Friday, June 19, 2015

5 Tips for More Effective Practicing

Practice Makes Perfect

So let's start practicing how we practice!


We all know that to be successful and make progress, we have to practice what we're working at.  However, many people struggle with how to make their practice effective.  Sitting down to play and simply repeating your piece over and over and over will help you get a little better here and there, but if we hone our "practicing" skills, we can make MUCH more progress MUCH more quickly.  Here are a few tips that I prioritize with my students.

1. Practice Every Day


Ok this one might seem obvious, and everyone SAYS they do it, but they really brush it off as something that isn't really necessary.  Heres how it usually goes down - ok I'll practice every day...but Tuesday I'm going to dinner, and Thursday my friends are coming over, and Friday I'm going swimming, and nobody practices on Saturday anyway....So I guess I'll practice a few days and I'll do extra time to make up...but not really cuz I'll get bored and rationalize that I've done enough.  Then when the next week rolls around and lesson time pops up - frustration abounds because they aren't as far along as they feel they should be. 

Here's the deal.  When you have a lesson - all sorts of information has been thrown at you, and all sorts of beneficial, guided practice has taken place.  When you practice that same day, you enforce that information.  If you then skip one or two or three days - you start losing that valuable info, and your practices become less effective.  Practicing for a little while every day is truly the key to moving forward at a steady and successful rate.  I'm not saying miss Grandma's birthday or anything....but even if you're super busy - playing through your piece even once before bed is better than skipping and getting out of your routine.  Set your alarm...and just do it.

2. Practice at the Same Time Every Day


So this is the natural step two from the above tip.  And I'll be honest, sometimes it doesn't work out because we've got SO many things planned for our very busy, very fun lives.  But JUST like doing homework before playtime and working out as soon as you wake up - if you set a GOAL time and STICK TO IT - practicing will become routine, and it will feel totally natural.  Push through it...do it for 21 days (or however long they say you need to repeat something to become a habit), and it will become an easy part of your every day life.

3. Make Goals and Write Them Down


Your piano teacher doesn't just write down what your "assignment" is for their own benefit.  We write down what you're supposed to work on because we want YOU to look at it.  Every week you should decide what you want to accomplish by the end of the 7 days. Decide what it will take to reach that goal - and WRITE IT DOWN.  Every time you sit down to practice - take out that notebook - look at your goals and your steps to reach those goals - and practice accordingly.  If you sit down with nothing but moving forward in mind, you'll go into auto pilot, make a little bit of progress, and get up without actually accomplishing much of anything. If you know when you sit down, that you aren't getting back up until you've mastered that crazy hard measure on page 3 - then you'll overcome an obstacle, and truly move forward with your piece.  BUST OUT THAT PAPER AND PEN KIDS!

4. Practice in Small Sections


This one is serious boys and girls. Everyone sits down trying to get through their practice, opens their music, starts on page 1 - ends on page 5, does it maybe once more, and hops up hoping they got a little better.  And everyone KNOWS that this is a total waste of time.  I tell my students every day - if you start at the top and fight ALLLLL the way to the end - by the time you reach that last note - you've forgotten anything you may have learned about page 1! What was the point?! Go back to tip number 3 - make your goals - sit down and plan to work on one page, one line, one measure at a time, and DON'T move forward until you've reached your goal and you feel CONFIDENT in the section you've dedicated your practice time to. Repetition is the key people.  Getting it right one time doesn't mean you've got it.  Repeat those small sections until you KNOW you've got it, and if you play fifteen other pieces and come back - you'll still have it.  Then you can move forward happily!

5.  Reward yourself!


Don't make your practice time feel like hard work that you HAVE to do! Do whatever you need to do to make it enjoyable! If that means you get to eat an m&m every time you finish a line - then bust out those m&ms! If it means you need to practice right before you go to bed so it's not interfering with time you want to be with your friends - then schedule accordingly (and stick to it).  You are working towards something and that is wonderful! Make it feel wonderful and be PROUD of yourself EVERY time you reach a goal! 




Get Out There and Practice your Practicing! It Truly Makes A Difference!

Monday, June 15, 2015

Perks of learning to Play!

