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I know yamaha do a course, but is there any other recognised keyoard courses which you can just use in schools? Is there any other red tape?

2007-01-24 23:45:16 · 2 answers · asked by tim b 1 in Education & Reference Teaching

2 answers

First of all, if you are intending to add music to a USA public school, you need school board approval with district support. And find a principal who also sees the need and form an alliance with him/her.

Who will provide instruments? You might need to write a grant.
Will there be a charge to each student for your service? Where in a school's time schedule can time for your class be found?

Are you a licensed educator? Degree? Intern? What credentials do you have? Do you know you will have to pay for your own college credits to become certified as needed by the district? Teachers pay for education out of pocket. Okay with fingerprints and drug testing?

And most of all, please use correct grommer-grimmer-grammar and spilling-speling-spelling.....yeah.... when you intend to become an educator. What? Spelling has nothing to do with music? It all goes together, you support one another's efforts across the various subjects. Adagio-

2007-01-25 00:24:27 · answer #1 · answered by donkey hotay 3 · 0 0

1. Are you in the UK/USA or somewhere else?
2. Are you teaching single children, pairs or groups it makes a BIG difference.
3. How old are they?

You need to provide more info. If you live in a big city there will almost certainly be music shops with excellent books in them.

Try putting keyboard teaching online into Google you will get plenty of resources eg: http://gardenofpraise.com/keybdles.htm

Good luck but do plan it out first even if you have to change your plans once you start.

2007-01-25 04:49:47 · answer #2 · answered by Richard T 4 · 0 0

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