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Piano Teachers: Unique and Budget-Friendly Student... [gallery] Tis The Season...for Homemade Holiday Music Ornaments! The holiday season has approached faster than a student can play the Alla Turca, and the thought of heading to the mall or ordering...

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Piano Piano Extenders, Piano Foot-Pedal Stools; Piano... Why is piano posture so important?  It's important to stress the correct hand and seating position of all piano students.  Piano posture can affect more than just the uncomfortable side effects of sitting...

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Free iphone Ear Training App Practice your Ear training (intervals, triads and even modes and scales with full version) anywhere for Download the free Ear Training Lite for iPhone Check out this... http://fb.me/FZnn4BYA

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Piano Studio Policy and Scheduling Piano Lesson Breaks;... Take a Break: Even the most dedicated piano student or piano teacher needs a few breaks throughout the year to relax, recharge, and come back to the very next lesson with the energy and excitement comparable...

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How to fix floppy wrists If you teach beginning piano students or are a beginning piano student yourself, you may notice a case of the "floppy wrists." A teacher will immediately notice the non-legato, bumpy, and percussive sound....

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Piano Teachers: Unique and Budget-Friendly Student Gifts for the Holidays..Ornaments!

Category : Music Games and Apps, Teaching, Your Piano Studio

Tis The Season…for Homemade Holiday Music Ornaments!
The holiday season has approached faster than a student can play the Alla Turca, and the thought of heading to the mall or ordering music gifts online with express shipping would bring out the “Bag Humbug” in any piano teacher!  If you can spare a short trip to your local drug store, an hour to spin your creative artistic web, you can have a unique holiday gift for each student in less time than it takes to spell fortississimo.

Last Year’s Student Gifts…
In previous years, I would get an ice cream gift certificate for each student, which used to cost about $2 per students.  Last year, I found that it’s now difficult to get an ice cream, or a gift certificate for less than $5 per student, since most of the gift cards come prepaid.  If you have a large piano studio of over 30 students, $5 per student may just break your monthly studio budget!  There’s also the issue of all of students from my two piano studios being able to find the same ice cream store nearby.

This Year’s Student Gifts’ Inspiration
This year, as I was decorating our Christmas tree with my family, I was reminiscing about my special collection of piano ornaments that students had given me over my past 18 years of teaching.  There is the collection of the very cool White House ornaments that are fun to learn about, various pianos (one is the size of a thimble, up to larger ceramic grand pianos,) and notes, and instruments of every style and color.   I came up with the idea of making my own music ornaments that the students could bring out yearly, remembering their piano lessons with me long after they were off to college.

Create your Own Music Ornaments!

So let’s get on with it before that mistletoe wilts!

Supplies:  (I found these at Rite Aid Pharmacy)

* Glitter Ornaments (I found them on sale for just $1 for a set of 8 different colors!

* Ornament Hangers Pack of 20 for $1

* Glitter pen  (Around $5.  I like the ones that dry and look puffy.  Get the largest size pens as possible, with the smallest tip for writing)

Just lay out newspaper to protect your table surface, and decorate the ornaments with your favorite music motifs!  I think that the ornaments with a treble clef on one side and an 8th note on the other turned out the best.  Use contrasting colors!  These ornaments can even be given to student that celebrate Hanukkah…just use the light blue balls and gold writing.  Some of my students are hanging them on the rear view mirror to their car to drive around with that musical holiday spirit!

Happy Holidays from Wenjen Piano Studios!

www.wenjenpiano.com

Piano Piano Extenders, Piano Foot-Pedal Stools; Piano Posture

4

Category : About, Piano Competitions and Piano Events, Practice Tips, Summer Camps (Educational), Teaching

piano foot pedal box www.cgsimports.comWhy is piano posture so important?  It’s important to stress the correct hand and seating position of all piano students.  Piano posture can affect more than just the uncomfortable side effects of sitting with poor posture.  It affects tone and sound production, and can make it almost impossible for students to create that beautiful, rounded hand position that all teachers work on.

