Tuesday, March 4, 2008
Video - First Song Lesson 6
Here is a clip of my students first time singing and playing a song. This was during our 6th lesson. It is these moments that there are no criteria. I simply let the student play and have fun with it regardless of the flaws. The idea is to build confidence as my student had never done that before. If she feels excited about how it felt (which she did) she is likely to go home and practice it more. With some refinement through our exercises we will be able to eliminate many flaws and allow the student to focus on creating as opposed to practicing. The excitement of how it feels to be able to perform music is in itself the motivating factor with the guitar and is something that becomes arbitrary as we master the instrument more and more. We begin to forget how it felt the first time we were able to sing over music we were playing. The satisfaction of feeling like we had accomplished something that seemed relatively impossible before.
Saturday, March 1, 2008
Click To Learn Guitar Article Published Online
I have an article published on the popular webnewspaper Broowaha. Here is the link for the article:
Article Link
Please leave your thoughts along with the others. It is this weeks most viewed article!
Monday, February 25, 2008
Friday, February 22, 2008
Notes - Lesson 5
Lesson 5
Our fifth lesson consisted of a more open approach. I did not plan anything, instead We went over previous information, talked some more about how the student was feeling and what her goals were. The lesson exercises went as follows:
Chord Exercise: Play each string of the chord in ascending order. Each correct string played is tagged. Once all the strings are tagged that is cue for the student to then play the entire chord. Correct performance of the entire chord is tagged.
*note: The chord exercise is meant to teach the student how each string should be played and heard to properly play the entire chord. If all strings are played correctly then the chord will be played correctly. Focusing on each string breaks the chord mechanics down to small steps to achieve a big success which is playing the entire chord correctly and easily.
Strumming Exercise: This exercise is meant to learn the mechanics of strumming. The strings should be strummed with an easy attack that is musical. Each correct strum is tagged. each chord is strummed 4 times. The fourth correct strum of the chord is tagged twice to signal a chord change.
*note: The double clicking of the fourth strum teaches the student where the end of a 4 bar measure would be. This is crucial when paying with others or reading music. Also, with all these exercises you can have the student call out the chord being played for their memory.
Chord Shape Exercise: This exercise improves the mechanics of moving from chord to chord. The teacher calls out a chord and the student simply put their fingers on the chord shape. Each correct chord shape is tagged. This exercise can be done by the teacher calling the chord, the student calling the chord or the student reading the chord.
Chord Reading Exercise: This exercise improves the student's reading skills. flash cards with chord names are set in a random order. The student does the strumming exercise using the order of the flash card chords. The student does not call out the chord, instead goes to the next chord. This improves the student's ability to read a chord progression and perform it.
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
Video - Chord Shape Exercise
This exercise is meant to increase the speed of moving form chord to chord. Combined with the chord and strumming exercise the student learns good technique along with speed.
Notes for exercise:
-Call chord
-Tag correct chord shape by student
Saturday, February 16, 2008
Notes - Lesson 4
- Review previous lesson
- Review Em chord
- Play each string - TAG correct play
- Play whole chord - TAG correct play
- Review Gmaj chord
- Play each string - TAG correct play
- Play whole chord - TAG correct play
- Review Cmaj chord
- Play each string - TAG correct play
- Play whole chord - TAG correct play
- Review Strumming Exercise
- Ask student what chord feel easiest to play and in what order they prefer to play them
- Have student call out chord and strum each chord 4 times.
- TAG each correct strum
- Double tag the last strum of each chord to signal a chord change for student
- Incorporate Flashcard with strumming exercise
- Hold flash cards up intermittently
- Have student call out chord on flashcard and strum the whole chord
- TAG if chord called is correct and strum is correct
- Learn Dmaj chord
- Finger 1on the 2nd fret of the 3rd string, 2nd finger on the 2nd fret of the 1st string and 3rd finger on the 3rd fret of the 2nd string..
- Play just the four top strings.
- Play each string - TAG correct playing
- Play whole chord
- Incorporate new chord with strumming exercise.
- Assess students ability to strum. If student is ready, incorporate a metronome to play with strum pattern.
