Mary Lynne Bennett, Pianist
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Cost Benefit Analysis

8/17/2015

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It is back-to-school time and parents are deciding which extracurricular activities their children will be involved in this year. Some of the options are obvious, while others are some they may not even know existed. I am on several moms’ Facebook groups, and they are constantly asking other moms, “what activities are out there for my 2.5 year old?” New parents are given no road map as to what choices are out there for their little ones and have to do research to find the best fit for their children.


As an early childhood music educator, I have heard many parents explain their decisions why or why not to register their toddlers and preschoolers in music classes. Other than reasons of time/schedule conflicts, their logic is often that if they only have the budget for one activity for their toddler/preschooler, then those resources should go toward an athletic program (gymnastics, soccer, Gymboree classes, etc.) rather than a music program. When I hear this reasoning time and again, the response inside my head is usually something like this: “Oh, I understand, music is always the first thing that gets cut from the educational budget. We’re used to it.” I see the graphs showing the highest paid employees in most states in the US are the university or professional football and basketball coaches and I can understand why the parents want their children to excel in athletics.


So, I thought I might put together a summarial side-by-side benefit analysis. This is by no means comprehensive to all music programs and all sports programs, but is limited to my research and experience. I have advanced degrees in music education and over twenty years of teaching experience. I am also a mother of three and have had my own children participate in 3 and 4 year-old soccer, mommy and me and preschool gymnastics, preschool dance, swim lessons, little league t-ball, baseball, basketball, golf, and tae kwon do programs. Obviously, I see that there are benefits to both, and have a great respect for the benefits of physical education programs. What I don’t think is widely known among communities of young parents is that early childhood music classes can provide many of the same benefits as these programs, along with others. Below is a side-by-side (not exhaustive) comparison of what two theoretical programs might provide.
















Research has shown time and again that participating in active music making, not just passive listening, changes and develops new pathways in the brain. It stimulates intellectual, social and emotional development in ways we are just beginning to understand. Many early childhood music programs incorporate not only active music making, but also movement experiences including beginning dance, improvisatory movement, and play as well as language development skills, using both sign language and foreign language songs. The benefits of early childhood music programs are numerous and clear, yet the message still needs to get out to parents today that these programs are available, accessible, and most importantly, providing a chance for families to connect with their children through the bond of music making. If you are a parent of a young child reading this and weighing your options, do your research and of course, always make choices that are best for your family and children.


For more information about early childhood music programs available in your area, please visit www.musictogether.com which has a class locator on their website. Mary Lynne Bennett teaches Music Together in Allison Park, PA, runs a private piano studio and teaches on the piano faculty at Duquesne University.





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Why you should sing with your child...

6/8/2014

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As a teacher of early childhood music, Music Together classes, of course I sing with children, it’s my job. But I also sing with parents and caregivers, and I want them to know, it’s their job too. Too many children in today’s society only experience music through recordings. They are played Disney film soundtracks over and over again, KidzBop CD arrangements of pop tunes are given out at McDonald’s as toys, and parents entertain children for hours on end with their favorite Muppets videos on YouTube from when they were kids. So, children are getting exposed to lots of music, but they are not becoming music makers.

I also teach group piano to college music majors, and I have done so for over ten years. As a part of that course, students are required to figure out tunes by ear. I often choose very familiar tunes such as “Happy Birthday” for them to plunk out the melody without ever looking at the sheet music. This should not be a difficult task for music majors whose ears have supposedly been trained from an early age, but it has been exceedingly difficult for so many of them. I have had many music majors, who have come into the class completely unfamiliar with how the tunes go. Tunes that we traditionally think of as American canon such as “She’ll be Comin’ Round the Mountain”, or “This Land is Your Land”, or “Battle Hymn of the Republic” are honestly foreign to them. Students come in to the class claiming that they have never heard these songs and have no idea where to begin. Of course, I sing them and tell them to go listen repeatedly to recordings, but this reveals one important thing to me and that is that their parents never exposed them to this music, or if they did, they did not sing it with them. I have also talked with many piano teachers who have said that recently their beginning students could not pick out simple tunes a note at a time, like “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star” because they simply do not know them.