It’s difficult to get the very young students, from ages 3 to 7, to sit correctly at the piano. While adjudicating, I’ve found that most students sit too close to the piano, too far back on the bench (they should be sitting on the front half of the bench,) are used to having their feet dangling off of the bench(although I’ve seen some pretty creative foot stools created out of phone books,) and are slightly leaning backwards instead of forwards. The students’ posture must begin with their feet being flat on the ground or a flat surface, with the help of a piano foot stool. I’ve always kept a number of foot stools at my disposal while teaching, from a higher, padded foot stool, to a low plastic foot stool that I got a for a few dollar at Ikea. However, the best one that I have found that has withstood time and countless adjustments, is the one from http://www.cpsimports.com/foot_pedal_stool.html I like that students can use both the damper pedal and the una corda pedal correctly with this box.  My students get an early start on the damper pedal with my Musical Journeys piano method and also with the Faber Piano Adventure series.  They love being able to push down their own pedals without having to stand up while playing (which is how most smaller students without foot pedal stools use the damper pedal) or ask their parents to help out!

The older version had a double-latch system, and it looks like the newer one has a roller system that is probably easier for the students to adjust. The other problem with the old foot stool was that there was only one thin strip of padding behind the box, so my piano would get scratched about the pedals. I fixed this by sticking small pads to the back of each metal pedal on the box. It looks like the newer pedal box is now padded on this area.   The sale price is $129.99, way down from the $259.99, which is what I probably paid many years ago!  While $129.99 is still kind of a steep musical investment, rivaling the cost of the best sounding wood metronomes, it has been a tradition for my piano students to either resell or gift their foot stool to another smaller and younger member of my piano studio, when their own toes can finally touch ground.

Free iphone Ear Training App

Category : Practice Tips, Teaching

Practice your Ear training (intervals, triads and even modes and scales with full version) anywhere for Download the free Ear Training Lite for iPhone Check out this… http://fb.me/FZnn4BYA

Piano Studio Policy and Scheduling Piano Lesson Breaks; Summer Break, Spring Break, Holidays at http://wenjenpiano.com/blog

1

Category : College-minded, Piano Competitions and Piano Events, Practice Tips, Studio Policy Tips, Teaching

Take a Break: Even the most dedicated piano student or piano teacher needs a few breaks throughout the year to relax, recharge, and come back to the very next lesson with the energy and excitement comparable to the first day of starting lessons or teaching. I also use this time to spend quality time with my family and to catch up or get ahead on things such as tax preparation, writing recommendations. Teachers have very different philosophies and preferences in taking holidays and breaks. Just remember that “all work and no play makes Jack a very dull boy,” a quote from The Shining!

Short Summer Break: Some teachers take off the whole summer. A pro is that a teacher can book an extended judging event or take a long vacation out of town. The con is that the students return in the fall forgetting most of what they worked so hard to learn from fall to summer. It’s virtually back to square one with beginning students. I tried taking the entire summer off teaching my very first year of teaching, and it was my last year of taking more than a two-week summer break ever again!

Summer Motivation Can Wax and Wane: I’ve talked to a lot of teachers that take summer breaks that say that many of their high school students end up quitting piano lessons over the summer. They fall out of the habit of practicing and taking lessons, lose motivation, become busier, and drop the lessons, despite having studied piano for as many as ten years! Remind the high school student that college applications generally don’t care about activities that don’t continue into the high school years. While it is primarily the private schools and not the U.C. schools that allow high school seniors to list extra-curricular activities on the application form, I’ve found that many of my students enjoy writing about their love of music and playing the piano in their essays, no matter what they plan to study! I always feel so honored when a high-school senior tells me that they want to continue their piano lessons right up until the week they leave home for college!

Set Summer Goals: I feel that it’s important to keep the students playing the piano and motivated throughout the summer. My competitive students perform in the Southwestern Youth Music Festival (SYMF) which is a competition with categories based upon the student’s age and length of study. My students enjoy participating in both the solo and duet categories, performing with other students in my piano studio. The event runs at the end of July and first week of August, so students work on polishing their SYMF pieces right after the June recital. Summer is a great time for all students to work on piano duets, duos, or concertos.

Teach Duets, Piano Duos & Concertos: Many of my students participate in the CAPMT Piano Auditions held in November that requires two solo works and a duet, duo, or concerto movement. Summer is the perfect time to take on learning a new concerto! It always amazes me how hard a student will work to get his or her piece learned well enough to play it with the 2nd piano part!

