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Extra-curricular activities

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If your kids do piano, please could you answer me a couple of questions about them.

40 replies

tortoiseshell · 24/09/2008 10:16

I teach piano, and my kids do piano as well. I'd just like to ask some seemingly random questions, will explain why later! I have a theory that I'd like to prove...

  1. Is your child good at any sport?
  2. If so, which sports?
  3. Do they seem a co-ordinated child or an un-co-ordinated child?
  4. On the piano, did they find it easy or hard to put hands together - particularly when playing something like a scale where the hands are going in the same direction?
  5. Do they find the piano 'easy' or do they have to work hard to sort the notes out.
OP posts:
AMumInScotland · 24/09/2008 16:16
  1. Not really. Certainly not interested
  2. N/A
  3. Great at fine motor control, average at gross motor control
  4. Easy - but had learned other instruments before piano
  5. Easy - as above
chipkid · 24/09/2008 16:22

1 and 2. showing some promise at golf but tis all

  1. co-ordinated
  2. Not got there yet
  3. easy so far
tortoiseshell · 24/09/2008 18:11

Thank you - much appreciated! Any more answers?

In the questions about the piano, it's very specifically how easy they find it to co-ordinate the hands, not reading music etc. Meant to include that before. Thanks!

OP posts:
tortoiseshell · 24/09/2008 18:13

And also is specifically hands together! Co-ordination question is more about gross motor control - whether your child is one who can effortlessly turn a cartwheel/bowl a ball/hit a tennis ball or one who is all arms and legs all over the place when they run - you know what I mean!!!

OP posts:
PussinWellies · 25/09/2008 11:18

Okaaaay...
I've had three piano starters, two of whom have given up:
DS1 (has stopped)
(1)and (2) Good at sailing and gokarting
(3)Two left feet
(4)Very frustrating
(5)Sightread from music to keys effortlessly but never knew what the note was called.

DS2 (has stopped)
(1) and (2) Rubbish at most sports, OK at gymnastics
(3) Very badly coordinated, walks into walls
(no, I don't see how he manages balancing on a high beam at all)
(4)Very difficult. Often played one or both hands in the wrong direction
(5) Difficult

DD1 (started 6 mths ago)
(1) Idle child
(2) but OK swimmer
(3) No
(4) Easy
(5) Easy unless tired

FAQ · 25/09/2008 11:25

none of my children play (although DS3 showing massive interest - but too young yet)

However I can answer for myself - I play the piano (and organ - so 2 hands and feet need co-ordinating)

  1. Is your child good at any sport? - No totally hopeless - especially if it involves hitting a ball with something in my hand

  2. If so, which sports? N/A

  3. Do they seem a co-ordinated child or an un-co-ordinated child? - wasn't particularly co-ordinated as a child (not much better now)

  4. On the piano, did they find it easy or hard to put hands together - particularly when playing something like a scale where the hands are going in the same direction? Yes I found it easy

  5. Do they find the piano 'easy' or do they have to work hard to sort the notes out. - Found it fairly straight forward

FAQ · 25/09/2008 11:26
  • just noticed that you started the thread tortoise - so already know about co-ordinating hands and feet on the organ
tortoiseshell · 25/09/2008 11:27

Aha Faq, you may prove my theory with that!

OP posts:
tortoiseshell · 25/09/2008 11:27

lol!

OP posts:
FAQ · 25/09/2008 11:30

am intrigued as to your theory.......

tortoiseshell · 25/09/2008 11:31

I need a few more answers first!

OP posts:
Seeline · 25/09/2008 11:32

DS, nearly 7 has very little interest in any sport, playing or watching. Catching and kicking etc not particularly skilful, and I would say generallly un-coordinated. He has really only just started hands together, and certainly no scales yet, but does seem to have picked it up remarkably quickly. Generally, I would say he is finding it easy at present, although I'm not sure how much he is actually reading the music or playing by ear IYSWM. What's your theory Tortoise?

FAQ · 25/09/2008 11:32

trying to think back to school - we didn't do many sports there - fencing was the big one...

Most of those that were fantastic at the fencing (and thinking back those that did other sports) played the piano, but as their 2nd instrument - best fencers were

a cellist
a trombonist
a percussionist

mehgalegs · 25/09/2008 11:37
  1. DS1 -no. DS2 is a good sports all rounder, very nimble and agile.

  2. DS1 is a good swimmer but not so good at ball games. DS2 good at cricket and football.

3)DS1 a liitle absent minded, bungling mad professor type. DS2 very coordinated.