I can't say it enough….adding music to your child's education is ENDLESSLY beneficial! Check out this article by Laura Lewis Brown - published on the PBS Parents website! It sums up a few of the really amazing ways that learning to read and play music adds to your child's development.  Enjoy! 


The Benefits of Music Education


Whether your child is the next Beyonce or more likely to sing her solos in the shower, she is bound to benefit from some form of music education. Research shows that learning the do-re-mis can help children excel in ways beyond the basic ABCs. 
More Than Just Music
Research has found that learning music facilitates learning other subjects and enhances skills that children inevitably use in other areas. “A music-rich experience for children of singing, listening and moving is really bringing a very serious benefit to children as they progress into more formal learning,” says Mary Luehrisen, executive director of the National Association of Music Merchants (NAMM) Foundation, a not-for-profit association that promotes the benefits of making music. 

Making music involves more than the voice or fingers playing an instrument; a child learning about music has to tap into multiple skill sets, often simultaneously. For instance, people use their ears and eyes, as well as large and small muscles, says Kenneth Guilmartin, cofounder of Music Together, an early childhood music development program for infants through kindergarteners that involves parents or caregivers in the classes. 
“Music learning supports all learning. Not that Mozart makes you smarter, but it’s a very integrating, stimulating pastime or activity,” Guilmartin says. 
Language Development
“When you look at children ages two to nine, one of the breakthroughs in that area is music’s benefit for language development, which is so important at that stage,” says Luehrisen. While children come into the world ready to decode sounds and words, music education helps enhance those natural abilities. “Growing up in a musically rich environment is often advantageous for children’s language development,” she says. But Luehrisen adds that those inborn capacities need to be “reinforced, practiced, celebrated,” which can be done at home or in a more formal music education setting. 

According to the Children’s Music Workshop, the effect of music education on language development can be seen in the brain. “Recent studies have clearly indicated that musical training physically develops the part of the left side of the brain known to be involved with processing language, and can actually wire the brain’s circuits in specific ways. Linking familiar songs to new information can also help imprint information on young minds,” the group claims. 
This relationship between music and language development is also socially advantageous to young children. “The development of language over time tends to enhance parts of the brain that help process music,” says Dr. Kyle Pruett, clinical professor of child psychiatry at Yale School of Medicine and a practicing musician. “Language competence is at the root of social competence. Musical experience strengthens the capacity to be verbally competent.”
Increased IQ
A study by E. Glenn Schellenberg at the University of Toronto at Mississauga, as published in a 2004 issue of Psychological Science, found a small increase in the IQs of six-year-olds who were given weekly voice and piano lessons. Schellenberg provided nine months of piano and voice lessons to a dozen six-year-olds, drama lessons (to see if exposure to arts in general versus just music had an effect) to a second group of six-year-olds, and no lessons to a third group. The children’s IQs were tested before entering the first grade, then again before entering the second grade. 

Surprisingly, the children who were given music lessons over the school year tested on average three IQ points higher than the other groups. The drama group didn’t have the same increase in IQ, but did experience increased social behavior benefits not seen in the music-only group.
The Brain Works Harder
Research indicates the brain of a musician, even a young one, works differently than that of a nonmusician. “There’s some good neuroscience research that children involved in music have larger growth of neural activity than people not in music training. When you’re a musician and you’re playing an instrument, you have to be using more of your brain,” says Dr. Eric Rasmussen, chair of the Early Childhood Music Department at the Peabody Preparatory of The Johns Hopkins University, where he teaches a specialized music curriculum for children aged two months to nine years. 

In fact, a study led by Ellen Winner, professor of psychology at Boston College, and Gottfried Schlaug, professor of neurology at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, found changes in the brain images of children who underwent 15 months of weekly music instruction and practice. The students in the study who received music instruction had improved sound discrimination and fine motor tasks, and brain imaging showed changes to the networks in the brain associated with those abilities, according to the Dana Foundation, a private philanthropic organization that supports brain research. 
Spatial-Temporal Skills
Research has also found a causal link between music and spatial intelligence, which means that understanding music can help children visualize various elements that should go together, like they would do when solving a math problem. 

