Categoriearchief: Suzuki

Best way to learn new skills

This interesting article was pubished by the Washinton Post. I should like to share it with you.

Foto: Heleen Verleur
Photo: Heleen Verleur

If you’re trying to improve your golf swing or master that tricky guitar chord progression, here’s some good news from researchers at Johns Hopkins University: You may be able to double how quickly you learn skills like these by introducing subtle variations into your practice routine.

The received wisdom on learning motor skills goes something like this: You need to build up “muscle memory” in order to perform mechanical tasks, like playing musical instruments or sports, quickly and efficiently. And the way you do that is via rote repetition — return hundreds of tennis serves, play that F major scale over and over until your fingers bleed, etc.

The wisdom on this isn’t necessarily wrong, but the Hopkins research suggests it’s incomplete. Rather than doing the same thing over and over, you might be able to learn things even faster — like, twice as fast — if you change up your routine. Practicing your baseball swing? Change the size and weight of your bat. Trying to nail a 12-bar blues in A major on the guitar? Spend 20 minutes playing the blues in E major, too. Practice your backhand using tennis rackets of varying size and weight.

“What we found is if you practice a slightly modified version of a task you want to master, you actually learn more and faster than if you just keep practicing the exact same thing multiple times in a row,” said Pablo Celnik, an author on the study, in a statement.

Here’s how they arrived at that conclusion. The researchers recruited 86 healthy volunteers and asked them to learn how to perform an abstract motor task that involved moving a cursor across a screen by squeezing an object connected to the computer. “The screen test featured five windows and a ‘home space,’ ” according to a release describing the study. “Participants were asked to move the cursor from home to the various windows in a set pattern as quickly and accurately as possible.”

Essentially, the recruits had to learn how to use a mouse that operated via squeezing, rather than sliding around.

The subjects were separated into three groups. All three groups participated in an initial testing session. Then, two of the groups did a follow-up exercise six hours later. The first group performed the exact same test as before. The second group did a six-hour follow-up too, but their test was different. The rules were similar — move a cursor around by squeezing something — but the researchers subtly altered the test by changing the amount of force required to use the cursor.

A third group, serving as a control, didn’t perform any six-hour followup.

Finally, all three groups performed the initial test again, 24 hours after it was first taken. The question: Which group would perform best, showing the greatest increase in ability to move the cursor?

The control group — the ones who didn’t do a six-hour follow-up session — performed the worst. The group that repeated the exact same test six hours later did considerably better.

But the folks who did the variation of the test at six hours performed best of all — 24 hours after the initial session they scored nearly twice as high on the task as the group that did the same test at six hours.

“For skills to improve, we must update an existing memory with new information,” the researchers conclude. If you practice the exact same thing the exact same way every time, you’re not layering much new knowledge over what you already know.

But, the theory goes, subtly changing things up and adding tension between what your body already knows and what it doesn’t can help you learn skills faster.

The researchers caution that it’s important not to change things up too much. If you’re trying to improve your golf swing and spend 20 minutes a day shooting hoops, you’re probably not doing yourself any favors. “If you make the altered task too different, people do not get the gain we observed,” Celnik said. “The modification between sessions needs to be subtle.”

Source: Christopher Ingraham from The Washington Post

Sponsoractie ‘Help een kind aan een instrument’

Beste ouders,

In het kort komt deze actie van de ‘Europian Suzuki Association’ hier op neer: om kinderen over de hele wereld (vooral in arme landen) de kans te geven een instrument te leren bespelen.

Als alle kinderen hier in Nederland (en in andere landen waar men zich dit kan veroorloven) gesponsord één keer voor de buren spelen, of één keer op school, dan zijn er al weer wat kinderen (in bv Afrika) geholpen. Vind sponsors en speel de sterren van de hemel! 🙂
Je kunt ook je studie tijd laten sponseren, per 15 minuten.

Print het sponsor formulier uit, en lever het bij mij in:

Sponsorship Form

dan zorg ik dat het terecht komt bij de juiste mensen.