What Works for Me: I try to follow the general school schedule. I take two weeks off in the summer (the last week of August, first week of September because most families like to sneak in that last vacation before the busy school year begins,) two weeks off in winter, a spring break (which doesn’t line up with all of the schools’ breaks,) and national holidays. The parents actually appreciate that they can go off on vacation without feeling like they are missing out on their piano lessons. The students continue to practice during the breaks. Many of the parents will bring a small keyboard with them on holiday or will seek out hotels that have pianos in them! Basically, each student will have eight holidays throughout the year. I compensate for these days by holding 8 or 9 performance workshops monthly during the school year, mandatory for the students, but at no additional charge to the monthly tuition. The key is to schedule out all of the holidays WAY in advance, and to keep the number of holidays the same for each lesson day. By fall, I have my calendar for the next 12 months all planned. This is courteous to the piano students, and makes everyone’s busy lives easier.

Well, after taking my own kids to the park for a play date, lunch, out to a 3D movie, practicing piano with kids to prepare for the workshop on Saturday, going for a run, emailing students and parents, calling some friends, helping my husband prep for his first photography exhibit, cooking and enjoying a semi-quiet dinner together, finishing bedtime rituals for kids, and working on my blog, I’m officially putting day 1 of my spring break to bed. See why I need an entire week of spring break? Stay tuned…

How to fix floppy wrists

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Category : Practice Tips, Teaching

If you teach beginning piano students or are a beginning piano student yourself, you may notice a case of the “floppy wrists.” A teacher will immediately notice the non-legato, bumpy, and percussive sound. A student may notice their wrist going up and down like a trampoline every time they play a key on the piano.

A fun way for students to troubleshoot their own floppy wrists is to place small, flat erasers, about the size of a quarter, on each hand while playing a legato piece. I have little skull-shaped erasers left over from Halloween that have funny eyes that the kids say are watching for their floppy wrists. When the students are concentrating on reading the notes and forget their curved hand position and start to use their wrists for momentum, the erasers will fall off of the hands and remind them to not to bounce the wrists.

The cap of a small water bottle works great for adults as well. Don’t use coins, as you risk getting them wedged between the keys!

May the legato playing you hear be a smooth and connected as someone tiptoeing across a wire!

How Do I Motivate My Child or Piano Student to Practice?

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Category : Practice Tips, Teaching

Take the Piano Practice Quiz!

  1. It is more important to: a. Practice at least 30 minutes a day.  b.  Practice consistently each day.  c.  Practice the complete lesson assignment daily.
  2. True or False :  All students should complete daily practice on their own.
  3. True of False:  Students that schedule their practice time in the morning are more likely to complete their practice goals.
  4. True of False:  Students should always start practicing their piece by playing through the entire piece or playing as much as they have already learned.
  5. All students should feel motivated to practice because they take piano lessons

Answers

1.  B  The most important habit to establish is daily practice, even if it’s only 5-10 minutes a day, which is a very realistic time for a piano student that is only 3 years old.

2.  False.  Lead by example.  It is very difficult to expect any student that is not used to sitting down and completing work to suddenly be able to sit and practice on their own.  It is important that the parent that attends the lesson is the parent that is primarily helping the child to practice each day for the first year, especially when children ages 6-10.  Students that have parents guiding their daily practice progress much faster, and the parent tends to learn how to play the piano and piano theory along with the child!

3.  True.  I’ve found that the students that set practice time in the morning are very consistent in their practicing.  Of course, if the student or the family tends to be rushed in the morning, it is better to schedule a consistent practice time after school.

4.  False.  When the piano piece is very long, or if the child is struggling to get to the end of the piece, it is better to have the student start his piano practice by working through the new section, while the mind is fresh.  If the student is on a deadline for an upcoming event, teacher can mark out the daily sections (4-8 measures)  that the student is to complete over the course of the week.

5.  False.  Each student will have a different level of motivation to practice the piano, which will wax and wane every few months.  It is fine to give students extra incentives to practice.  For younger students, teachers can give little practice prizes to students who complete their practice goals each day for a month.  Both older and younger students will be motivated to practice when an upcoming event is in the horizon.  Monthly performance workshops keep students on track each month.