“We have some pretty good data that music instruction does reliably improve spatial-temporal skills in children over time,” explains Pruett, who helped found the Performing Arts Medicine Association. These skills come into play in solving multistep problems one would encounter in architecture, engineering, math, art, gaming, and especially working with computers. 
Improved Test Scores
A study published in 2007 by Christopher Johnson, professor of music education and music therapy at the University of Kansas, revealed that students in elementary schools with superior music education programs scored around 22 percent higher in English and 20 percent higher in math scores on standardized tests, compared to schools with low-quality music programs, regardless of socioeconomic disparities among the schools or school districts. Johnson compares the concentration that music training requires to the focus needed to perform well on a standardized test. 

Aside from test score results, Johnson’s study highlights the positive effects that a quality music education can have on a young child’s success. Luehrisen explains this psychological phenomenon in two sentences: “Schools that have rigorous programs and high-quality music and arts teachers probably have high-quality teachers in other areas. If you have an environment where there are a lot of people doing creative, smart, great things, joyful things, even people who aren’t doing that have a tendency to go up and do better.”
And it doesn’t end there: along with better performance results on concentration-based tasks, music training can help with basic memory recall. “Formal training in music is also associated with other cognitive strengths such as verbal recall proficiency,” Pruett says. “People who have had formal musical training tend to be pretty good at remembering verbal information stored in memory.”
Being Musical
Music can improve your child’ abilities in learning and other nonmusic tasks, but it’s important to understand that music does not make one smarter. As Pruett explains, the many intrinsic benefits to music education include being disciplined, learning a skill, being part of the music world, managing performance, being part of something you can be proud of, and even struggling with a less than perfect teacher. 

“It’s important not to oversell how smart music can make you,” Pruett says. “Music makes your kid interesting and happy, and smart will come later. It enriches his or her appetite for things that bring you pleasure and for the friends you meet.”
While parents may hope that enrolling their child in a music program will make her a better student, the primary reasons to provide your child with a musical education should be to help them become more musical, to appreciate all aspects of music, and to respect the process of learning an instrument or learning to sing, which is valuable on its own merit.

“There is a massive benefit from being musical that we don’t understand, but it’s individual. Music is for music’s sake,” Rasmussen says. “The benefit of music education for me is about being musical. It gives you have a better understanding of yourself. The horizons are higher when you are involved in music,” he adds. “Your understanding of art and the world, and how you can think and express yourself, are enhanced.”

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Piano at the Beach is Moving to Music City!

By now you all now the sad and yet exciting news! 

I'm going from Miss Walker to Mrs. West!!! 

Adam and I will be getting married on Folly Beach next month and I am SO very excited!!! We know we want to live close to family for that amazing big family atmosphere, and since I'm from Murfreesboro and most of my family lives in Tennessee - we're packing up the homestead in July and heading to Music City to put down some roots!!  

I've been teaching my Charleston babies for 3+ years now, and it is just breaking my heart to think of leaving.  You have all grown so much and worked so hard over the past few years, and I am endlessly proud of you! You all know I'll be back to visit and check on you, so keep up the hard work!!! 

As for all of you music lovers in Tennessee - I'll be living in Murfreesboro when I move in July, and would LOVE to meet you, make new friends, and find some lovely new students to share my love for music with!  I know you don't know me yet, but feel free to give me a call, shoot me an email, or face time to ask me any questions about my lessons, my teaching methods, my experience, or anything else you can think of! I'll be accepting students in Murfreesboro, Smyrna, Brentwood, etc. I can't wait to meet you all! 


Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Talk about Rhythm

WOAH
If you want to see a dedicated, motivated, passionate music lover...look no further. Music runs through this kid's bones, and we should all remember...when we LOVE what we're doing...it shows!


Please everyone...LOOK AROUND YOU! LISTEN! Find the music that speaks to your soul...learn a variety of pieces to find what you truly enjoy. Play the music you love, and you won't look at the clock when you practice..you won't feel frustrated as you work on a measure for the 15th time...you'll get lost in the love of the music! Let yourself wander and get lost...its good for your soul <3

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Motivation for January Practice!


Happy January All! 

I've been away from the blog for a bit - as I've been so busy with my students and family, but I am finally back to my weekly posts! They motivate you…they motivate me…whats not to love?!

