Connecting through Music through the Internet

For me, the effort to make online piano lessons work is all about human connection through music!

While CCISD schools are closed for physical distancing, all piano lessons will be conducted via Web — no in-person lessons. For the online lessons, desktop or laptop is preferable for a side view of the student and keyboard and to turn Original Sound ON in Zoom’s desktop/laptop app’s Audio-Advanced settings. If you only have a tablet or smartphone available, let’s make do! I am also willing to try out my Google Meet account, Skype, Facetime, and What’s App. Just let me know of your interest!

To get ready for your first Zoom lesson, create your free basic Zoom account at zoom.us . When it’s almost time for the lesson, click on the link in the lesson reminder text. You will be prompted to download the Zoom app, which improves quality. Project your voice toward your device’s microphone.

Before each lesson, log in to your Musikhaus Texas Portal to read News and Lesson Notes so you know what to expect from the coming lesson. Close other Internet browser tabs. Place all piano lesson books, recordings and a pencil and eraser within reach. Ask others in your household to refrain from using the Internet during the lesson.

Attached are peeks from beyond the screens of my current online lesson setup.

Signing on with Liam Du-da-di T-Rex, who brightens my day. Top of the laptop already tilted down for side view of the piano. Notice light source is from behind the camera, not in front of it.
Getting ready to sit at the piano. I like this distance and elevation of the laptop for the side view.
Overhead view of my hands on the keyboard through the iPad on the stand. I’ve also attached my iPhone7 to the iPad stand with rubber bands, and it worked fine. iPhone and iPad’s Zoom Meeting Settings have “Auto Connect to Audio” OFF and “Always Mute My Microphone” ON. This prevents feedback painful to the ears.
See Zoom’s “gallery view” on the laptop? It’s a setting on your Zoom meeting screen that shows the student, my piano and myself. It would be nice if I had a larger laptop, but my 2011 MacBook Air is more than sufficient for now. Wow, it’s older than several of my students.
Going to turn my whole body back to the laptop for away-from-the-keyboard audiation skills, which may also be done standing up for longer activities. I just tilt the top of the laptop to show my upper body. I’d like students to be agile about turning toward the laptop when necessary.

Easy Zoom piano lessons through April 1, at least

Hi again, Musikhaus parents and students!
I will no longer send you Zoom links for piano lessons. It’s much simpler for you to set up a free basic account at https://zoom.us/ and “Join” me on Zoom by inputting my Personal Meeting ID. That’s what I’ll be sending you this week, and you’ll join all lessons with it even when we reschedule. Use a desktop, laptop or tablet for the lesson so the screen is big enough to see what I am doing.
Online piano lessons are getting better day by day!

Students and parents, this set-up gives me a side view of the student’s hands, and the laptop/ladder is super easy for the student to move to show the face up close or movement activities if student backs away. Use “gallery view” to see me and how you appear to me.

Zoom lessons Mar. 16-20

Musikhaus parents and students,

I will text you Zoom links for our online piano lessons this week. You don’t need a Zoom account, just a device (or two) that has Internet, microphone, speakers, and camera.

The Skype-MyMusicStaff integration didn’t work out in test calls yesterday afternoon.

Additionally I’m having trouble with more emails than usual not being delivered, even after carefully going through the configurations yesterday morning. That’s why I’m posting about what’s going on here, on the Musikhaus Piano Lessons Facebook page, and the musikhaus.mymusicstaff.com portal.

Keep calm and wash a song!

Carla

Piano lessons via Web to prevent spread of virus

All Musikhaus piano lessons will be conducted online at their previously scheduled times during the week of March 16 — no in-person lessons.

This STRONG strategy that encourages people to stay home in order to prevent the spread of COVID-19, out of LOVE for all our neighbors, including the most vulnerable, is called social distancing. Area school districts and many other organizations are adopting it. Social distancing is most effective at slowing the spread of a pandemic when practiced in lockstep and SOLIDARITY with the larger community! See www.ccisd.net/covid-19 .