Friday, February 8, 2008
Video - Lesson 3 Chord Exercise 2
Here is a second example of the chord exercise. The student calls the chord and frets the chord shape. The student then plays each string one at a time. Each correctly played string is a TAG. After all string are played the student plays the whole chord. A correctly played chord is a TAG.
Notice when the student does not play a note cleanly or does not fret the chord correctly there is no click sound. The student then reassesses and tries again, this time doing it correctly. The click then tags the correct performance.
This is 1 hr. 30 mins total over a 3 week period of playing.
Tuesday, February 5, 2008
Video - Lesson 3 Chord Exercise
Here is an example of the chord exercise for the Click to Learn Guitar method. The student frets the chord, plays each string, then plays the whole chord.
Chord Exercise:
- Have student fret the chord shape
- TAG correct fretting of chord shape
- Have student play each string
- TAG correct performance of each string - Student does not move to next string until they hear the click
- Have student play entire chord
Monday, February 4, 2008
Video - Lesson 3 strumming exercise - 02-03-08
Quick Note: The noise in the background is a howling dog. NOT A MURDER.
So far my student has had three lessons. This equates to 1 hr 30 mins of guitar playing. However, it has been 30 minutes a week as the lessons are every Sunday. She has not practiced once since she started so this represents what the student is able to do and comprehend after playing for 1hr 30mins over a three week period.
Strumming Excercise
- Ask student what chord feel easiest to play and in what order they prefer to play them
- Have student call out chord and strum each chord 4 times.
- TAG each correct strum
- Double tag the last strum of each chord to signal a chord change for student
Sunday, February 3, 2008
Notes: Lesson 3 Plan
Lesson 3
- Review previous lesson
- Review Em chord
- Play each string - TAG correct play
- Play whole chord - TAG correct play
- Review Gmaj chord
- Play each string - TAG correct play
- Play whole chord - TAG correct play
- Review Cmaj chord
- Play each string - TAG correct play
- Play whole chord - TAG correct play
- Review Strumming Exercise
- Ask student what chord feel easiest to play and in what order they prefer to play them
- Have student call out chord and strum each chord 4 times.
- TAG each correct strum
- Double tag the last strum of each chord to signal a chord change for student
- Incorporate Flashcard with strumming exercise
- Hold flash cards up intermittently
- Have student call out chord on flashcard and strum the whole chord
- TAG if chord called is correct and strum is correct
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
Notes: Lesson 2 Video
Lesson 2 Video Notes:
· I mumble
· Slouching posture in beginning
o Fix this
· Posture corrected when lesson starts
· Student posture comfortable
· Asked student to put Guitar on
· Had student turn volume up and pluck strings to check for sound
· Called out date for video reference
· Grabbed Notebook
o Posture changes to crossing legs - student still comfortable
· Review finger numbers
o student is correct each time (small success)
· Explained changing string numbers
o Posture still relaxed with legs crossed
· Reviewed string numbers
· Reviewed fret and finger placement
· Had student show me Em chord
o Tagged correct Em finger placement
· Had student play each string of the chord
o Tagged each correct string played
· Had student finger Gmaj chord
· Student was having trouble with the chord due to incorrect finger placement
o I moved in and physically changed student's fingers
§ believe this is case by case but in the future I should instead tell the student the correct fingering and have them figure it out. Physically moving in should only be done for non-finger position correction or finger position correction as a last resort.
· Returned to chair position
o Posture changed - no longer crossing legs
· Had student play each string
o Tag each correctly played string
· Student has trouble correctly placing fingers on strings
o I intervene and explain correction
· "use the tips of the fingers to push down on the strings like pushing the keys of a keyboard"
· Have student play all strings
o Note - In future use clicker with different click sounds to signal playing next step instead of verbally instructing (i.e. once student successfully plays all individual strings a second click sound would signal to play the whole chord.)
§ Posture changes to crossing legs
· Explain flash card exercise
· Show flash cards 5 times
o At end posture changes. I move in towards student and say "That was great". This is additional praise to mark a large success.
