Teaching Tip Tuesday: Advice for New Teachers

I have often been asked what advice I have for new piano teachers just starting out. Today I’d like to share four basic suggestions that will help get your studio on its way!

1. Be Professional

When you present yourself and your studio more professionally, people take you more seriously. You are running a business! You are providing your expertise and knowledge to your students as a service; you have so much experience and knowledge to offer and you should present yourself as such. Here are some of the most important things your piano studio needs:

Have a studio policy!!

I cannot emphasize this enough. In the very least, your students and their parents need to know what you expect as far as when tuition is due, if you require late fees, what your make-up policy is, and that you don’t want them to show up at their lesson with a contagious illness. Type up all of your rules and policies, print it out on some colorful paper and distribute it to new students.

Studio contract

Along with my studio policy I always have my new students and their parents sign a studio contract. This basically states that they will abide by the rules and policies of the studio, and that when they sign up for lessons they are committing to that lesson time (including the payment of tuition for that lesson time) for the entire semester. This protects you and helps keep your income more reliable. Do it.

Learn to say “no”

Ok, so I started teaching when I was fifteen. It’s easy when you’re young and inexperienced to let people sort of walk all over you, but you’ve got to just remember that this is a business and you need to run it as such. You will have students who don’t show up to lessons, and they will want to not pay you for that no-show lesson. (Don’t let them do that! Have them pay upfront each month.) You will have people who want make-up lesson after make-up lesson, taking up all your non-teaching time. You will have people who don’t pay you on time. You will have people who want to argue your policies. Over the years I have come a long way in my dealings with students and parents. You just have to decide what your policies are going to be and stick to them.

Professional teaching environment

Keep your studio nice and clean and quiet! It’s not fair to the student if your children are in the room demanding your attention, or if it’s noisy and cluttered and hard to concentrate.

Dress the part

Admittedly I have taught many-a-lesson in jeans and bare feet. It’s not a huge deal. But think of the respect you will have from your students as you make the effort to dress a little nicer. A professional appearance and attitude will go a long way in a lesson.

2. Be Creative

Piano teaching today isn’t what you may remember from when you were a child. Piano teaching does not (or should not) consist merely of picking a piano method book and methodically going through each and every page and reading through and teaching each concept as it is presented. Use some creativity! Put some ingenuity and fresh ideas into your lessons to make your students want to come back! Pick and choose exciting and motivating challenge pieces for your students to learn to supplement whatever book they are using. Teach new concepts before they are introduced in the book if it is something that will excite their imagination and get them to love to play. Encourage creativity in your studio by having composition recitals and teaching students to play from a fakebook. Have a memorization or a sight reading competition. Allow more advanced students to mentor younger beginners in a class setting using creative games and songs. Create a star student wall in your studio and honor the best practicer of the week. Use your imagination!

3. Be Yourself

Use your strengths and individual background to enhance your piano teaching. Have a background in math teaching? Great! Use that knowledge to amp up your studio’s music theory and rhythm skills. Love to dance? Perfect! Get those students moving to the music as you teach meter, beat, rhythm, expression. Got skills in gourmet cooking? Amazing. Your students and parents who attend your recitals, group classes or end-of-semester parties will thank you! Maybe you are classically-trained. Maybe your favorite tunes to play on the piano are show tunes or pop songs that you can sing along with. Use these strengths to your advantage as you find your niche in teaching and as you guide your students to be well-rounded musicians.

4. Be Encouraging

Last of all, I think that positivity and encouragement are super important. Don’t forget to tell your students what they are doing amazing at! Of course you’re going to critique and teach and guide them to fix their mistakes and to improve, but don’t forget that a happy attitude and thoughtful compliments can go a long way in affecting the overall experience the student has with piano lessons – and that could have life-long consequences, good or bad!

What tips of advice would you give to new piano teachers?
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Teaching Tip Tuesday: Listening Assignments

Teaching Tip #11: Listening Assignments

I think it’s really important to get our students listening to more music. Sometimes I get really into it and assign awesome, hard-core listening assignments (like listening to a whole bunch of pieces by a specific composer, and writing down things you like about each piece, and such). But sometimes I think it’s important to just throw in a quick, simple listening assignment that goes along with whatever the student is working on.

Simple listening assignments are great ways to teach about music history, famous performers, the musical periods, or about musicality and interpretation.

Have a beginning student playing the super simplified “Ode to Joy”? Have them listen to the REAL deal and see how joyful it sounds!

If a student is learning a classical piece, have them listen to some good recordings of the piece and get some interpretation inspiration!

One of my students played a simple piece in her method book that sounded a bit impressionistic – in fact, it was almost exactly like the first line of Debussy’s Reverie. We talked a little about impressionism in music, and I played a line or two of the piece for her, and then assigned her to go home and listen to the whole piece.

I recently had a student playing in her Faber & Faber “Popular Repertoire” book the song “What a Wonderful World.” Well, she had never heard the song before, and didn’t know who Louis Armstrong was! So I assigned her to go home and look the song up on YouTube and take a listen.

Listening assignments can be simple and spur-of-the-moment, but they will really help our students become better musicians (and maybe enjoy playing their pieces a little bit more!)

Teaching Tip Tuesday: Teach those chords!

Teaching Tip #10: Teach those chords!
I have recently discovered the importance of teaching chords. Lately I have been really trying to get all of my students, all ages, playing major and minor chords all over the piano and in different inversions. A huge help in this has been in using my technique booklets – My Muscle Builders Book and My Muscle Builders Book 2. My students have amazed me in their chord-playing and I really think it is helping them become overall better musicians.
Understanding and being able to easily play chords, in different inversions, helps students in learning their pieces. SO, so often their method book pieces have a melody line in the right hand and chords in the left hand (whether block chords, broken chords, or whatever figuration the notes are in). When students don’t understand chords well, each measure can be a struggle to learn. Many students need to stop and “figure out” the notes of each measure. BUT, if they are good at chord-reading and have a good understanding of primary chords used in a key, all you need to do is have them take a look at the piece and point out the basic harmonies. They will see that a piece may only consist of C, F and G7 chords, and will be able to learn it SO much faster because they are already pros at playing those chords.

