Hgeocities.com/Vienna/Stage/9802/april5/adults.htmgeocities.com/Vienna/Stage/9802/april5/adults.htm.delayedxJ{&OKtext/htmlBmo&b.HFri, 06 Apr 2001 00:01:40 GMT0Mozilla/4.5 (compatible; HTTrack 3.0x; Windows 98)en, *J& Adults not worth being tought? - www.ezboard.com



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      > Adults not worth being tought?
   
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RemRem
Registered User
(2/28/01 6:33:56 am)
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Adults not worth being tought?
As I currently move to Munich (haven't found an appartment yet) I checked with the local music school as I also need a new teacher. Unfortunately they told me they only accept kids. So if you're over 18 and not already at that school you have to find a teacher on your own. So for most adults that would be a conservatory student. I wonder what I may expect from someone with hardly any teaching experience...
I was pretty pissed as that music school claimed on thier website that they are *the* source of musical education for kids *and* adults.

Dorie Straus 
Moderator
(2/28/01 6:57:33 am)
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Re: Adults not worth being taught?
Just as with any teacher, there will be those who are good at it and those who are not. Perhaps the advantage of a conservatory student might be that he/she is not burned-out from teaching and won't have a teaching overload. They might be happy to have the extra money and might be excited to teach an adult. Could be a good thing!

Ellen G 
Registered User
(2/28/01 8:02:47 am)
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Re: Adults not worth being tought?
Sounds like they did you a favor by rejecting you. I don't know about other places, but in NY there are an awful lot of people who hold certificates attesting to their authorization to teach, but whose knowledge about the subject matter they are teaching is sorely lacking. This scenario suggests to me that their expertise is working with kids, and secondarily they are into music on a limited basis, realize the limitations of the staff.

It's weird, though, because obviously you can have "kids" that range in age from 4-18, give or take. You can have a "beginner" ranging in age from 4-99. So can they help a precocious 13-year-old more than they can help a novice adult? Hmmm...

You're an intermediate player and moving into more advanced pieces. If someone who can't play the pieces themself is trying to help you, they're not going to be able to. If a conservatory student knows more of the ins and outs than a teacher on this staff, problems they had to conquer to get to where they are, their experience is more valuable to you. "You need to wam up with these scales because..." "You need to white out these fingerings because..." "If you set yourself up this way, this is what will happen in this passage..."

People who haven't advanced past a certain level never realize how much more they don't know! This can really hurt a student who is trying to move around a cello with greater facility, playing more difficult rhythms, exercise bow control in more technically demanding passages, and the teacher hasn't got a clue that what he's teaching ISN'T HELPING. It is, indeed, less critical to a 9-year-old trying to twinkle.

Too many generalizations and too much subjectivity here, actually, and I'm bound to step on some toes.

jekerry
Registered User
(2/28/01 8:24:03 am)
Reply
go for a student teacher
The best teacher I've ever had is a grad student at Eastman. She's so enthusiastic! And respectful! Why would you want to take lessons from some burnt out over worked classroom type teacher when you can get lessons from someone that has new, fresh ideas and is still learning too so understands what you are going through? Take the gift and find yourself someone who wants to teach. You might find a great one.

Best,

Jane

me4cello
Registered User
(2/28/01 11:03:57 am)
Reply
try out 2 or 3..
as others have said already, you might be pleasantly surprised by the fresh approach of a conservatory student, if you get the chance try out 2 or 3 and see if you click with anyone, you'll be helping to support a starving student too!!

RemRem
Registered User
(3/1/01 5:40:02 am)
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Thanks all!
Yes, I'll see what teachers I can find. But I'll also make that music school remove that crap from their website...
Actually those (public) music schools are pretty good here in Germany. You can be sure to get a qualified teacher and the are cheap as the city pays up to 50% of the fees. Those schools are in every bigger village and up to now I had never heard that they do not teach adults...
But...maybe...as we all know that 99% of the kids will become great virtuosos...

