Ask
an Expert: Archive
HI Brian,
Having an older adult as a student can be very rewarding,
both for the teacher and student. Adults are often serious,
committed,
and very appreciative students. As to your question, I do use
a slightly different approach to adult beginners as opposed
to younger
students.
One of the big differences is that I am much more structured
with younger students, and I try to take them through a "big picture" study
of drumming. If a young student wants to play only drum set,
I very much believe that they still need a strong grounding in
fundamentals.
I am a firm believer in getting a student sitting behind a set
on the first lesson, be they young or old. It may be only for
a few minutes, but it lets them have some fun, and it gets all
four
limbs moving early on. I then usually tell them that if they
practice their snare drum reading, and stroke development as
I assign, we
will get some time on the drum set next week as well. If they
practice, they will get behind the drums with headphones on again
the next
week, if not, well then we used all our time working over things
that they should have practiced on the pad!
With an adult, I am less worked about them learning things that
might make them a better all around player. I figure that they
are an adult, and if they want to spend most of their time playing
drums and learning a specific style, and less time working on
chart reading, fine. All students need to spend time working
on the fundamentals
of motion etc, but there are areas that I give adults more leeway
than younger students. They are an adult and they should have
more input than a younger student. A younger student usually
doesn't
see the big picture, so I feel like I may need to make them study
some things, and areas that they may not be as excited about
as others. Adults also tend to more sensitive to lack of progress,
so I also try to be very encouraging. Making them feel like they
are doing well and growing is a key to keeping them motivated.
Either way, we all love music and the drums because it's exciting
and fun. For both young and old, I try to keep things exciting,
motivating, and fun. I hope that this helps.
Jim Rupp
|