This week…be ready for your jaw to drop…

I'm not sure if you watch America's Got Talent…but this kid makes me want to start! WHAT a motivation to the rest of us out there! Stop looking at the clock while you practice…remember to allow your emotion to flow through into your playing…be PASSIONATE about the songs you choose to learn and play and share…watch and enjoy!




Thanks Adrian Romoff for your passion and dedication to your music! You're a role model for all of us looking to be the best we can be!

Thursday, January 23, 2014

New Music for the New Year!

Happy New Year Everyone!

I want to start this year with one of my VERY favorite piano songs...Once Upon a December composed by Stephen Flaherty.  It is gorgeous, complex, and emotional.  If you want a challenge, give this one a shot!



New Year New Lessons

Give me a shout asap to get your piano lessons scheduled for the new year! Spots are filling up and I'd love to add you to my list! 
Me: Ashley Walker / Piano at the Beach
email: ashleyerinw@gmail.com
phone: 803.370.1275

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Hard Work Pays Off!

Check this out guys...just another example of how hard work pays off!  It doesn't matter how old you are - the important thing is how much work you put into it!

Just wow.

Monday, September 16, 2013

Pug Puppy Birthday Party!!!

HAPPY BIRTHDAY WALTER! 

As many of you know, I am the very proud and happy owner of a pug puppy named Walter!  He just turned 1 year old, so in his baby pug honor, a birthday party was thrown.  I have a whole blog post about it containing amazing things like pug puppy photos, a recipe for a puppy birthday cake, my mom's DELICIOUS chili recipe, and lots lots more! Did I mention pictures of a baby pug? You know you wanna see puppies ;).  Go check it out! AshleyErinWalker-PugParty


Saturday, September 14, 2013

Its all about Inspiration!!

Some of my students over in Mt. Pleasant have recently refreshed my creative vibe! They are still in the early stages of learning to play and read on their own, so they are experiencing all the ups and downs, challenges and rewards of learning a new language.  Although learning to read music is challenging and sometimes frustrating, these students have found pieces of music that are inspiring them to work harder and faster than ever before!  One of them heard a complicated version of the Swan Lake theme,  and is absolutely determined to be able to master it on his own, while another student is fascinated with the original version of Fur Elise! Their newfound dedication to their lessons and their motivation to be able to read complicated pieces on their own has inspired me to no end!  It reminds me that, any time you reach a slump in your work, or you lose your motivation, you simply need to find what inspired you in the first place! Stay inspired! Stay creative! Stay determined! You can learn anything you want to, if your head and heart are in the right place.  <3 :)


Monday, June 3, 2013

Home again Home again!!!

Hey guys! I've missed you! As most of you know, I had the opportunity to spend two weeks with my family in Europe and have been traveling around like crazy! I saw amazing things I never thought I'd be able to see, and I was able to spend quality time with my family.  Here is a sneak peak (through my iPhone) into what I got to do and see while I was away!

The BigBen skyline! This was the only blue sky we saw during our week in London haha

Close up of Big Ben on a dreary, yet gorgeous London day

These bright yellow fields are all over England! This is what they use to make Canola Oil.  Who know it was so pretty!!!

Cardiff Castle in Wales

Florence, Italy was breathtaking

Me and the little brother at the Mediterranean!

The Queen's Garden in London

Me and Sam pigged out on Gelato the whole time we were in Italy!

Oh yeah....I ran through Platform 9 3/4....no big deal ;)

Italian window boxes made me want to plant flowers everywhere!

Mom and Sam in London

Italian street musicians were insanely amazing!

The Palace

Pizza in Italy makes me want to move there.

Poppies were growing all over Italy!

Stonehenge

Westminster


Amazing street artists in Florence!


I'm so glad I had the opportunity to spend this time with my family and see incredible things I never thought I'd be able to see! I'm ALSO tremendously glad to be home to my students, my fuzzy little kittens and puppy, and the Charleston summer sun :)

Monday, May 6, 2013

Summertime = Playtime!

Hi guys! Happy Monday! 
I just wanted to pop on and share a few thoughts on practicing in the summertime.

1. Take a mini break! You've worked HARD this year and you deserve some fun in the sun! Give yourself a whole week of no piano - all play :).

