How to Let Kids Interested in Piano Lessons?
by Music Lesson MusicLessonMany children throughout the world have taken to music lessons in schools with excitement and wonder, practicing every day and every evening, yet there are still countless children who dread the day that piano lessons roll around. Part of the reason for this lack of interest is in the music selections. Another reason has to do with the music teacher and the jobs, or assignments the student is given on a weekly basis. Piano for kids must include positive reinforcement.
Music is the language of the soul and in our modern, high-tech, reality TV society, it can difficult to get a child genuinely interested in music lessons in schools. For beginners of any instrument, the first few weeks and months can be the most trying and difficult to overcome. This is where the enjoyment and lifelong passion for music rests, and it is also the period of time when that passion can be lost forever.
It's not the student's job to make a piano lesson interesting and exciting. It's up to the piano teacher, whose job it is to find the right balance, the harmony, if you will, between the basic earliest music lessons in schools and the core and heart of music itself. Most of us at one time or another have seen a movie or a television show that depicts the cantankerous elderly female piano teacher sneering at her student who is merely trying to do his or her very best.
Accomplished musicians hear every mistake, every nuance that doesn't work, in just about every piece of music that their students attempt to play. The student may come to a piano lesson with hope and excitement, honestly believing that they 'nailed' it this time, only to leave feeling dejected and that no matter what they do, they aren't going to ever please their teacher.Sponsor Ads
Created on Dec 31st 1969 18:00. Viewed 0 times.