My mother sang almost constantly to me and with me when I was a child. I was lucky to grow up in a generation when there were no portable DVD players in the back of the station wagon on long road trips, or even trips to the store, to keep me entertained, that was my parents’ job. When we weren’t singing songs together we were playing the alphabet game or the license plate game, always interacting with each other. She was a wonderful model for me as a young developing musician. She didn’t always get the tune or the notes exactly right (and as I got older, I am sure there was way too much eye-rolling and correcting on my part) she wasn’t a professional musician, but there was always joy when she made the music and shared it with me and my sister. We sang so many songs so often that I have a wide repertoire of children’s songs still at my command, at the forefront of my memory.

Now, after my years of training as a music educator, I realize just how critical that parent model is in the development of a child’s musical abilities. I sing to and with my own children, even when they do roll their eyes. My oldest son sings in a top children’s chorus in the area with a beautiful soprano voice. My youngest child’s favorite song to sing right now is from Frozen, but that doesn’t mean she doesn’t know all of the Music Together songs we sing all of the time in the car, at home, and any place else. I don’t get to sing with them sometimes on busy days but we always sing prayers at night, even spoken prayers are turned into sung ones using familiar folk tunes like Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star replaced with Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep.

Don’t blame public school or preschool music teachers for not teaching what the parents should be. I’ve been there too. The music teachers in the schools see the children for maybe 30-40 minutes a week and in that time they are expected to teach music for the winter program and the spring musical about D.A.R.E. or character education and the school theme song, plus they are supposed to be teaching them something about reading and writing music at the same time. Many music teachers do try to teach familiar folk songs to students, but because they see them for such a short period of time, the songs barely make an impact on even the most conscientious students. Parents and caregivers are the ones who supposedly spend the most time with their children and so if young children are going to become music makers, they need a parental model of a music maker.

I have a private piano student whose mother took him to Music Together and sang with him when he was younger and he is one of my students with the most developed ear. He can pick up patterns so quickly and learn complicated pieces at a very young age. He had a strong foundation and it has helped him succeed in his next musical steps.

Even if you, as a caregiver, feel insecure with your own vocal abilities, sing for and with your child. Sing along with your favorite mp3’s. Sing a lullaby. Sing off-key. Sing the wrong words or make up your own. They won’t care, as long as you are giving them attention, being silly with them, calming them down. Music is a language, and children learn language from their primary caregivers first. If they don’t see you being active music makers, they in turn will most likely not become active music makers. We as a society need more active music makers, not just passive consumers. Without the music makers, who will write the next Disney film score?



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Parental Involvement: A Key to OUR Success

3/14/2013

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Mary Lynne Bennett, DMA, NCTM, is a piano faculty member at Duquesne University, a private studio teacher, a church musician, and a mother of three young musicians.

As music educators, we are probably all aware that music students whose parents are more actively involved in their musical lives are as a whole, more successful.  Some of us have even taught our own children with great success stories.  For example, Jon Nakamatsu, whose mother was his first teacher, has a brilliant concert career.   While others of us wouldn’t go that direction, we remain highly involved in our children’s musical pursuits.  What is important in today’s society is that parents take even that initial step toward seeking out lessons for their children, and then continue to be encouraging as their children begin their musical studies.  

We see a wide variety of parental attitudes toward private music lessons within our teaching studios, let alone society at large.  These attitudes contribute directly to student successes or failures in their development at the instrument.  Parents who are committed to bringing students to lessons faithfully, helping them learn to practice (at least in the beginning stages), investing in a quality instrument, and seeking out performance opportunities are going to have children who have a more successful and more satisfying experience overall.  This is something that we as teachers need to remind parents who are considering lessons for their children.  Many teachers have agreements for the parents to sign not only to make sure the parents understand their business policies, but also to reinforce to the parents the commitment they are making to the child.  