Many of my students have also started playing a bit from fakebooks, and it is so fun to see them use their chord-playing knowledge to fill in the harmony (all on their own!!) of a fun, familiar song. I really have been enjoying this awesome Disney Fake Book (Fake Books), and it has a great variety of songs, some easier ones that my students have been enjoying, and some harder ones that I have been having a lot of fun with as well!

So teach those chords! Let’s create a generation of great, well-rounded musicians, shall we?

Teaching Tip Tuesday: Highlight It!

Teaching Tip #9: Highlight It!

Happy Tuesday! I’d like to thank all my great readers who keep coming back even after such intermittent posting on my part 🙂 I’d like to get back to sharing some simple teaching tips each Tuesday that have helped me in my own studio – and hopefully they can give you some ideas to help in yours! Sometimes it’s the little things that make a difference.

Today’s tip is about highlighters. I love to keep a highlighter marker near my piano to use during lessons. Then I have my students use it to sort of analyze a piece they are working on, and to isolate and highlight a specific thing they need to work on.

I have a student who just learned a piece in their book very well – that is, he learned all the notes perfectly but I didn’t hear much change in dynamic levels. So I had him take the highlighter and go through the piece and circle all of the dynamics.

Slurs are another great one – have your student highlight the slurs or phrases in a piece to help them remember to play them nice and legato.

Whatever a student is learning or struggling with at the moment is a great thing to circle or highlight. Having the student actually do the highlighting puts them right in the middle of the learning process; rather than watch you circle the things that they missed in their music, they have the opportunity to take a good look at their own music and figure it out on their own.

What are some simple ways you involve the student in the learning process? Do you have any particular ways you typically like to mark up the student’s music?

Teaching Tip Tuesday: Visualize the Music

Teaching Tip #8: Visualize the Music

All of my beginning students do five-finger scales/arpeggios/chords each week. Sometimes it’s fun to give them a new way to visualize these scales! I had a lot of success with my youngest student (4 years old) learning her C Major five-finger scale using these colorful fuzzies as a reminder of which notes to play! I sent the fuzzies home with her in a little baggie and she got to put them on her piano to find the right notes so she could “tip-toe up the keys.”

 

Another great way for young students to visualize scales (and to experience them in a whole new way using their whole body!) is to use a giant floor piano and colorful beanbags. Students can actually “tip-toe up the keys” and even “play” the scale in different ways – short or long (hopping or slowly stepping), soft or loud (saying the letter names soft or loud and stomping or tip-toeing), etc.

What are some ways you help your students to visualize the music?


p.s. don’t forget to enter the giveaway for a free copy of my new Spectacular Spring! lesson plan!

Teaching tip Tuesday: Give yourself a vacation!

Teaching Tip #7: Give yourself a vacation!

When I plan out my teaching calendar, I make sure to give myself needed and desired vacation time. As a self-employed private music teacher, you deserve a vacation just as much as any employee of a company! Tuition is always the same amount each month, even if some months have three lessons and some have five. You may need to get your students’ parents used to this idea, but it makes so much more sense. If you plan it out in advance and let students know (I like to send out a calendar at the beginning of each semester), you will be able to enjoy those times (such as Christmas break, your summer vacation, etc.) without worrying about not being paid for a couple of weeks out of the month. When the semester’s tuition is broken up into equal monthly payments, you are essentially getting paid vacation time.

In addition to the obvious holiday breaks (Christmas, Thanksgiving, etc.) I like to take days off such as my birthday, family birthdays (don’t want to be teaching on my child’s birthday, no sirree!), any holidays that land on a teaching day that my husband is not in school, etc. You work hard, give yourself a break!

Happy Tuesday!

Teaching Tip Tuesday: Ask Questions

Teaching Tip #6: Ask Questions!

A great way to teach is by asking questions. And by actually waiting for the student to come up with an answer! I think that so often we ask a question to a student who sits there timidly for a moment, and too soon we jump right in and tell them the answer. When a student knows you actually are waiting to hear their answer, they will become more accountable for their practicing and for their music knowledge.

I recently had a student play a piece that was very well-learned, and being so pleased with their hard work I asked them, “What are some ways you practiced this song that helped you to learn it so well?” Posing a question that makes them really ponder how the practicing process yields good results, while at the same time complimenting their hard work, can be so effective in reinforcing good practice habits.

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!

Teaching Tip Tuesday: Communicate with the Parents

Teaching Tip #4: Communicate with the Parents

It is very important to communicate with the parents, especially when the student is very young. Often the parents know better than you the things the child is really struggling with in regards to lessons because they are with them at home every day during practice time!

They can help to tell you what parts of the lesson are hardest for the student, or what parts they are not enjoying (for example, one parent recently told me that their child hates practicing her scales and arpeggios – well I would have never known if she had not told me – now I can come up with ways to make it more fun and exciting!). Parental involvement with young students is so imperative that it is absolutely essential to have a good line of communication with the parent.

Teaching Tip Tuesday: Recognizing Sharp Signs

Teaching Tip #3: Recognizing Sharp Signs

Well I warned you that some of these tips would be random. And quite simple. When teaching young students about sharps and flats, a great way to teach them to recognize a sharp sign is that it looks like a tic-tac-toe game. There you have it. Happy Tuesday to all!

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