Monday, February 22, 2016

Reflection on trumpet lesson

I know very little about the trumpet, so I was quite nervous before I started my five-minute lesson.  In fact, even if I had been teaching an instrument I know how to play I probably would have been nervous.  I’ve really only taught a handful of “first” lessons before.
I made the decision to show the student how to hold the instrument right at the beginning of the lesson.  I thought that it made sense to do this because since the student is there for a trumpet lesson, then that’s what he would want to do right away.  I suppose everything went according to how I expected it to go, so any bad part of the lesson was because of my poor plan.
One little thing I wish I had done was not ask what the student’s name was when I walked in.  Clearly it’s a private lesson and I would have known what his name was.  Another thing I wished I had touched on was posture.  A few other people did this, and I realize it's very important.  This seems like something that should be taught when teaching how to hold the instrument.  I also could have done a better job of laying out the expectations of the lesson.  I’m sure I also could have made better eye contact.  This is constant struggle of mine not just in teaching, but in life in general.
I’m sure there were many other things I did wrong, and if I think of them later I’ll add to this post.


1 comment:

  1. You have a lot of great points Jacob, many that I also felt about my own performance. Since we both did Trumpet as well, I was also feeling like I wish I had mentioned good posture - that is really important. I also feel like I laid out expectations a little bit, but I could have been more concrete in what exactly I was doing to reach them.

    I went in with the approach that this was a private lesson, but I feel like later in the class it turned out to be more of a prep lesson for band class in general. If it was more of a prep lesson I would have just gotten straight to learning the instrument instead of getting to know the student (because of time constraint).

    ReplyDelete