2. Don't forget to start back practicing at the end of your mini break ;)

3.  Don't make it hard or stressful! Summertime is supposed to be relaxing.  So don't force yourself to sit at the piano for 30 minutes if all your friends are outside playing! Practice for 15 minutes in the morning after you eat breakfast (you know when the neighbor kids are still sleeping), and then practice for 15 minutes at night after dinner or before bed! Even break your practicing up into 10 minute segments if thats easier!

4.  Set a timer.  This will make your life SO much easier because you won't be constantly hopping up to check the time.  The more you think about it...the slower it goes.  Just focus on your song and before you know it you'll be done for the day! 

5.  Work with your teacher to find music you love.  If you can't stand the songs your trying to learn, your practicing sessions will be SO much worse.  Pick songs you WANT to know how to play and songs that intrigue you! This doesn't mean pick easy songs by the way...pick something that challenges you and you'll be proud of yourself when you've mastered it in a few weeks :). 


Monday, April 29, 2013

Here be Pirates

HAPPY MONDAYYYYYY
(or whatever we're supposed to say to get through waking up early again ;) )

I'm going to have two of my students working on this piece this week so I wanted to show it to the rest of you too!

Anybody a Pirates of the Caribbean fan? I LOVE the Davy Jones organ piece in the 2nd movie!!! Definitely my favorite song out of all 4 movies.  Go check it out here!




Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Happy Spring Time!

I can't get enough of the warmer temperatures right now! I'm planning on spending all of next weekend on the beach!! Are you guys getting out in the sun yet?



I want to post a link to a new song for you guys today.  Its a little  challenging but SO worth it.  One of my students is working on it right now and he ALMOST has it mastered! I'll ask his permission when he's done and see if we can post a video of his final product once he is satisfied with it.  

This is basically Twinkle Twinkle taken to a whole new level.  Its "Ah, Vous Diral-je, Maman" by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart! Check it out and let me know what you think! 





As usual guys remember to tell your friends to give me a shout if they'd like to try out lessons! I've got some available time slots and I'd love to chat about getting started! I'll be passing out some of my beachy business cards to all my current students this week too so you can share the love with your friends! <3

Friday, February 15, 2013

Love Is In The Air!

Happy Valentines Day guys!!

My Valentine gift to you:  If you sign up for lessons in the month of February your first lesson is free!!

I love this candy/flower/pinkandred filled holiday!  I thought I'd pop on here and give you guys something romantic to listen to.  One of my girls is actually playing this song for her upcoming talent show and she's doing SO well with it! Its a gorgeous fun piece and perfect for this love-filled week.  Shoot me a message if this is something you'd like to add to your repertoire!


PS:  I've opened up my schedule to include some new timeslots!!! I love my kids so much I just couldn't help but take on some more this year :).  Give me a call 803.370..1275 or shoot me an email ashleyerinw@gmail.com for details on availability and any questions you may have!


Wednesday, August 8, 2012

I am speechless

This video is one of the most beautiful things I've ever seen.  Watch this and I swear you'll run straight to your piano to practice.

PS:  watch his hands feel for the correct position before he plays each bass clef chord.  Keep your eyes on your music boys and girls...this kid is showing you that if you work hard enough and you play long enough, you wont need to stare at the keys to find your place on the keyboard.  If you can't find it with your eyes closed, then you haven't finished practicing.

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Batten Down the Hatches

Oh my...my summer has disappeared in a whirlwind of crazy!  I don't know about all of you...but I think something was in the water this summer and kept everyone's schedules stirred up and flying left and right! I think this very moment is the first chance I've had to breathe in about two months.  Anybody else experiencing this summer anomaly?   I thought summer was supposed to be lounging on the beach and eating watermelon!!!! Well...I have officially decided to take back my summer starting today...and that means back to blogging with you guys :)

So lets start by rewinding.  I simply MUST share with you the incredible trip that I took this summer with my family.  Family vacations are limited once kids become grown and live in other cities (enjoy your vacations now boys and girls!).  However, my family has always been close and managed to keep with tradition this year and get both me, my little (not so little) 19 year old brother, mom and dad all together for a family trip to (drumroll pleases) IRELAND!!! This was my first time out of the country AND to the place where my family originally comes from (can you tell by the pale skin, red hair, and freckles?) so I was in awe the entire trip.  Let me let the pictures do the talking:

