What
makes a good guitar teacher?
It’s not so obvious what makes a good teacher, having
knowledge of the subject is important obviously, but if you’re the sort of
person who cannot transmit that information to somebody else, you are not a
good teacher.
I have come across many people who are experts in
their subject, but are unable to appreciate where the pupil is at that point in
time in order to instruct them.
I have also come across people, who are only slightly
ahead of the pupil in what they really know, but they are excellent at
transmitting that information; they in my opinion are good teachers!
If you go back to when I started there was no formal
training in contemporary guitar styles, and there were no exam qualifications
at the time. If you wanted to do gradings you had to study a classical
instrument. If you were a young whippersnapper like me and you just wanted to
just go out and change the world by playing rock guitar, you were
unlikely to go and study an instrument like the piano in order to get a piece
of paper to get a job. I would still rather work at getting in through
the back door by gigging and making connections. This was the way that things
used to be done in the past, and
I suggest actually that this should be more of the way of doing things now.
A good teacher is a mind reader
If someone is able to look inside the mind of a pupil
knowing exactly where they are, and is able to read the rules that are laid out
in front of them to see the problems and how they can be best corrected they
possess a skill of teaching.
This skill requires someone to be focused on the
subject, in other words the pupil.
A good teacher is an iconoclast
Break the rules in order that people can be free, so
they can get out of the cage they have created by the way they think and by the
way they play. This requires the teacher to think outside the box, for instance
what do you do when somebody comes along who has a deformity in their hands or
their fingers? If you are playing classical guitar how do you get on with the
fact that they’re not going to be using the ‘correct fingers’?
What happens if they have some problem in the way
that they see the world? You have to inhabit their world in order for
them to express themselves through music, there is no school curriculum or
syllabus that will help you, it’s completely down to your own genius. Take the
labels like ADHD and throw them away.
A good teacher knows that they are rubbish.
All of the things that one holds dear are only ideas.
For everything a teacher tells a pupil about technique there is a great player
who is doing the exact opposite. You can never know it all and you are never
truly correct.
A good teacher is also a good business person
Charging
a high rate for what they do, but giving incredible value in the way they do is
important. A teacher should not be held to account by other teachers who are
undervaluing themselves. A teacher should make sure that they earn a good
living from what they do, because it will add life force to the work.
If you don’t charge enough you
will resent working!
A good teacher is organised, punctual and reliable.
Many things that are taught and not direct, are
implicit in what they do. Being an organised and reliable one inadvertently
teaches a pupil to be the same. To succeed as a musician, if that’s what they
choose, one of the most important skills that you need is reliability. This is because
no one wants to work with an idiot who forgets what he or she is booked to do,
who is late and unreliable. They will make one or two gigs by being like that,
but after they will not be hired again, ever. And the same goes for a teacher.
Remember that Bluescampuk are
running free Q&A sessions the next one is one July 21st at
7.30pm contact us for details
Vic and the team
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