Greg wrote:Yeeouch! Scoob's right. If you are a performance major, you may want to look at Education or Business. However, if you are already a music business or education major, you can get the degree and get a job.....I truly believe the quality of your work will hing upon your level of skill on your applied instrument. A band director who can't shape a phrase musically will not be effective teaching students to do the same. This goes for intonation, rhythmic accuracy, etc.Scooby Tuba wrote:Here's some inspiration. You should start think about changing your major, because there is someone else out there who IS motivated to practice and succeed and they're going to eat your lunch very soon. No person should have to motive you to practice. Those who succeed are self-drive.
When a parent comes to me and ask ME to motivate their child (you're acting like a child, btw), I strongly encourage them to find a new teacher. I then call the next student on my waiting list.
Get your *** in gear.
However, with that being said, I do think a good kick in the pants from some private instruction never hurts.
Being a teacher I would never tell anyone to major in education, especially just because they couldn't hack it as a performance major. Being an ed major (any ed major, not just music) has to be something you are inspired to do, not just use as a back up in case you don't make it in something else. If that is the student's attitude going in then he/she is in for a huge shock. You have to want to be a teacher. It can not simply be a back up. Otherwise you will not enjoy it and your students will not be served. I get the same feeling when the jocks want to major in elementary ed so they can be coaches when they grow up... cut me a break.
I do like the idea of learning to play trombone. It will help keep the embouchure in shape and help develop your ear as well, assuming you are listening to what you are playing.
ken k