RobertaJill
Registered User
(3/2/01 4:02:09 pm)
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Re: Adults not worth being tought?
I am having trouble finding a cello teacher, not because they don't think adults are worth teaching, but because no one wants to teach in the evenings or on Saturdays. And while there are always college and grad students who accept students, my concern is that they finish their degrees and leave -- and I am finally looking for someone who will help me build a program for developing my skills. I am a relatively advanced student but I have to work 8-5 (to pay for cello lessons, among other things!)! I found one teacher who will meet with me in the late afternoon on a day I can leave work about a half hour early -- let's hope things work out!

Roberta

Lucy Clifford
Registered User
(3/2/01 9:41:51 pm)
Reply
Re: Adults not worth being tought?
While I have been a student-teacher, and taught adults, from my research it is my considered, and Oh, so humble opinion that if you really want to have a 'greater facility', and I know that you really DO :rollin find a really great, professional, experienced teacher.

One of my fellow librarians took up the violin - after spending 18 months with various student and amatuer teachers (with all due respect!) she was persuaded to ring a top violinist from the BBC orch, who is renowned as a great teacher for all people. And sure enough she's playing really well: loves practicing, enthusiastic, happy, confident to play.

It might cost a bit more, but it is really worth it.

Make sure that you feel happy with the teacher. Students are renowned for being flightly, arrogant, inconsiderate, irregular and inexperienced. If you find a teacher who is
1) a great player
2) an experienced teacher
3) loves to teach (and learn!)

you will be much happier.







Ellen G 
Registered User
(3/3/01 8:10:02 am)
Reply
Re: Adults not worth being taught?
I think the premise got changed here somehow.

First choice, all things being equal, is a professional cellist with fabulous teaching skills. However, in this case that wasn't an option, which is where the conservatory student came in. In fact in MANY cases that is not an option, either due to availability, finances, logistics. The amateur cellist population is really spread out.

Anyway, there are people with great facility on the instrument who cannot communicate well and therefore do not make good teachers. There are some people with good communication skills, but are not as highly trained on their instruments as they think they are, and can really hamper a student cellist in the long run. Much advanced repertoire is performed with excruciatingly poor technique, and because they don't know it's poor, it is perpetuated in their students. There are some excellent advanced dedicated students who are far enough ahead of the students they are teaching that they can, in many instances, do more good than harm.

Anyway, it's all personal. I live one place, have certain things available to me, my own expectations, a background and level of play which is NOT conservatory. That already puts me in a different world from anyone who has been a conservatory student, or a former professional. I am extremely fond of my teacher, but I have learned a heck of a lot from another cellist I study with infrequently who is operating on a totally different plane, can manage to isolate problem areas and dispel them with a movement and a few sentences. If this were available to me on a regular basis, sure, I'd have progressed faster. But we have to work with our own realities and make the best of them.

RemRem
Registered User
(3/8/01 6:22:22 am)
Reply
Update
As one needs an official permission to put something on the conservatory BB and they are only available when I'm at work I put my request in the newspaper. Wonder who'll reply...
Anyway, it still makes me sick that they only accept adults for that music school when no kids show up. It's so discouraging that they tell me I'm not worth as much as a kid who might even be forced by the parents to play an instrument. I love to play the cello and I feel that I have the same right to have a qualified teacher as a kid has...:(

vsteele
Registered User
(3/8/01 9:38:25 am)
Reply
teachers for adults
I ran into the same problem here in the States when looking for a high level teacher. I ended up with a graduate student and she was not much better than I was and kept cancelling my lessons.

Luckily, after a year I was transferred to another city and now I have one of the best teachers in the area. I make her life easier by leaving work early once a week to take a lesson at the school. She makes my life easier by not only teaching me with great skill and professionalism, but involving me with musical events at the school as if I was a student.

Things will work out, just keep looking (and practicing)

Bobbie 
Registered User
(3/8/01 10:22:35 am)
Reply
Re: Update
I've been lucky in finding two fine teachers. The first of these, however, says that she has had so many problems with adult students that she doesn't like to take them. Most adults are gung-ho at the beginning and she adapts to their special needs (works schedules, physical problems, etc) and then they quit before they get going or they never practice because they are too busy, etc, etc. Yes, kids do that too, but at least there there is a parent who pushes a little.

