On The Topic Of Teaching Saxophone 2
On The Topic Of Teaching Saxophone 2

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On The Topic Of Teaching Saxophone 2

This entry is part 2 of 10 in the series Teaching Saxophone

My philosophy of learning is that we never truly stop learning in our lives.

This truism is a critically important concept that is a cornerstone of my value system as a teacher. It is informed by my 20 years of teaching youth & adults, and by a graduate degree in adult education.

I know  that I will continue to learn, and that some of my best & most important learnings will come from working with my students. Furthermore, to be a really good teacher, it is my solid belief that I have to be open to being challenged, and therefore open to learning from my students.

The blending together of these teacher/learner roles is IMO, what prevents instructors from getting stale, regardless of what they teach: be it saxophone in a private studio setting, or English 101 at a college.

As we work with students in our studios, we need to keep a few things in our minds:

Learnings are not always obvious from the outside.

As a teacher, I might assume that a student hasn’t learnt because I don’t notice a marked difference after a learning opportunity. I need to recognize that perhaps the student has learnt, but learning is complex, and may not necessarily result in changes that are visible from the outside.

Furthermore, a student might encounter barriers that affect how, or even if, a change occurs. And to further complicate things, the student may not recognize that they did indeed undergo a change after a learning opportunity, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that they did not learn something.

Working extremely hard may make you only somewhat better at something.

Once a certain level of proficiency is reached, it may take much longer to attain a new level of performance. In the beginning stages, changes are much more obvious. The key as a learner is not to give up or be frustrated by the seemingly lack of progress. As a teacher, the key is to support the learner at whatever place they are currently.

What you think you know, and what is true are sometimes different.

Making assumptions is a part of everyday life, and the majority of our assumptions go unchallenged. When an assumption is proven wrong, how open we are to re-evaluating our beliefs is an indicator of our willingness to learn and accept new ideas. As both a student and a teacher, being open to having our beliefs and assumptions challenged is what enables us to learn.

Our job as instructors is not necessarily to wade through all of this in every 30 or even 60 minute saxophone lesson, but to at least recognize and be aware of these realities when working with youth and adult learners. Because if we’re cognizant of things like this, it will change the way we interact with our students on a week to week basis, and will make us better teachers.

…this is just my blog. My “real” website is www.bassic-sax.info. If you’re looking for sax info, you should check it out too.There’s lots there!

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