· Asked student how they felt about the chords
o Student responded - YES
· Discussed playing Cmaj chord
· Had student first learn to start on the EM chord then called out the finger position of the Cmaj chord
o Tag each correct finger position
· Engage student to correct hand placement to make chord feel more comfortable.
· While still engaged with student, explain that we don't play all the strings for the Cmaj. Only the bottom five.
· Had student play each string of the Cmaj chord
o Tag each correctly played string
· Have student play chord
o Tag correctly played chord
· Give student time to rest hand
o Note - I am showing flash cards each time I call out a chord
· Have student hold chord again
o Tag correct finger placement
· Have student play each string again
o Note - Student technique has improved.
· Have student play whole chord
o Tag correctly played chord
oPosture change - Move in after this ti signal Large Success with "That was great"
· Flash card exercise again
o Tag rach correctly played chord
· Student has trouble with Gmaj finger shape
o Has two incorrect attempts
· I engage to correct
o Note - this correction should of been done verbally
· Return to chair
· Return to game (flashcard)
· Student has issue with Cmaj finger shape
o No tag given due to incorrect playing of the Cmaj
oStudent reassess and successfully corrects it.
oTag correct performance
· At end of flashcard game posture change - Move toward student and signal Large Success with "That was Great" with click for additional praise.
· Discuss student's guitar skills with them
o Use this time to verbally praise student for successes
§ Note - Student responds VERy well to the praise at this point
· Go over strumming exercise
· Practice strumming exercise
· Lesson finished
Monday, January 28, 2008
Notes: Lesson 2 plan
Lesson 2 Plan for Student
- Review Lesson 1
- Finger Numbers - TAG correct finger answer
- String Numbers - Low E is string 6, high E is string 1 - TAG correct answer
- Fret Numbers - TAG correct answer
- Fret Placement - TAG correct finger placement
- Review Chords
- Em Chord (E minor)
- Have student place fingers for chord - TAG correct finger placement
- Play each string - TAG each correctly played string
- Play entire chord - TAG correctly
- Gmaj Chord (G major)
- Have student place fingers for chord - TAG correct finger placement
- Play each string - TAG each correctly played string
- Play entire chord - TAG correctly played chord
- Show Em and Gmaj flashcards intermittently 6 times
- Have student play corresponding chord shown on card - TAG correct chord played
- Have student place fingers for chord - TAG correct finger placement
- Play each string - TAG each correctly played string
- Play entire chord - TAG correctly
- Ask student what chord feel easiest to play and in what order they prefer to play them
- Have student call out chord and strum each chord 4 times.
- TAG each correct strum
- Double tag the last strum of each chord to signal a chord change for student
Notes: This Is Your Brain on music - 1-27-08
* Musical notes appear to fall into categories as to whether they are important notes of the piece or not. Many amateur singers dont store in memory every note of a musical piece. Rather, all have an accurate and intuitive sense of which those are -- and we store musical contour. Then, when it comes time to sing, the amateur knows that she needs to go from this tone to that tone, and she fills in the missing tones on the spot, without having explicitly memorized each of them. This reduces memory load substantially, and makes for greater efficiency.
* Music works because we remember the tones we have just heard and are relating them to the ones that are just now being played.
* The regular pulse of music causes us to expect events to occur at certain points in time.
* Real conversation between people, real pleas of forgiveness, expressions of anger, courtship, storytelling, planning and parenting don't occur at the precise clips of a machine. To the extent that music is reflecting the dynamics of our emotional lives, and our interpersonal interactions, it needs to swell and contract, to speed up and slow down, to pause and reflect. The only way we can feel or know these timing variations is if a computational system in the brain has extracted information about when the beats are supposed to occur. The brain needs to create a model of a constant pulse -- a schema -- so that we know when the musicians are deviating from it. This is similar to variations of a melody: We need to have a mental representation of what the melody is in order to know -- and appreciate -- when the musician is taking liberties with it.
* Music is organized sound, but the organization has to involve some element of the unexpected or it is emotionally flat and robotic. Too much organization may technically still be music, but it would be music that no one wants to listen to.
