What Real Progress Looks Like in Beginner Piano Lessons

What Real Progress Looks Like in Beginner Piano Lessons

He started beginner piano lessons in November. Nine years old. Full of energy — and not exactly what you'd call "consistent."

He missed some lessons. Lost his book. More than once. Last week — broke his iPad. (That's the device he uses for Piano Maestro to check his piano homework. Gone.)

And yet.

Last weekend, he walked into a recital — in front of his whole family — and played a duet with me. Then turned around and played a solo.

Six months in. Holiday interruptions. Bad weather cancellations. A missing book. A broken iPad.

And there he was.

What Six Months of Piano Lessons Actually Looks Like

We have this idea — as piano teachers — of what progress is supposed to look like.

Consistent practice. Books that come out of the bag for home practice. Steady forward movement, week after week.

And sometimes it does look like that. But a lot of the time — especially with young beginners — it looks a lot more like this boy.

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