We have probably all read numerous quotes from music advocacy research studies about the countless benefits of music study for students.  What I have recently realized as I have become a parent of music students is that there are many benefits for parents as well.  Being a parent of a music student helps me understand the relationships between myself and my children better.  It helps me learn what motivates and interests my children as I search for incentives to help them become better at practicing.  It helps my parenting skills as I learn how to establish discipline and routine with their practicing, which is different for every student.  Something that works for my own students may or may not work for my children, so I am even learning new teaching techniques.  For many parents, their children’s exposure to private music study may also be their own musical education as they sit in on lessons and practice sessions.  Parents sometimes decide to take up the instrument themselves and even play duets with their children.  For many students who begin lessons at a young age, it becomes a multi-generational activity, one which can deepen the parent-child relationship at a new level.  

Many former public school music educators, myself included, say that the reason they left, or the part of the job that they disliked the most was having to deal with the difficult parents.  These were not always necessarily the overbearing, helicopter parents who wanted their students to enter every competition.  These were also the parents who did not understand why in the world the MUSIC teacher would need to assign any homework.  After all, they would say, my child is going into the restaurant business like me, so [even though she loves chorus, has a solo in the upcoming concert and does summer community music theater] why does she need to learn to read music?  As private instructors, we do not usually deal with parental attitudes such as the latter.  Instead, what we more typically have is a group of built-in advocates for music education who we can count on as a voice of support in the community.  

Peer pressure among parents is astounding, especially when it comes to sports and academic participation.  If Johnny is playing in ABC soccer league, then Davy and Sammy had better be as well...keeping up with the Jones’s.  If Susie is in an advanced math summer camp, then Rosie and Jonie might not be in advanced math with her next year unless they join in.  If enough parents were bragging about their children’s music lessons, then they might be trendsetters in the community.  I can think of countless conversations I have had with other young parents in which we list our children’s extracurricular activities.  They list the three or four sports their child participates in and I list the one or two sports and the two or three music activities.  Then they say, “Oh, music lessons!  I’ve been thinking about that but I wasn’t sure when to start.”  Or they say, “I started band when I was in fifth grade.  I guess that’s when Charlie will start too.”  Just reminding other parents that extracurricular musical training is an option gets the mental ball and the conversation rolling.  

How can we, as private instructors, give the parents of our students the tools and strategies to become music advocators and help us continue to grow our studios?  First, we can help make them aware of all the resources that are available for parents of musical children.  There are organizations such as the Association of Music Parents that can help parents learn to find their voice to advocate for their child’s music education.  I keep a studio Facebook page that parents can read and I post links and articles I find on music advocacy along with other helpful topics.   Periodic newsletters for families can include thank-yous for parents that have given referrals or given support to the studio in other ways.

Some studio teachers have parents who are skilled in technology record their events and post them online.  Social networking is increasingly becoming a powerful tool for parental communication and we as private instructors are just beginning to understand its potential.  Do you have a studio blog?  Invite a parent to write a guest submission for it.  Don’t have a blog?  Find out if the parents do and see if they would be interested in writing about your studio.  

Supportive parents may also be willing to assist you in promoting your studio events in other ways, such as placing flyers or posters in their schools, houses of worship, and/or places of business. Also, we can do simple things such as remind parents that they can invite friends to come to studio recitals and events.  So much of what parents are looking for for their children these days is product-oriented.  What better way to recruit than to have potential families see the fruits of your students’ labors?

Our relationship with the parents of our young students is just as important as our relationship with our students themselves.  Open communication and education for the parents is crucial to our students’ success, and to ours.  Parents in today’s media-driven, quick-fix society need to be reminded in as many ways as possible that music lessons are an important option for their children’s well-rounded education.  Parents who are already convinced that this is the case can be our best allies in the fight to keep public and private music instruction alive and well in our community.  
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Where are the piano students?

