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Harry Potter helps students practice

Dec 16

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16/12/2010 1:56 PM  RssIcon

Four weeks ago, my Harry Potter-obsessed 11-year-old daughter suggested I implement a ‘house’ system with my students. She said she thought they would all practice more if they were earning points for their house and competing for the ‘house cup’ (something which happens in Harry Potter, in case you didn’t know that).

Even though it was nearly the end of the year, I decided it would be fun to trial it for a short time. It has been a huge success!

I allocated each student to one of three houses: Yamaha, Kawai and Steinway. (Not trying for any sort of ‘product placement' here, I just thought these names were appropriate!) I split siblings up so that they would be able to compete against each other. Here is an extract from the email I sent to all of my students:

"You can earn points for your House by practising! You will earn:

· 1 point per minute of practice PLUS

· 5 bonus points per session of practice

You must keep a log of the day or date and start/finish times of each practice during the week… starting right now! Next lesson we’ll be adding your points to your House’s total.

In addition, you will be awarded 10, 20 or 30 progress points in your lesson. Obviously, the more efficient your practice is during the week, the more you will have progressed.

The House with the most points at the end of the term will win the House Cup! There will also be awards for individual effort."

Everyone got very excited about this and I had colourful charts on the wall showing each student’s contribution and the growing house totals. I plan to convert these into high-tech Excel graphs at some stage (with help from my husband of course) and post them on the website. All in all it really got students motivated to practice!

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2 comment(s) so far...


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Re: Harry Potter helps students practice

Thanks for this idea! I have done a simplified version so far; one of my 7-year-old students goes to the same school as my daughter (and they are in the same House at school too.) So my scales challenges for each week come with the proviso that if he plays accurately and steadily with his fingers curved, his thumb moving smoothly and so I can't hear the bump every time his thumb plays, then his House wins for the week. If he misses one of those steps, then he has to pick one of the other Houses to win instead. I have a dozen or so students at the same school so we have the potential for a great House competition!

By Rebecca Stewart, www.sightreading.com.au on   7/03/2011 2:06 PM
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Office 2010

I will keep your new article. I really enjoyed reading this post, thanks for sharing.

By Office 2010 on   11/11/2011 11:40 AM

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