to sight read, and to get them to make sight reading a habit.

Practicing Incentives

My hope, as a piano teacher, is to eventually teach my students to love music, to love it so much that their motivation for practicing is that they want to become better, that they love making music. I want them to practice so they can perfect that challenging piece, so that they can experience that great feeling when they have really accomplished something wonderful.

But sometimes students (especially the young’uns) need a little bit of extra motivation and incentive now and then. Now of course, you don’t want them to solely practice just so they can get that prize – but what if they wouldn’t even practice otherwise? Isn’t it better for the student to practice consistently just so they can earn a prize, than to not practice at all? Rewards, prizes, and other incentives definitely have a place in early music study, and when used wisely can be a great help in training young musicians.

As a young piano student, my teacher gave us points each time we passed off a song. Each time our card of points was filled, we received a coupon for a free ice cream cone. How exciting it was to fill out those cards! Sometimes students need something like that to show them how much they have accomplished. And to be perfectly honest, for some reason my sisters and I hardly ever redeemed those ice cream cone coupons (I know, weird huh?) – we had this huge stack of them in our piano bench (why didn’t we redeem those?? that is so ridiculous). Even if you use a card or chart and students receive stickers for passing off certain assignments, having that visual representation of their progress can be very motivating for some students!

As a teenage piano teacher, I challenged my students to practice a certain amount each day and to record their practice time. In the summer when they came prepared to their lessons and had done their practicing, I used to take them out to our big freezer after their lessons and give them an Otter Pop (mmmmm…I can taste it now…). Students love getting small rewards, and a cold treat on a hot day might just be the motivation they need! It can be something very inexpensive (stickers and Otter Pops are definitely affordable, especially if you buy a lot at a time!), and it adds a bit of fun to the whole practicing thing!

My parents are very wise, and they instituted a great incentive program for my siblings and I: if we didn’t do our practicing, we were required to pay for our piano lesson that week! Holy cow, what a great incentive for a teenager with little income. Obviously this incentive would have to come through the parents, but it can’t hurt to suggest it.

Often in my teaching I have done a similar thing to my first piano teacher, in that I have Piano Point Cards for each student. Students receive different amounts of points for different activities: passing off a piece, reaching their practice goal (more on that later), performing a piece for somebody, memorizing a piece, arriving on time to lessons, attending a recital, etc. The great thing about this kind of system is that you can come up with your own categories for things you want to stress in your own studio. If you prefer that students complete assignments rather than practice a certain amount, then give points for assignments completed.

Another incentive program: hold a practicing competition. A whole new element is added to practicing when the student knows that they are competing against their peers. Sometimes a little healthy competition is just what your studio needs! Be sure to pick some good rewards for the winners, and make it lots of fun!

When deciding on what rewards or prizes to award to students, why not use music-related prizes? For example, a fun piece of sheet music (such as a fun pop song or duet) or a small gift certificate to your local music store is double motivation – not only will the student practice hard to receive it, but once they receive the prize they will want to go home and practice the new piece! Awesome.

Another idea: give out studio awards at a year-end recital. Make sure students know you are watching and paying attention to who practices hard, who improves different aspects of their playing, who has a good attitude, etc. Give out fun certificates and perhaps some small prizes.

My favorite story about practice incentives is from my little sister (my three younger siblings also have taught piano lessons!). When she was a teenager, she once had a student who would not practice. Week after week she struggled to motivate this kid to practice, but to no avail. So one week she asked him what his favorite candy bar was. He told her what it was, and she said, “If you practice this week, at your next lesson I will give you your favorite candy bar. If you don’t practice, I’ll eat it in front of you.”

Well, the next week the kid showed up and had not practiced again! So my sister proceeded to eat the candy bar. Way to follow through! hehe

What incentive programs have you used in the past? What has been the most helpful? What do you think motivates your students the most?

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