1/26/2013

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I have heard many universities, even distinguished schools of music, lament over how difficult it is to recruit piano students these days.  In my nine years of teaching at a university, the third-largest in the state, I taught very few music majors whose primary instrument was the piano.  With the "tiger-mom" boom and the "helicopter parents" abounding, why on earth is there a shortage of young pianists who want to pursue a career in performing or teaching piano?

Since I recently moved to a new area and have tried myself to recruit private students, I have discovered the answer to the universities' question.  Parents are not investing in lessons for their children in the numbers they were even a generation ago, and the drop-off is steep. Piano retailers are shutting down in large numbers, many only surviving because they also sell inexpensive digital instruments. There are many nationally certified, highly educated and highly qualified private piano teachers all over the country whose studios are not full and who are also constantly trying all sorts of strategies to recruit students.  Without students coming "through the pipeline", the universities have little hope of recruiting pianists to fill their teaching studios as well.  Many are blaming the economy, but the issue is more complex than that as family life has shifted from the family around the hearth (and the piano) to the family on-the-go and online. 

There are some piano teachers who are well-established in their geographical areas and have great word-of-mouth referrals and always have a waiting list.  Even these teachers may only have a handful of students who are considering music as a career, or even a college major.  Many serious young piano students are planning (as their parents may or may not have prescribed for them) careers in medicine or science and are playing music "on the side" because Mozart makes them smarter or it looks good on a college application to have more accolades from competitions, or maybe, even, because they enjoy it!  

So, how can we, as private piano teachers and music educators, stress the importance of making the investment in piano lessons to parents?  When parents are spending thousands of dollars on sports equipment, sports camp, (in part to counteract the thousands of dollars they spend on fast food), LEGO sets and robotics, iPods, iPads, and countless other gadgets for their children, why not music lessons?  Could it be that the media culture has so saturated and overtaken parents' mindsets that they are feeling forced to make a choice on how they spend their resources for enhancing their children's education? There are many questions still left unanswered, but there are a few strategies that may be successful in helping the paradigm shift.

Private teachers and school music educators should improve their working relationships at the local and national levels.  It is imperative, as always, that those working toward music advocacy stick together.  Private music teachers should be willing to work in cooperation with public school music teachers to provide quality education for the children in their communities.  Also, school music educators should seek out and know the private teachers in their community, and regularly refer their students to private lessons, especially at the elementary level.  Won't the middle and high school (and even elementary) choral and orchestra directors be thrilled when they have students proficient enough in piano to accompany their groups?  School music teachers know well that students in their classes who have had private lessons are more music literate and are usually leaders in their ensembles.  It benefits their programs to have more students in private lessons.  This does not seem to be stressed in music teacher education programs across the country.  School music teachers, although they may have limited contact with parents as opposed to classroom teachers, do have some opportunities to stress to parents the importance of investing in private lessons for their children, not only in winds, strings or voice, but also in piano.  

Private music teachers need to enter the 21st century when it comes to reaching parents, finding them where they are (online) and convincing them that lessons are a good choice to make when investing in their children's education.  This is easier said than done, as many private teachers do not have the financial means to constantly advertise on the Internet on sites that parents would frequent.  Private music teachers need to expand their social and business network beyond musicianship sites and group to PARENTING sites and groups.  I recently saw a classified ad posted by a parent who was looking for a piano teacher for their child on Craigslist.  Hey, if you can buy a piano or find a free one on there, why not a piano teacher as well?  Parents need to be reminded in as many ways as possible that lessons are an option for their child.  Music teachers have long known that parental involvement in their child's music lessons is a key to the child's success, but first the parents have to choose to make the investment in an instrument and in lessons in the first place.   