Real Italian Food
I developed a new love for hot tea...mmmmmm
Cathedral on a BEAUTIFUL sunny day
Look at that organ....breathtaking 
Can you tell I liked the food? 
Me and my little brother <3
The Cliffs of Moher (ummmmm beautiful...but TERRIFYING)
The Cliffs of Moher (at this point I threw a hissy fit and made the whole family stop and go back...my reason? The path from here on out was ON the cliff edge...no more pretty grass and flowers between us and certain death...one mis-step and you were over the edge...We ended up enjoying the cliffs from here with a cup of hot tea and watching the bravest of the travelers try to wind along the rest of the path.  My fear of heights kept us all on safe ground ;)
Incredible castles everywhere
Beautiful
Green :)

Sam and Mama
Castle Moat
DUNGEON DUNDUNDUNNNNN
Scary Moat around the castle after a crazy storm. 
Driving through the Countryside



Summer updates: to be continued....










Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Play me, I'm Yours




These videos are a little old...but I ran across them today and I love them!!! British artist Luke Jerram started "Play Me, I'm Yours" and it has been pulling people together since 2008.  It's amazing how a little bit of impromptu music can draw such a crowd!  Whether they have never touched a piano before, or they've been playing for twenty years, these public "Play me, I'm Yours" pianos are attracting everyone!  How much fun would it be for a bunch of us to get together and play in downtown Charleston, or out on Folly Beach?! What would you choose to play???  Maybe its time to bring "Play Me, I'm Yours" to our little corner of the world.  Food for thought for this fun-loving piano teacher and her wonderful students.  


Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Song of the Week

Lets step back in time for a moment shall we??  Everybody remember the movie Anastasia?


One of my all time favorites!  In the movie her music box plays a song called Once Upon a December.  It has always been one of my favorites and a long time ago I found the sheet music for it.  Every now and then on a rainy day I'll pull that out and start playing.  Its the kind of song that you can feel in your bones.  I found this on YouTube so you can hear the song and see some of the work:  Once Upon a December.  You've got to practice hard if you want to get this one down guys...its no easy feat....but its EVER so worth it in the end :D


**Everybody remember:  I've got a couple of In-Home Piano Lesson time-slots still available for Charleston, SC and surrounding areas!  Shoot me an email (ashleyerinw@gmail.com) or a text/phone call (803.370.1275) and we can start playing!!

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Song of the Week!! (and some other stuff too)

SOOOOOOOOO I'm a little behind on my song of the week I know I know....But in my defense I've been horribly distracted by two dear friends of mine...I mean really...who could turn this down?


Puppy love makes everything better!! This is Bindi (she looks just like a fox!) and Oliver (big black and white baby).   I've been taking care of them for a friend this week and its taken a toll on this piano teacher's productivity ;).

BUT BACK TO MUSICAL BUSINESS!

My song of the week?
by Taylor Swift (rumored to be another animal lover)

This is such a great song to work on for a bunch of reasons...but right now the puppies are yapping my name so I'm just going to give you my favorite one.

My middle school girls reallllyyyyy want to play it...they are willing to take on the most complicated versions of this song simply because it speaks to their love-struck hearts.
This is why I mix up the music in my curriculum.  Yes we will play classical music.  Yes we will play pieces designed to teach a specific technique or a piece that focus's on a specific lesson we're working through.  But we will also play music that makes you feel excited and proud and determined.  If what you're playing doesn't speak to your soul...you simply won't work as hard!  Love Story has my kids practicing twice as long every day and calling me up during the week with questions to make sure they're getting the music just right.  I love it!

Now lets find out what music speaks to you :D  



Monday, April 30, 2012

mmmmmmmmmmm monday

Nothing like a box of cookies to throw me off of a healthy eating kick and into a sugar coma!

But hey...everybody needs a little pick-me-up to get through the beginning of a busy week.  Always reward yourself after a really good practice session! 30 minutes of piano practice = 1 delicious lemon meltaway cookie = happy students and a happy piano teacher :)

**Time-slots for piano lessons still available in Charleston and the surrounding areas!  Give this cookie-devouring piano teacher a call/text 803.370.1275 or email ashleyerinw@gmail.com to book a spot!!