I think that I was more nervous than I had ever been in my
life before I did my 10-minute lesson.
I struggled greatly trying to come up with a lesson plan. Honestly, most of my time “preparing”
was actually just spent trying to come up with a good idea. I finally thought of something that I
could do, and went with it. Doing
a lesson on fugues was one of my original ideas, but if it hadn’t been for
finding that color visualization video on YouTube, I’m almost sure I would have
settled on something else. My big
issue with the idea was trying to present it in a clear, easy to understand
way, and that video really helped me do that.
My
stress was building throughout the weekend, and it peaked right before Dale
started his lesson, and I found out that I was going to be second. I sat in my chair with my head down,
nearly in tears. It was a bit
strange. I’ve performed music probably
thousands of times in all different environments. I don’t even have a major fear of talking in front of crowds
general. Yet this was different
somehow. I think the main reason
why was because I was unsure that what I had prepared was going to work. I suppose I felt a bit underprepared. This is despite having shared and
practiced my lesson over the weekend with my wife and my parents. They all were very encouraging, and
said I would do great, but I just didn’t believe them, because that’s the negative
attitude I tend to have. I think
another reason why I was so nervous was because along with the conducting
assignment I had to do two days later for a different class, this was the most
relevant thing I had been given to do in graduate school yet. I wanted to take it seriously and
hopefully do a good job.
When
I started, I had pulled myself together, and I was no longer nervous. One of the things I was most unsure of
was the beginning of the lesson. I
felt pretty good about the idea of having the class sing a round, but I hadn’t
completely crystallized how I was going to do it in terms of what words I would
use to get them to start. Overall,
I was pretty happy how the whole initiation part turned out.
Having
someone from class come up and play the piano was a last minute change I
made. I was intending on playing
it myself. I’m an extremely poor
piano player, but I had practiced that part enough so that I was fairly
comfortable with it. In the end
though, I thought it would be better to have a student do it because it was
another way for the class, or at least someone from the class to be doing
something instead of the teacher.
I thought, anything to make it more like a lesson and less like a
lecture. I’m glad I made this
decision, because I think it worked just fine.
Making
sure it wasn’t a lecture was possibly the number one concern I had, and was
most likely the thing that made it so hard to come up with an idea. Everything that was popping into my
head just involved information, and me talking. I knew that the ideal lesson would involve the students
doing some sort of activity most of the time rather than just sitting and
listening to a teacher talk to them.
Ideally, the activity would involve them playing music. As much as I tried to fight against
lecturing, I ultimately failed.
Mr. Schneider rightfully pointed
out in his comments that I was indeed starting to lecture, and that I was
introducing too many terms. After
discussing it with him, and doing some more thinking about it myself, I think
I’ll be able to come up with some ways of making the lesson more
student-centered for next time.
It seems like you learned a lot. Keep up the good work.
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