Now, I know all of us here are different and did NOT quit. But I think probably a lot of teachers have had similar experiences.

cellisstra
Registered User
(3/17/01 11:02:09 pm)
Reply
Re: Adults not worth being tought?
I am being taught by a college student and find her enthusiasm infectious. She is prepared to take risks in letting me attempt what I like, despite being too difficult for me, as she knows that I am much more motivated to practise what I like. And I am getting there!
Because her own learning experience is fresh so is her teaching. Recently I met someone who started at the same age (46) that I did, and had to try four professional teachers before she could find someone to take her! Give me my college student any time!

RemRem
Registered User
(3/19/01 3:49:39 am)
Reply
Re: Adults not worth being tought?
Well, so far I got one phone call from a cello student who considered teaching me. She obviously didn't think it was neccesary to take the bubble gum out of her mouth while talking to me on the phone...Now I'm calling the music schools in the villages around Munich. The cello teacher of one school is going to call me to arrange a lesson...sounds much better to me.

yesipractice
Registered User
(3/19/01 3:54:39 pm)
Reply
lucky in Berkeley
I started cello lessons just a little over a year ago. My first couple of lessons were with a woman who used the basement of a music store for teaching. We didn't click at all. She was very rigid and didn't know what to do with me (probably figuring, what kind of nut starts cello at age 50). Anyway, I then found a most FABULOUS teacher and have been taking my weekly lessons with him since. My progress is steady, I'm having a great time and I believe this is the very best investment I've made ever. It's harder than I ever imagined but I will persevere. A great teacher makes a big difference.

Cellospieler
Registered User
(3/23/01 5:58:13 pm)
Reply
Move here RemRem!
It's been a while since we've chatted Rem Rem, but having spent a lot of time in Germany, I have been aware of this attitude, and apparently it is very prevelant in Deutschland across all of the arts. There is no way I could have begun cello as an adult in Germany and been in 2 orchastras, a string quartet and a cello quintet within three years! They say there: "Why start as an adult--you'll never make anything of yourself." It is a common and unfortunate ideology.

I have at my disposal a list of a dozen cello teachers, and have had lessons as late as 9 p.m.! Here, anything goes! Come to the Vereinegten Staaten, you're cello learning will never suffer!!

RemRem
Registered User
(3/24/01 4:58:57 pm)
Reply
hey Cellospieler!
Nice to hear from you!
Anyway, I had no problems in the area where I lived until a few weeks ago. No problems finding a teacher or with their attitude.
Have I told you about the teacher who called me a few days ago? He talked to me on the phone for 15 minutes without stopping. Anyway, he seemed pretty oldfashioned (numbering every single position while my last teacher just wanted me to know where I can find a certain note) and I'm sure he would have been horrified by the music I like (Apocalyptica). His lesson were cheap though (25$ for 1 h). I'll find a better one :-)


          New Adults not worth being tought?-RemRem-(16)-2/28/01 6:33:56 am  
               New Move here RemRem!-Cellospieler 3/23/01 5:58:13 pm  
                    New hey Cellospieler!-RemRem 3/24/01 4:58:57 pm  
               New lucky in Berkeley-yesipractice 3/19/01 3:54:39 pm  
               New Re: Adults not worth being tought?-cellisstra 3/17/01 11:02:09 pm  
                    New Re: Adults not worth being tought?-RemRem 3/19/01 3:49:39 am  
               New Update-RemRem 3/8/01 6:22:22 am  
                    New Re: Update-Bobbie  3/8/01 10:22:35 am  
                    New teachers for adults-vsteele 3/8/01 9:38:25 am  
               Re: Adults not worth being tought?-Lucy Clifford 3/2/01 9:41:51 pm  
                    Re: Adults not worth being taught?-Ellen G  3/3/01 8:10:02 am  
               Re: Adults not worth being tought?-RobertaJill 3/2/01 4:02:09 pm  
               Thanks all!-RemRem 3/1/01 5:40:02 am  
               go for a student teacher-jekerry 2/28/01 8:24:03 am  
                    try out 2 or 3..-me4cello 2/28/01 11:03:57 am  
               Re: Adults not worth being tought?-Ellen G  2/28/01 8:02:47 am  
               Re: Adults not worth being taught?-Dorie Straus  2/28/01 6:57:33 am  
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