Private music teachers have also long known that word-of-mouth is the most effective tool for gaining new students.  We also need to use that word-of-mouth power among parents to transform the mindset of the parents in our community that lessons are a must-have commodity for their children.  If you are a parent and a music educator, or a parent who is not a music educator but believes in the power of music education for your children, talk about it with other parents.  Write about it in your blogs.  Brag about it on Facebook just like you would if your kid's team won the little league world series.  Be the voice of music advocacy for other parents.  This generation of parents needs to realize the importance of raising the next generation of new musicians.  We need new performers and composers and music educators. Otherwise, we will all be doomed to hearing the next generation of remixed pop music that becomes the same as it ever was and our grandchildren will make us listen to their watered-down or cut-up versions.  Music permeates our society.  It reflects our culture (sometimes sadly) and moves us all in so many ways.  We need not only to keep it in the forefront, but also to teach our children not only how to listen but to create and perform.      




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Analogies for Piano Teaching

1/26/2013

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Analogies are comparisons of two things that are similar in some way, but might not normally be considered similar.  Analogies can be useful for piano students to help them relate piano playing and practicing to other facets of their everyday lives.  Here are a couple of analogies I used in teaching today.  

Learning a piano piece is like putting together a jigsaw puzzle.  When we first open the box (look at the piece), we notice all of the different pieces (the individual pitches, rhythms, etc.) We notice the different colors (dynamics, articulations, etc.) and we might even start to see how the different pieces of the puzzle (sections of the piece) fit together.  Some pieces fit together logically with no "trying out" required, but other pieces look similar but slightly different, so we have to take time and carefully piece them together.  Once we have finished the edges of the puzzle, or understand the basic structure of the piece, we feel a sense of accomplishment. We've completed the first stage of learning the piece.  However, there is still much work to be done to complete the whole picture.  We need to understand the shapes, lines, color scheme of the entire piece in order to put it all together.  When we have a finished product, we can be proud of our work, show it off to our friends and family, and sometimes, deconstruct and start all over again.  Sometimes, when we put the puzzle back in the box for a few years, and get it out again, it is a little easier to put together the second time, but it still requires some trial and error, some reconnecting with the lines and shapes of the picture.  

Learning to play the piano is like completing an obstacle course.  In an obstacle course, there are some places where you just run.  This is the easiest and one of the most fun parts of the obstacle course, and one of the best times in a piano student's journey.  They make leaps and bounds in their progress and feel really good about themselves.  There are some places where you crawl in obstacle courses.  These are times when a piano student has to slow down and take some time learning a concept and it may not feel like they are making any progress, but they are, it is just slower than they are used to after a run.  These times can be frustrating but if the student realizes that they are slowly but surely working toward their goal, they can see the light at the end of the tunnel.  There are hurdles, and then, there are the walls.   These are some of the most challenging times for piano students, and often when they up and quit lessons altogether.  Typical "walls" in a piano student's journey happen when they are first learning to read the grand staff, when they have to play hands together doing different things for the first time, when they are starting to move out of five-finger hand positions and learn scales, when they start to have to understand minor *gasp* key signatures and their relationship to majors, when they have to read rhythms more complicated than sixteenth notes, and when they start playing contrapuntal music.  I'm sure my colleagues could name more walls that individual students have encountered; these are just a few of the most common.  As piano teachers, it is our job to know where these walls may pop up and help our students by cheering them on up over the wall.  We can find fun ways to help our students climb and succeed without getting overly frustrated or burned out.  It's also important for the students to be aware, especially the older ones who are more self-aware, that there may be times like these, which is why I had this discussion today in a lesson.  If we explain to the student, "hey, this appears to be a challenge for you, let's climb this wall!" it can help motivate them to meet the challenge as they are practicing at home.  It can hone in their focus and keep them moving toward their goals.  
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Welcome to Musings!

7/27/2012

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I am embarking upon a new phase in my career as I go from serving as a tenured associate professor at a university back to focusing on independent studio teaching for all ages.  I am looking forward to working with students who are eager to learn and curious about music making and performing.  I also look forward to learning from all of you!
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    Mary Lynne Bennett is an independent piano teacher and performer in Pittsburgh, PA.

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