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IS MY CHILD OLD ENOUGH TO START PIANO-MUSIC LESSONS?

By Jerry Greene
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Before I give you my opinion on
this, I want you to ask yourself this question: “Why do I want my
child to take piano lessons?”
Proper answers
should include these types of responses:
- “I want to give my child a
love for music that they can enjoy and carry on throughout their
entire life.”
- “I want to give my child a
boost in creativity and spatial reasoning skills by studying
music.”
They should not
be this:
- “I want my child to be
involved in music from an early age because I hear that they can
earn big scholarships to colleges/universities and I wont have
the money to send them to a good school."
- “I want my child to be a
famous music star!”
- “I took lessons when I was
young and hated them, but I wish I would have kept
going, so now I am going to force my child to take lessons so
that they don’t have the same regret that I do."
Although these 3 responses, phrased
differently, may have some positives, they are focused on
YOU, and not your child. Please make sure that you are enrolling
them in piano lessons because you want them to have a great
experience that they can enjoy and keep with them for the
rest of their lives, while increasing their brain’s capacity for
doing math and other augmenting other reasoning skills. With that
being said, let me answer the first question, “Is my child old
enough to start piano lessons?” This depends on a number of factors:
- Can your child physically sit
still for at least a half-hour? (The typical length of a
beginning-level piano lesson)
- Can your child mentally focus
on doing what is expected of them for at least a half-hour?
- Does you child need you to be
in the room, or will they suffer from separation anxiety causing
them to be focused on where you are and not at
the task at hand, which is learning music?
- Can your child read the
letters of the alphabet?
- Can your child read and count
numbers?
- Can they do very simple
addition like 2+2=4?
- Do they get enough exposure to
the types of music that would complement what they will be
learning?
Although each of these factors can be
worked around in some fashion, especially when first starting out in
music, these could be considered a good list of pre-requisites. In
my personal experience, I have started children as early as 4, but
suggest that they probably wait till 5, in order to be more familiar
with the pre-requisites I just spoke of. One of the good things
about learning to read notes, at such an early age, is that children
pick up on them rather quickly. They are learning to read the
letters of the alphabet (putting a name to a symbol) which is
exactly the same thing as learning to read the notes. The
closer together these two experiences happen (learning to read
letters and learning to read notes) the better. I have even heard of
parents using flash cards with notes on them (can be picked up at
just about any music store) while doing letters of the alphabet at
the same time and find that their children learn both equally as
fast, and better yet retain them! This can be a great
advantage because once they can read music (both treble and bass
clefs), learning to play an instrument becomes very easy,
since it is a matter of motor coordination (something that is
generally easier to learn once the “notes are out of the way”.)
It is also beneficial for your
child to have friends that are going through the experience of
learning music at the same time. They often will want to show each
other what they have learned and play together. This is exactly what
happened to me. I had friends that were taking lessons and showing
me what they were learning and I wanted to do the same thing. Before
I knew it, we were in school band together (now playing band
instruments as well as piano) and were enjoying it
“socially”.
I wish you and your child/children
all the success in the world and welcome any questions that you may
have for me. Please feel free to contact me at my website:
http://JerryGreene.Com
Jerry A. Greene is a private music
teacher in the San Antonio, TX area. If you are interested in taking
private lessons with him, please click one of the links below:
Piano
Lessons in San Antonio, TX
Private In-Home Music Lessons in San
Antonio, TX
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Sheet Music - Copyright 2008 © - All Rights Reserved
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