🎲 Teaching Piano Intervals with Dice: A Fun Group Activity for Young Beginners
If you’re searching for a fun, hands-on way to teach piano intervals to young beginners, this creative dice game for group piano lessons helps students understand how notes move up and down the keyboard through play.
Free Piano Key Worksheets for Beginners: Make Learning the Keyboard Fun and Visual
These free piano key worksheets help beginners identify black key patterns, letter names, and keyboard groups—without endless drills or confusion.
Let’s be honest—some of us never outgrew our coloring obsession. 😅
And that’s a good thing. Because coloring isn’t just fun—it’s one of the most powerful ways to help young piano students learn and remember new concepts.
That’s exactly why I created the free Explore Piano Keys worksheets: a colorful, hands-on way for beginners to recognize black key patterns, letter names, and keyboard geography without the pressure of a theory book.
One Morning I Woke Up and Wrote Down Everything I Know About Teaching Beginners
If you’ve ever wondered how to teach a piano lesson to a 4-year-old without feeling scattered or overwhelmed, The Piano Expedition gives you a clear, creative roadmap to guide your youngest students with confidence.
🎹 When Overwhelm Meets Purpose: Reclaiming the Heart of Beginner Piano Teaching
🧭 A Clear Path for Every Age and Stage
Whether you’re wondering how to teach piano to a 4-year-old, or what kinds of activities actually work for a 5-year-old beginner, you’ll find answers inside The Piano Expedition.
Each monthly framework includes:
🎵 Age-specific lesson plans — Know exactly what to teach and when.
🎨 Creative off-bench activities — Movement, games, and manipulatives that make learning stick.
🎒 Flexible pacing guides — So you can adjust for every student’s needs.
You’ll know how to guide a 4-year-old through rhythm play and finger numbers… how to help a 5-year-old connect patterns on the keys to notation… and how to keep early learners engaged without burnout.
Stop Burning Out: How to Teach Piano with More Energy and Less Stress
As piano teachers, we’ve all been there—facing the overwhelming task of planning yet another lesson, trying to stay creative, and wishing there was a magic solution to make it all easier. Some days, the only thing getting us through is that extra cup of coffee ☕. But let’s be real—coffee isn’t enough to sustain us for an entire semester of teaching.
What we really need is a system—a flexible framework that takes the pressure off and keeps our teaching fresh and inspiring.
This is where The Piano Expedition comes in.
🎹 Little Fingers Jingle Bells: The Perfect Preschool Piano Christmas Song
If you’re searching for an easy Christmas piano song for preschoolers, Little Fingers Jingle Bells is the perfect choice for your youngest beginners.
Teaching “Jingle Bells” to preschoolers and early beginners just got easier. With Little Fingers Jingle Bells, even your youngest students (ages 3–7) can experience the joy of playing this classic Christmas tune at the piano.
This printable Christmas piano PDF is designed for tiny hands, big smiles, and holiday magic—making it the perfect first performance piece for your studio.
🎹 Teaching Kids That Music Moves in Directions
One of my favorite moments in a beginner piano lesson is watching a child’s face light up when they realize: music doesn’t just sit still—it moves.
In this activity from The Little Red Piano, my student explored the keyboard by playing all the white notes while we chanted a simple rote song together. Nothing fancy. No sheet music. Just sound, movement, and discovery.
Teaching Steady Beat in Beginner Piano Lessons (Yes, It Gets Messy!)
If you’ve ever felt like your beginner piano lessons are a little chaotic—you’re not alone. Teaching steady beat, rhythm, and basic coordination is one of the trickiest parts of working with new students. And sometimes? The lesson gets messy.
That’s not a bad thing. In fact, it’s exactly how beginners learn.
Preschool Rhythm Activities: Long & Short Sounds with Xylophone 🎶
One of the best ways to teach preschoolers rhythm is through movement, sound, and play. Instead of drilling note values or clapping patterns, we can give young learners something they feel and experience—and that’s where songs like “Long Sprinkles, Short Sprinkles” come in.
