What We Do
Experiential Education PDF Print E-mail
  

Learning by doing is integral to education here in our Piano Program. Experiential learning takes place through activities that include multisensory projects, collaborative efforts, and just plain fun! Giving back to the community is an essential part of our program. From producing DVDs to sell for charity to personal achievement through larger organization, participants here stay involved.

Media Production

For a few Saturdays per year, regular classes are set aside and students undertake a variety of music-educational adventures. Either in December or June, they join students from our Average Age and Teenage program to produce a DVD. Led by PPK and ZPP faculty and parent volunteers, students work hard to prepare their pieces, then record them. The sales from these DVDs always go to a charity to benefit other children who are not as fortunate. In 2007, students made a 70-minute DVD for the holidays. Proceeds are going to the Danville children's Guild, an organization whose commitment makes children's lives better through raising funds for charity. The Guild assists various children's charities in our area.

Every March, PPK students join students from all over the area to participate in the Dana Foundation’s Brain Awareness Week, to learn about their brains in music study. Cognitive neuroscience is fascinating, and our students benefit from knowing how to use theirs to best fit their goals in piano!brain-awareness-logo Parents often learn much about their child's capabilities and the children impress parents with their knowledge of Cognitive Neuroscience..

MTNA-sponsored Music Achievement Award Program is a year-round program in which students develop an aspect of their own learning, then receive a special award at the end of the year. It is an excellent program since it is  writtten to be utilized differently by every student. Each students sets his or her own goal, and the mentor works with the participant to make sure he or she reaches the goal. Awards produced by MTNA are given at the end of the year in an awareds ceremony. Every student participates!

Service Learning – how music affects others.

Sharing their time and talents helps students develop awareness of needs outside themselves and the value of community involvement and service. Participation in their own twice-yearly recitals provides such a vehicle. The recitals are largely student-driven. They decide what to wear, what to play (with our help here) and how they want to present their pieces. Everyone gets a chance to share their art with one another, AND, they love their performance to be included on their own website as well as on the main website. Sharing their gift of music is exciting and fun, and helps society. They want other children to enjoy their playing as much as they do! 

Extracurricular

In keeping with our support of a well-rounded education, we avidly support students' choices to play in school and church talent shows, family events, and for their friends. Participants in our program then report to us such performances, and the list can be seen on every student’s own webpage (see www.pianokidsite.com).

 
Zinn Piano Program Philosophy PDF Print E-mail
Zinn Piano Program is not just another piano program. We do not simply teach piano or give piano lessons. It is a new approach which offers effective music instruction (piano study) within a framework of relevant research findings in cognitive neuroscience and psychology. Stated differently, the cross-disciplinary fields of music and psychology are combined to help students learn to utilize their cognitive resources in ways that achieve their true musical potential. Are you interested in the outcome? Visit our student's website to hear them perform on video by visiting PianoKidSite.com. Our students can do everything at the piano as outlined by the Music Teachers National Association (MTNA) guidelines for best practices (click here to read the guidelines).
 
Music has been described as a universal means of expression which has been manifest over the centuries in all parts of the world. By creating a powerful sequence of activities and integrating these with every child on an individual basis, participants thrive in our psychologically safe and supportive environment. By using carefully selected sequences in visual, auditory,and time perceptual activities, participants develop better language, speech, memory, abstract thinking and motor coordination. Through meaningful experiences, people who come to us become insightful questioners, impressive musicians, thinkers and inspired action-takers.
 
Comprehensive musicianship is based on the knowledge that every person has the ability to learn piano and learn it well. Of course, that means that every student has to have his or own personal plan that aligns with his or her cognitive capability.  To accomplish our goals, we provide strong partnerships with every student. We bring together families of all backgrounds who are excited about learning piano and participate cooperatively. When considering an applicant we consider factors such as willingness to provide adequate practice materials, parental commitment, previous music lessons, and qualities of character. 

Zinn Piano Program is the first of its kind to work within both fields of psychology and the performing arts simultaneously. It has distiled the relevant scientific findings concerning many different aspects of piano learning in a manner that maintains both scientific and artistic relevance.

The mission of our piano program is to serve anyone who wishes to benefit from our mix. We exist to serve our clients so that they do not merely receive piano instruction and hope it increases their cognitive capabilities, but to specifically target different capabilities and increase them systematically.

Zinn Piano Program has an elaborate and innovative program model that uniquely specializes in piano performance and applied psychological findings. Our instructional approach is evidence-based and research driven. We incorporate developmental and social psychology findings to account for each child's cognitive developmental level while using social cognitive learning theory to promote and enhance self-efficacy beliefs (perceived competency). At the same time, we follow a comprehensive musicianship approach that integrates five components of the music learning process:

 
Learning to Perform PDF Print E-mail
  

People come to piano lessons to learn performance skills requisite to play in various situations. Some want to be able to play in recitals, while others are happy playing for themselves, their family and friends. Successful performance can be referred to as enactive attainment, or one's perception of competency derived from engaging in mastery experiences. Since enactive attainment is the most influential source of self-efficacy, the utmost care must be taken to ensure the student's attempts to perform are successful. Zinn Piano Program accounts for the perceived threat of the performance situation, how the children feel about what they play, cognitive development level, and a myriad of other individual factors for each and every student.

