My experience as a teacher comes from when I started as a musician, I picked up music relatively quick so teaching those younger and less experienced than me.
Throughout my years I taught people the same way, and have seen people I taught now posting their own music and also gone on to study music at higher education.
For one of my courses at university I had to teach music, which not only le...
My experience as a teacher comes from when I started as a musician, I picked up music relatively quick so teaching those younger and less experienced than me.
Throughout my years I taught people the same way, and have seen people I taught now posting their own music and also gone on to study music at higher education.
For one of my courses at university I had to teach music, which not only led to me learning the fundamentals of teaching but a lot experiencing teaching in a classroom myself. I earned one of the highest grades in that class and have felt like it has taught me how to teach properly.
The way I teach guitar and music comes from my first guitar teacher, who taught me how to play guitar more fluently but also in a structured manner, starting off by learning basics such as chords, the pentatonic scale, and useful guitar techniques such as hammer on and pull off.
I don't like throwing people into the deep end, but like showing people some slightly advance techniques so they could learn it themselves and progress themselves further into the playing process at a quicker pace, but that is not something I will force upon, but only suggest.
I will teach songs with only the stuff that has been taught unless we are progressing through grades. The songs will progressively get harder over time, but we will settle on songs for some time to build up muscle memory as well as being able to remember songs.