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Merlin B. Thompson invites music studio teachers to link their
teaching with notions of humanity and presents a timely vision of
bringing student-centered teaching to life in the applied music
studio. Filled with a myriad of practical tips and strategies,
inspirational ideas, and real-life stories, More than Music Lessons
demonstrates how music teachers may thoughtfully build on and
exercise what's already there with students. This means teachers
appreciate their students' sense of self, their personal and world
views, their culture, and their spiritual individuality: teachers
share rather than direct their students' musical journeys. Parents,
Practicing, Projects, and Character provide the student-centered
framework. Having compassion for parents and the dynamics of
students' family home life is vital. Practicing fulfills our basic
needs for autonomy, fluency, relatedness, purpose, and reflection.
Non-performance projects bring fresh energy to students' musical
journey and amplify their musical persona. Character-an
interweaving of authenticity, calling, soul, life force imprinted
from birth-adds depth and integrity to musical explorations. The
book features A myriad of practical and inspirational tips for
vocal and instrumental teachers Real-life experiences with students
and parents Ongoing reflective explorations Frequently Asked
Questions Research from the fields of self-determination theory,
humanistic psychology, and project-based learning
Award-winning music educator Merlin B. Thompson invites today's
teachers to link their teaching with notions of humanity and create
success by building on what students naturally bring to their own
musical journey. Filled with over fifty practical and inspirational
teaching tips, More than Music Lessons is a must-read for every
genre of music studio teacher: vocal/instrumental, academic,
traditional, individual/group, Suzuki, exam-based, and online. A
four-part framework gets right to the heart of the matter: -Parents
- understanding the complexity of parental involvement and
students' home life -Practicing - an adventure in autonomy,
fluency, purpose, relatedness, reflection, and listening -Projects
- amplifying students' musical persona with non-performance
projects. -Character - engaging students' inborn authentic
character to ensure meaningful musical participation Grounded in
research yet enriched with real-life experiences and frequently
asked questions, More than Music Lessons offers a comprehensive
view of student-centered teaching, where teachers share rather than
direct students' musical explorations. This book provides resources
for teachers who work with diverse student demographics and sheds
light on how teachers may thoughtfully incorporate students' sense
of self, personal and world views, culture, individuality, and
spirituality as anchors for their unfolding and unique musical
journeys. More than Music Lessons will help studio teachers support
and inspire their students for a lifetime of genuine and joyful
music making.
How can piano teachers successfully foster student participation
and growth from the outset? How can teachers prepare and sustain
their influential work with beginner student musicians? This book
presents answers to these questions by making important connections
with current music education research, masters of the performance
world, music philosophers, and the author's 30-year career as a
piano pedagogy instructor in Canada, the USA, Australia, New
Zealand, and Japan. It investigates the multilayered role piano
teachers play right from the very beginning - the formative first
four to five years during which teachers empower students to
explore and expand their own emerging musical foundations. This
book offers a humane, emancipatory, and generous approach to
teaching by grappling with some of the most fundamental issues
behind and consequences of studio music teaching. More experiential
than abstract and cerebral, it demonstrates how teaching beginner
piano students involves an attentiveness to musical concerns like
our connection to music, learning to play by ear and by reading,
caring for music, the importance of tone and technique, and helping
students develop fluency through their accumulated repertoire.
Teaching beginner students also draws on personal aspects like
independence and authenticity, the moral and ethical dignity
associated with democratic relationships, and meaningful
conversations with parents. Further, another layer of teaching
beginners acknowledges both sides of the coin in terms of growth
and rest, teaching what is and what might be, as well as supporting
and challenging student development. In this view, how teachers
fuel authentic student musicians from the beginning is intimately
connected to the knowledge, beliefs, and values that permeate their
thoughts and actions in everyday life. Fundamentals of Piano
Pedagogy stands out as a much-needed instructional resource with
immense personal, practical, social, philosophical, educational,
and cultural relevance for today's studio music teachers. Its
humanistic and holistic approach invites teachers to consider not
only who they are and what music means to them, but also what they
have yet to imagine about themselves, about music, their students,
and life.
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