Performance accomplishments can be a major boost to self-efficacy. However, perceived failure either during or after performance can be a lingering source of self-doubt. The Zinn Piano Program takes steps to ensure students are not only ready in terms of their musical preparation, but also they feel they are ready. For instance, we do not let students to perform in recital situations without prior experiences of playing in other, low-threat performance situations. We also do not have students perform pieces that above their current skill level. Finally, we do not "force" students to perform to "teach them a lesson" (a tactic employed by numerous instructors in the music field). When children are forced to “go through with it,” particularly if the child is not ready, it "sets the stage" for negative performance outcome, acute feelings of anxiety about future performance, and at worst, a traumatic experience.

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Technique Training PDF Print E-mail
  

We have reserved a separate page for piano technique because of its tremendous implications for musicians of all ages. Roughly, technique is the physical movements associated with playing the instrument. More specifically, technique is about making specific movements within a piece of music, in response to the music itself. It is a hotly debated subject in performing arts, and a well-researched topic in performing arts medicine.

There are roughly two sets of literature about piano technique. First, and perhaps the oldest, is the anecdotal evidence from artists themselves. Everyone has a slightly different opinion primarily based on their own experience. When injured musicians started "coming out of the closet" in the early 1980's and talking openly about their injuries, chronic pain and other problems, there were two resounding "answers;" one from the performing arts community and the other from alternative medicine community. Unfortunately, alternative "therapies" abounded, "educational preventative techniques" grew and musicians flocked to them in large numbers. This phenomenon continues today with no one really knowing the nature of injury prevention. We are not going to elaborate on these ideas and therapies, except to warn the reader to beware--if a student or patient never learns how to maintain the educational goal or therapeutic gain by him or herself, the education or therapy may be creating nothing more than a placebo response (Roberts, Kewman, & Hovell, 1993; Voudouris, Peck & Coleman, 1985, 1989; Evans, 1974; Harrington, 1997 and Thompson, 1993).

The literature we adhere to is the placebo-controlled, peer-reviewed trials and other scientific studies carried out by numerous Performing Arts Medicine researchers and other scientists during the 1980's, 1990's and continuing now. Interestingly, this research quantifies the piano technique utilized by today's professional performers. We invite you to read our reference list or do your own search.

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Learning to Play "by Ear" PDF Print E-mail

What does it mean to play "by ear?" Briefly, it means one can listen to and discriminate among many musical elements at once. Musical elements include (but are not limted to) intervals, pitch, melodic direction, register (high, middle, low), tonality, harmony, voice leading, phrasing, balance, articulartion, and dynamics. Of course, many other factors involving having a “good ear,” but we are naming some of the basics.

A very important part the Zinn Piano Program involves teaching listening skills as we believe all students can be taught to play "by ear."  Although some students start out in lessons with a very good musical ear, experience has taught us that most of students need to be shown specifically what to "listen" for and they need to be taught how to recognize each element and apply it to the music learning process. Students have to be taught to play "by ear" in a manner that professional musicians already know; when presented with a musical score (notes), students eventually learn to synthesize and integrate the notes & rhythms, develop an accurate mental representation of them, and transform the sound immediately into what we call "music." All this is done seamlessly and mostly in a non-verbal manner. Unfortunately, we see some students attempt verbal sequential learning style and depending heavily on the notes per se without attending to their sound. When the notes are removed, these students hardly know where to begin! Sadly, making music is what everyone comes to lessons to learn to do, so if students depend on the notes, and not use the musical ear they have, they will not be able to memorize or learn their music thoroughly. They will come to experience music learning as drudgery and, of course, stop lessons due to perceived effort involved in attempting to learn music this way.

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Understanding Music History, Theory & Composition PDF Print E-mail

Learning is a process by which people gather information about the structure of something (music) and transform that information into symbolic representations that serve as guides for action (playing the music) (Bandura, 1986). Students learn music theory because of the cognitive structure it provides in making them a well-rounded musician. When students are attempting to learn a piece and need to do something to learn a piece, they answers need to come in a reasonable length of time, or self-doubt will set in. Music theory is one potent source of their music learning.

Music theory is the "English grammar" of music. Study of music theory is essential because of the need to understand the structure of music. Why does one need to understand structure? Why not just learn a piece and play it? The reason is that the pieces, whether they are Jazz or Beethoven, Blues or Bach, all are based on harmonic structure, enabling the musician to organize the piece in their mind. This works like the parts of speech so you can construct your sentences; so you can construct an entire sentence in past tense, then construct another sentence in future tense based on the rules of grammar that you “just know” so implicitly well. Musicians need to know their theory that well. It goes beyond mere memorization; what it does is enable the musician to conceptualize the score in such a way that the score makes sense to that musician so the piece is totally in the musician’s head.

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Learning to Sightread PDF Print E-mail
  

Sightreading involves a complex set of subskills which are fundamental to the music learning and music making process. Yet, teaching effective sightreading skills remains one of the most difficult endeavors in all of music instruction. It is one of the most written-about issues in music magazines and most music teachers will acknowledge that many students fail to achieve an acceptable level of sightreading skills during piano study. Many teachers hypothesize (as we do) that failure to attain adequate sightreading skills contributes significantly to early dropout rates in piano.

We use a combination of factors to teach effective sightreading so that our students master the basic skills of signtreading by the end of Level 1. From there, their skill set is automatic and they have a good approach to learning a new piece. Through weekly sightreading assignments, we are promoting their autonomy and effectively raising their self-efficacy.

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