  1. Both found it easy (to my surprise I still struggle)

  2. Both find it easy, very musical DS1 Grade 2 Jazz DS2 to tajke exam soon. they are doing duets at the moment and will take Grade 1 duet exam. Amazingly talented don't know where they get it from. Excellent teacher too.

mehgalegs · 25/09/2008 11:38

Just re read FAq - mine do fencing club and are both very good. DS2 one fencing club trophy last term.

mehgalegs · 25/09/2008 11:38

DS1 also plays cello very well. I am of him

singersgirl · 25/09/2008 11:39

DS2, 7 in August:

  1. No. 2)N/A 3)Quite uncoordinated. Has good balance but poor handwriting. 4)I suspect we're too early in his piano playing career to tell, but he doesn't find it particularly easy to put 2 hands together. Having said that, he's much better than I though he would be and plays very feelingly. 5)He plays by ear, and is taking a long time to learn to read the music because he doesn't need to yet. So he learns everything off by heart by watching me or his teacher play it once or twice. He knows what the notes are on the piano, but is not reading music fluently. He was a very early and fluent reader generally, so I know he could read the music if he could be bothered, but he is very much a 'path of least resistance' child.
Walkthedinosaur · 25/09/2008 11:39

1 & 2 - No hates all sport
3) Uncordinated - dyspraxic
4) Finds it difficult but is working at it
5)Although actually finds sorting the notes out easier than reading.

tortoiseshell · 25/09/2008 11:40

Ok, my theory is;

people's brains naturally make their hands do the mirror image of each other - so on the piano it is much easier to do contrary motion, with thumbs together, 1st finger together, 2nd finger together etc. To get hands together, you actually need to break that connection, so that actually the less co-ordination you have, the easier you find the piano.

In sports such as tennis/cricket your whole body is involved in ONE fluid motion, so you need co-ordination. My theory is that the people who find piano (and to a MUCH greater extent the organ) easy to put things together are the least co-ordinated people. And although people say 'you need so much co-ordination to play the piano/organ' the actual truth is that the less you have the better!

What do you think? It's certainly true of my pupils. And it's definitely true that most organists are unco-ordinated away from the instrument!!! Definitely true of me. I absolutely couldn't do anything like hockey or the like, swimming I was ok at, but totally rubbish at throwing ropes when we were doing lifesaving etc.

And of my pupils, the ones who find it hardest to put hands together are the sporty ones.

OP posts:
tortoiseshell · 25/09/2008 11:41

(This isn't a theory on how musical the child is btw - it's more to do with the mechanics of playing specifically the piano).

OP posts:
mummy197 · 25/09/2008 11:44
  1. Is your child good at any sport? very average - swims well, zero interest / skill if a ball is involved
  2. If so, which sports?
  3. Do they seem a co-ordinated child or an un-co-ordinated child? very average
  4. On the piano, did they find it easy or hard to put hands together - particularly when playing something like a scale where the hands are going in the same direction? finds this easy
  5. Do they find the piano 'easy' or do they have to work hard to sort the notes - very musical ear so plays well from memory, can self correct both hands, as a result learning to read music is a bit of a drag

whats the theory?

tortoiseshell · 25/09/2008 11:45

see above for the theory!

OP posts:
SaintRiven · 25/09/2008 11:48
  1. Is your child good at any sport? - average I think.
  2. If so, which sports?
  3. Do they seem a co-ordinated child or an un-co-ordinated child? - Co-ordinated.
  4. On the piano, did they find it easy or hard to put hands together - particularly when playing something like a scale where the hands are going in the same direction? - finds it easy
  5. Do they find the piano 'easy' or do they have to work hard to sort the notes out. - finds it easy.

On the other hand, I wasgreat at sports and having lots of trouble learning piano and making left and right hands do different things.

BalloonSlayer · 25/09/2008 12:23

Haven't read your theory yet, so just answering the questions about DS1

Good at any sport. No
Which n/a
Un-co-ordinated child
Found it easy to put hands together
I think finds it easy but says he doesn't want to go any more. BUT is very good at maths and has had no trouble working out what the notes are when it comes to reading the music

Beetroot · 25/09/2008 12:26
  1. Is your child good at any sport? - yes
  2. If so, which sports? in all teams at school - mainly ball sports though
  3. Do they seem a co-ordinated child or an un-co-ordinated child? - co-ordinated
  4. On the piano, did they find it easy or hard to put hands together - particularly when playing something like a scale where the hands are going in the same direction? - not sure about htis -
  5. Do they find the piano 'easy' or do they have to work hard to sort the notes out. - they know the notes - don't have to wqork put where they are