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Timothy Hagen - Flutist | Composer

Golden Rule #1 of Practicing

11/20/2015

10 Comments

 
Happy (almost) Thanksgiving, everyone! Here in Dallas, my students have the entire holiday week off from school, so I'm thankful for a chance to spend more time with loved ones and recharge my batteries a bit. I am also thankful for the opportunity to reflect on the first third of the academic year, looking back on strategies that are working and those that need fine tuning, hence the restarting of this blog.

My primary job as a teacher is to teach my students how to teach themselves, or in other words, how to practice effectively. In lessons, I walk them through the process of practicing, and while strategies change to suit different problems, the framework essentially remains the same: find, fix, repeat (a LOT), move on.

However, as the semester has gone on, it has become clear that my students need more explicit guidelines for their practicing than an instruction to use the framework to fix all of their problems. So, after teaching well over 300 lessons since August, a light bulb finally came on in my head this week. (Clearly, this was a slow burn.) On the spot, I invented the first of my Golden Rules of Practicing, all of which I will discuss here over the coming weeks.

Golden Rule #1 of Practicing: Never play something wrong the same way twice.

This gets at the fundamental problem in most students' practicing, namely that they think simply having the instrument in their hands counts as practicing. Honestly, I was well into my professional life before I realized how far this was from the truth, so this problem isn't isolated to the youngest players. Golden Rule #1 is designed to help by keeping practicers from mindlessly running through music without making improvements. There's a lot hidden in this simple-sounding rule, so let's look at it from different vantage points.

The first consideration is that mindfulness is built into the rule: one can't know a mistake has been made twice unless he/she is playing with awareness. Focusing on the music we make as we make it puts us on the fast track to improvement.

Equally important is the urgency this rule implies. Students (and the rest of us) constantly complain that they don't have enough time to practice, so who has time to make the same mistakes repeatedly? If we are aware that something is wrong, we need to fix it. Now. Or at the very least, make a note of it so that it can be fixed soon.

Also, the specter of healthy guilt looms within Rule #1, thanks to that word we should never use, never. Perhaps this is controversial, but I communicate from the point of view of a musician who has been salvaged by healthy guilt. If I know something is wrong and don't fix it, an irritant gets into my brain, like a grain of sand in an oyster, and it continues to irritate me until I return to the practice room to work it out and make a pearl. If I don't want to be irritated, I can work the problem out when it arises, thereby avoiding the guilt. Acknowledging the power I have to take responsibility for my own playing is what makes the guilt healthy, and framing it that way helps students too. Bob Duke, Head of Music and Human Learning at The University of Texas at Austin, puts it this way (paraphrased): as long as someone is happy with the status quo, why would they ever want to change? In other words, sometimes we need to be irritated to push ourselves to do our best work, and we likewise need to irritate our students from time to time as well.

A final element of this first rule is the idea of playing something wrong the same way twice. There is a virtually endless number of ways to play something poorly. However, if we are focused on fixing a passage--inventing and trying strategies, making changes one at a time--and the problem persists, then we really aren't playing wrong the same way every time. After all, we're making changes, so we're not having the same experience every time. Investment in the process and constantly trying to find a solution: these are invaluable behaviors that will help us find a solution or at least rule out the things that aren't the solution. As such, they should be positively reinforced within ourselves and our students.

As we wrap up, a word of caution regarding the word "wrong." Many people tend to internalize it as a value judgment. Playing something "wrong" makes us "bad players," and that can be the beginning of a neverending spiral of shame. I'm clearly not against using the word, but as teachers, it's important to frame it well. "Wrong" just implies that something is inaccurate, problematic, not being played to the best of the student's abilities. It has no reflection on a student's character or potential, and in my view, it does not even reflect on a student's true abilities. It is important that students, especially the most serious ones, understand this, so that they have the mental and emotional energy to keep going, even when the problems they're tackling are great and many. The same goes for us professionals, as well.

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Finally, if you like this post, then you'll love The Scientific Method of Practicing, where the underlying information is covered in detail. Head over to the publications page to pick up a copy.
10 Comments
Adrianne Greenbaum link
11/20/2015 10:03:37 am

I can tell you that, after teaching for 50+ years, learning what practicing really is and what degree of mindfulness it takes is still primary. All else is a subheading no matter what level. My college students display the quintessential impatience and lack of focus; we spend EACH LESSON in almost total for weeks, sometimes an am entire semester or more. It means they are focusing on life long learning. I will share your blog post with them as it may help cut off one of those weeks spent in their lesson!

Reply
Tim Hagen
11/20/2015 10:05:59 am

This is what makes you a terrific teacher, Adrianne! I couldn't possibly agree more with your posting. Great teachers unfailingly recognize that teaching students how to teach themselves is the biggest topic on the table. Period.

Reply
Helen Spielman link
11/20/2015 10:09:33 am

Tim, so glad you are sharing your wisdom and experience on this blog!
Developing mindfulness is a long, patient road for most of us - always good to be reminded. Thank you, and Happy Thanksgiving!

Reply
Tim Hagen
11/20/2015 02:00:56 pm

Thanks for the kind words, Helen, and you're right: developing mindfulness is a lifelong journey. Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours!

Reply
Randi Jean Bly
11/20/2015 10:45:37 am

Very well stated. My job as a teacher is to teach students how to teach themselves. After all, I see them only once a week. I recently challenged a student to play her piece slowly and accurately at my tempo all week-never up to tempo. She worries there is no time for this however, we know this will be time well spent! I hope she follows my advice!

Reply
Tim Hagen
11/20/2015 02:02:21 pm

I'm glad to run into another kindred spirit, Randi! I'll think good thoughts for your student in the hopes she listens to your excellent advice.

Reply
Lorna Kohler
11/21/2015 10:38:20 am

A friend forwarded this post to me. Thank you! As a teacher and as a musician, I am grateful for the reminder that there is always time for this quality of listening, creativity and mindful practice. Of course I know I am creating a habit that shuts down my listening if I play anything wrong more than once. I am currently playing in an onstage orchestra for a musical, juggling five reeds, three fingering systems and key changes every time I switch instruments. I know what I need to do: find the places that are still out of focus for me, and bring them into focus with mindful practicing. Sometimes this means transposing the part and playing it on one of the instruments with which I have far more experience. Whatever it takes to allow me to be fully present in the music.
I also appreciate your comments about the word "wrong". Beating myself up and attaching shame to wrong notes is never helpful. I am working on healing myself from this syndrome and being careful not to pass it on to my students!

Reply
Tim Hagen link
12/4/2015 02:09:21 pm

Hi, Lorna! Thanks so much for sharing your experience. I love how you prioritize doing "whatever it takes...to be fully present" and also how open you are to talking about keeping shame out of your musicianship (something I wish more musicians would speak about openly). Your students are lucky to have such a positive role model!

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Dave Booth
12/4/2015 06:38:53 pm

This reminds me of something Rupert Neary told me, when I was in fourth or fifth grade, and just starting flute lessons. He said, "If you play it wrong once, remember that, and don't do it again. But if you forget, and play it wrong twice, mark it, because if you play it wrong three times, you are practicing it."

Reply
Roy link
12/25/2020 03:56:32 pm

Hello mmate great blog

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    About Dr. Hagen

    Flutist/composer, passionate about teaching others and himself. Always searching for ideas that help do it a little better each day. Click here to learn more about me.

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