Mom, I Want to Quit Piano Lessons
for the Summer!
Quitting piano lessons for
the summer? Not a good idea! Why? Repetition is the
essence of learning. How many new skills have you learned
recently? In the process of mastering these new skills,
did you take three months off? You did? How was your
attention level when you returned to it? Did you have the
same enthusiasm at the end of that three-month hiatus as
when it began? When that three-month period was up, did
you remain at the same level of knowledge and manual
skills as when it began? You didn't? I wonder why? As they
say,“Out of sight, out of mind.”
Children just do not have the same level of concentration as adults-- or the
same level of devotion. Nor do they realize what is at
stake: the possibility of giving up the chance to develop life-long skills in order to play soccer, watch more TV, have more play
time, not be tied to a piano bench for 30 minutes a day or
not to follow up on the discipline set forth by the past
nine months of lessons.
In all honesty I have seriously considered taking summers
off, but when I tried that a few summers ago, for many of
my students it was almost like starting from the
beginning. If your child would continue to practice daily
they would probably remain in fairly good stead, but this
is not what happens. All of their (your) good intentions
just don't usually come about and piano is lost for 3
months. Even my best students that take the summer off and
continue practicing show signs of loss and have to review
for one or two months before continuing at their
appropriate level.
I usually do have a little less regimented classes in the
summer and I have even been thinking of trying some
different things, like maybe one lesson a month being a
group game/theory class. I hope to go to a teacher's
seminar this summer to help me with some new, more
innovative ideas on how to keep my students and parents
interested! We must
remember: music is one gift that can never be returned or
taken back. I try very hard to work with my students and
parents for a viable schedule to accommodate their other
interests as well as time for lessons and practice.
If any of you have
considered quitting piano lessons for good, please take
serious deliberation. If your child quits now, when will
he resume piano lessons? When they have mastered the
soccer game? And when he is 50 years old, will he still be
playing soccer? Will she be in Girl Scouts at that age or
using what she’s now watching on TV?
The point is, when setting
our priorities for a well-rounded childhood, we need to
balance our children's activities into immediate and
future applications and benefits. I can speak for the time
involved with piano study you will have to fill in the
blanks on the other activities.
Generally, beginning
students spend about 30 minutes every day practicing.
Lessons normally last for 30 to 45 minutes, one time a
week. The benefits far exceed the time involved each week,
they include improved study skills plus the development of
communication, cognitive, organizational, multi-tasking,
abstract and math/science learning skills. Music study
encourages less disruptive behavior, develops creativity
and cooperation, increases self-confidence, develops
perseverance and determination, improves dexterity and
discipline, fosters responsibility and self-esteem and
develops pattern recognition. The special benefits of
private lessons include one-on-one undivided attention
with the opportunity to discover and develop one's own
learning style, the opportunity for your child to be
treated as a unique, valued person and to enjoy having
someone who cares about her and sees her progress. Given
the time involved (three to four hours a week, including a
free day from practice), that's not a bad investment.
Parents, you have a pretty
good case to argue here. Protect your investment and keep
your child in music. Neither you nor your child will
regret it 10 years from now!
Sincerely,
Miss Joy