Kind in township in Zuid-Afrika (Mamelodi)
Kind in township in Zuid-Afrika (Mamelodi)
Ik hoop dat jullie meedoen! Tegelijk geeft het misschien ook een ‘boost’ voor het studeren.
(een mooie bijkomstigheid. ;-))

Hartelijke groet,

Heleen

Dit is het bericht zoals het door de ESA werd gestuurd:

Starting next week! ‘Give a Child a Teacher’ fundraising campaign

Give a Child a Teacher
is a special Fundraising Campaign organised by the European Suzuki Association (ESA) to raise funds to give more children the opportunity of a Suzuki education in Europe, Middle East and Africa.

The campaign will start next week and run from 1 to 31 December 2015

Get involved. Give something back
The ESA are asking all Suzuki Teachers throughout the region to organise fundraising events with their students during the month of December (download a poster here)

These fundraising events can be –

Christmas Concerts
Sponsored practice (download a sponsor form here)
Christmas Workshops
Any other ideas

Photos and videos are welcome – please send these to the ESA Office and they will be posted on the ESA website

Monies can be paid to the ESA either by –
Bank transfer
PayPal
Download a donation form here
Payments by 31 January 2016 latest please

The total amount raised will be announced on the ESA website during February 2016.
A cheque will be presented at the BSI Gala Concert, Royal Albert Hall, London in March 2016.

The money will be donated to the European Suzuki Teacher Development Trust (ESTDT) which is a charity concerned with making Suzuki Teaching in music available to children in Europe, Middle East and Africa. The ESTDT do this by giving financial support to Suzuki Teacher Training projects in countries where there is a need.

The ESTDT have helped to give Suzuki Teachers to children in:
Russia Latvia Lithuania
Poland Estonia Turkey
Croatia Hungary South Africa

The project in South Africa began in the township of Mamelodi, with 100 eager students, 9 violins and a tree to teach under. Read South Africa’s story here – Mamelodi – the Mother of all Melodies

‘Talent Education, for the happiness of all children’
Dr Shinichi Suzuki

Copyright © 2015 European Suzuki Association, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you are a member of the European Suzuki Association

Our mailing address is:
European Suzuki Association
45 Main Street
Upper Benefield
Oundle, Northamptonshire PE8 5AN
United Kingdom

Suzuki Workshop London 21/22 November

Last weekend gave me lots of new inspiration, as if something fell on its place.
Among many other things this is what I especially picked up:

– explaining things in a simple way
– digging in the keys will stimulate memory (don’t be to timid, exaggerate tone)
– let pulse dictate the music
– don’t think too much
– finding important notes in a piece, only playing important notes as an exercise (even as a composer I sometimes go too much into detail, instead of just following the base line)

Squirrel in a park nearby Carolines house
Squirrel in a park nearby Carolines house

De Muziekwedstrijd 2015

Zoals jullie waarschijnlijk al weten is het Prinses Christina Junior Concours een gezellig, laagdrempelig concours voor kinderen van 4 t/m 12 jaar.
Je kunt een filmpje van het spel van je kind maken en dit op hun site zetten. Dat is op zichzelf al leuk.

Schermafbeelding 2015-10-15 om 11.05.20

Hoe doe je dit?

Je kunt dit onder meer doen via een heel leuke en makkelijke gratis App die je kunt downloaden bij de App Store: ‘De Muziekwedstrijd 2015’.
Je kunt je filmpje versieren met allemaal grappige plaatjes.
Er zijn vele prijzen, niet alleen voor hoe goed iemand speelt, maar ook bijvoorbeeld voor het grappigste filmpje enz.
Ik heb gemerkt dat het stimulerend kan werken om het beste van jezelf terug te zien en te horen.

Klik hier voor filmpjes die al op de site staan

Wie weet vinden jullie dit een leuke vakantie activiteit! (Maar we kunnen het ook tijdens een les doen na de vakantie.)
De filmpjes mogen worden ingezonden t/m 31 december, dus we hebben nog even de tijd.

Als je het toch zelf gaat opnemen, let dan op de volgende dingen:

1. Neem een stuk dat je heel goed kan spelen, liefst zonder foutjes
2. Probeer in één tempo te spelen
3. Als dat al binnen je bereik ligt: speel de melodie duidelijker dan de begeleiding
4. Maak het spannend (hard, zacht enz.) en muzikaal

Volgens mij mag er niet gedraaid of ingezoemd worden met de camera. Maar de preciese regels kun je op de site vinden.