Wednesday, January 23, 2008
Thoughts For Next Lesson
My first lesson was an overall success. I realized quickly that there was a lot I needed to keep in mind when approaching the next one. After thinking more about my assumption that less visual pressure will allow the student to learn quicker, I've realized that my body posture has to change and stay consistent. Since I will be video taping the lessons from here on out I will be able to study my posture with the students and the overall ability to learn guitar because of it. My basic theory is that passive posture will be the best place to start to let the student ease into the lesson. Based on the first lesson, I could tell that I wanted to move closer in to see what the student was doing. I started to slouch and I could tell my face was more intense. In retrospect I can now see that this could become detrimental to the student as they may feel pressure and eventual frustration with the process. However, too much passive posture can make the student feel that they are not doing well as you are uninterested. I am basing this idea on my own experience with music teachers. A lack of interest or physical response can also make you feel that you are not doing something right. Or, what you are doing is boring the teacher. I believe that posture should change given the circumstance.
For instance, when the student starts to learn a guitar chord I have them play each string first. They start by plucking the heavy E string and do not move to the next until a click is heard. A click will not happen until the teacher hears and sees the string played cleanly and correctly. Once the teacher clicks, the student moves to the next string. This can be a very potentially frustrating time for the student. There are many things involved during this process. They are concentrating on holding the chord, playing the string cleanly and fretting the note correctly by the teacher's instruction. On top of that their hands are getting tired and their fingertips may be sore or hurting. I consider this a "Peak" time for the student and they need to feel relaxed and be able to concentrate. It is at this moment that the teacher should have a nice passive posture.
--Passive posture however should not involve sitting back on the chair (i.e. the way we would sit back on a chair to think of a problem or to analyze something in our head). While the teacher may feel that this is comfortable, the student may feel as if they are being judged or over analyzed. Again, this is based on my interactions with past music teachers and people.
When should posture change? Well, the first thing I believe we should to think of when approaching this question is, "What would we want?". In the spirit of click training as well as operant conditioning and positive reinforcement I would only want to change my posture or body language to signal a success to the student. A success would come in many forms, however, we don't want to use body posture as much as we use the clicker. I have a feeling this would condition the student to also look for a body language response and take away from the clickers effectiveness. Instead, I believe that the best time to change body posture would be to signal a "Large Success".
--For example: The student plays each string of the chord. They do not move to the next string until a click is heard. This is a "Peak" time for the student. When the student finally makes it through all the strings the teacher asks the student to play all the strings i.e. the entire chord. Given that the student has learned how the hand should be placed and how the fingers should be placed to play chord cleanly (the student learns this because to play each string cleanly the technique must also be clean)the student now has the hand and fingers situated to be able to play the whole chord correctly. If this is done successfully the student will play the whole chord perfect. This is considered a "Large Success" as the student has made many small successes to get to the final goal: To play the chord correctly. It would be at this point that the teacher would not only click to signal a success, but also rearrange their body posture to show that they are impressed with what the student has accomplished.
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
Notes: First Lesson With New Student
Here are the notes from my first lesson with my first student:
01-22-08
First lesson - Elizabeth
Taught - Finger numbers, string numbers, fret numbers, how to put fingers on frets, chords
Chords taught - Em, Gmaj
Time teaching - 30 minutes
Response from student - Good
Student abilities - Good
Response to click - Good
Resolution - Student decided to continue lessons
Observations:
- I believe that teaching someone without a guitar is less threatening and intimidating. When someone is first coming into a lesson and has no experience. Why would we sit there with our guitar, playing it great and feeling good. That just puts pressure on the student. The student should be eased into playing with the teacher. So that when that time comes the student has confidence in their abilities. When the teacher has the guitar at the beginning there is pressure on the student to do as well as the teacher. If not, frustration can happen. Without the guitar the student is free to be the only one playing therefore not being compared. THERE IS LESS VISUAL PRESSURE ON THE STUDENT IF THE TEACHER DOES NOT HOLD A GUITAR OR PLAY IT.
- Need to email student tomorrow and compliment their abilities today during the lesson. Also note what was taught, with as much information as possible. NEED TO EXPLAIN CHANGE FOR NEXT LESSON (will now be referring to high E as string one and Low E as string 6).