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#1 |
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Administrator
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Some teachers have a strict rule to how and what they teach and as a teacher this makes life much easier. Format to lessons are very important and you should always try to keep a written record of a student’s progress. This also helps if you have a large number of students and you need prompting on what was taught in previous lessons.
The 1st goal of every student is to play a song, as their teacher you should let the student know, it helps to play songs if you understand:
I will always try to incorporate a student’s favorite songs into a lesson as soon as possible and base learning around that. If they’re more interested in what they’re learning then they will learn faster. It is a good idea to have at least 10 beginner songs for them to choose from if they can not think of one themselves. I find the hardest students to teach are lessons that like any form of heavy metal or screamer bands as these styles of music are usually,
In other cases a student may not care about what he or she plays, this is good at first because it gives the teacher control over what to teach. I always encourage them to pick some of their favorite songs or styles to keep their interest level up in lessons. As a teacher I would prefer to keep all lessons on finger exercises, playing technique, theory & scales for the first 6 months before even touching a song but then I wouldn’t have any students so it is a good idea to find a compromise between the two and don’t teach one more than the other. I would be interested to hear other teachers or learners views on this!
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Remember, If it was meant to be easy everybody would be a great guitarist. |
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#2 |
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Newbie !
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Hungary for now
Age: 17
Posts: 11
Rep Power: 0
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I'm self-taught and have been learning for about a year now. I can't play many songs, compared to what a normal person could have learned in a year. For example, one of my cousins who has been learning for the same amount of time knows many more songs but no theory. Instead of concentrating on songs, I concentrated on the 'why'. I also taught myself to read music and I really improved in that as well. Now, I really don't regret it. Sure, I feel like a total fool when someone asks me to play a song and I'm like 'I know only a couple...' but in the end, I can probably beat them with my theory knowledge. :P I'm not saying I'm an expert by any means, though.
But maybe that's just me. Maybe other people need to constantly learn new songs (even if only simplified versions) in order to keep their interest there. I didn't need that. The simple fact that I was learning was enough. I must admit though that I wasted a lot of time when learning to switch between chords. I could have learned that by learning a song. But my rhythm sucked too much. >.< I guess your method is even better! Learning songs and theory/technique/scales/ect. at the same time. After all, guitar IS about songs, in the end, hm? |
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