Off-Bench Piano Activities: Teaching Musical Steps with Movement 🎹
👉 Off-bench piano activities are one of the best ways to help beginner students learn musical steps, rhythm, and note reading through movement before they ever sit at the piano.
Off-Bench Piano Activities: Teach Steps and Skips Through Movement 🎹✨
Teaching piano to young beginners doesn’t have to stay at the bench—this off-bench activity using alphabet cards gets kids moving, while building the foundation for understanding steps and skips in music.
News flash for piano teachers: off-bench activities are WAY more than just apps or games.
If you’ve ever felt like “off the bench” time in your piano studio was just a bonus activity or a reward, I want to challenge that thinking. Because here’s the truth: movement isn’t extra — it’s essential. And when it comes to teaching early concepts like steps and skips, getting kids up and moving might be one of the most powerful teaching tools you have.
Piano Games AND Music Writing? Yes, You Can Have Both!
If you teach young beginners, you’ve probably felt this tension before: should piano lessons be focused on fun games or serious music theory books?
Many teachers swap in games to keep students engaged but end up leaving out the foundational writing practice that helps students internalize what they’ve learned. Others go the opposite direction, focusing heavily on worksheets but losing that joyful, playful spark that makes kids love piano.
But here’s the good news—you don’t have to choose. 🎲✏️
The Wheel of Doom 🎹 | A Fun Piano Lesson Game Students Love
If you’ve ever wished for a way to keep students engaged and excited during lessons, let me introduce you to the Wheel of Doom — a playful studio game that turns practice challenges into a fun adventure.
Inspired by @ryantrahan’s 50-state journey, the Wheel of Doom has quickly become a favorite activity in my studio.
Why Off-Bench Piano Games Help Beginners Learn Rhythm Faster
Are you spending enough time "playing" with your students?
I'm not talking about board games or boom cards. I love those, too. I'm talking about games that use LARGE body movements. I'm talking about visuals that PREPARE our students instead of overwhelm them.
Free Piano Key Worksheets for Beginners: Make Learning Fun and Stress-Free
Teaching beginners to find their way around the piano keys is one of the first (and most important) steps in piano lessons. But let’s be honest—traditional theory books and endless drills can make this stage feel dull for students and exhausting for teachers. That’s why I created a set of free piano key worksheets that turn review into something colorful, memorable, and fun.
How to Choose the Best Halloween Piano Music for Your Students 🎃
Discover the best Halloween piano music for beginners and elementary students. Tips for teachers + sheet music picks your students will love!
Fall Piano Ensemble Music for Group Lessons and Recitals
Fall is the perfect season for piano ensembles. Between the excitement of Halloween, the beauty of autumn leaves, and the anticipation of upcoming recitals, your students are looking for music that feels festive and fun — while still being accessible at their level.
I personally can’t WAIT to introduce these duets to my buddy lessons! These kids are absolutely going to flip out!
If you’re a piano teacher planning fall group classes or recitals, you’ll love these three fall piano ensembles for beginners and elementary students. Each one is studio-licensed, so you can use it with as many students as you’d like in your studio.
🎹 Baby Shark Pre-Reading Piano Solo & Duet – Make a Splash With Your Young Beginners!
Looking for a fun pre-reading piano solo or duet for young beginners? Baby Shark brings smiles and success to preschool piano lessons.
How Come We Try to Squeeze so Much Out of So Little?
I believe it is a scientific fact that the closer we get to the end of the toothpaste tube - the more that humans try to squeeze that last little bit out.
I've been thinking - do tend to do that with my piano studio? Like how, do you ask?
For me, three basic ways:
TIME
Thank you for being a friend…
Do you have music teacher friends? Is it even important these days?
Every where I have lived, I have had a community of music teacher friends, or like-minded musicians.
This has taken different forms. Sometimes it was my colleagues at a public school or music academy.
Mostly- I’ve been a member of a local MTA group. (If you don’t know what that is - it is the local group of music teachers that is affiliated with Music Teachers National Association - our US teacher group.)
I’ve had a local group since the late 1990s. Until I didn’t.