A teacher recently wrote to us with a question: I have a transfer student that is VERY attached to the Middle C position and the finger numbers. She has taken piano twice before in 6-month stints and can play by ear, but is having a difficult time with pieces that aren’t middle C position– until she hears it played. I have started at the beginning with her. She’s 13. I don’t want to lose this student’s attention —I’ve not had many transfer students and am not sure how to proceed.
Feeling as though your piano students are “stuck” in a five-finger position and afraid to venture outside of their comfort zone? Try this tip below…
Common problems that arise from dependency on “Middle C Position” include:
1. Dependence on finger numbers vs. keyboard awareness. Students who use Middle C Position think of “D” as “2” and E as “3”. Once you move their hands to a new position, such as D position, they will almost always play an E with their right hand every time they see a D (their 2 finger is conditioned to play every time they read D on their music) and so on.
2. A fear or reluctance to play pieces with hand positions where left and right hand are far apart.
3. A fear or reluctance to play pieces with a key signature.
4. A lack of comfort with accidentals.
5. Stiffness when playing, especially when required to change hand positions mid-piece.
Moving Away From The Security of Middle C
To avoid this dependence on hand position, encourage your student to look at the piano “as a picture”. By this I mean that the groups of black keys need to become her landmarks. She’s used to the security of having her thumbs touching. This lets her know she’s where she needs to be. Many students view the piano as a vast sea of white keys…unpredictable and overwhelming. They panic and want to know “Where do I put my hands?!”. The black keys are there not as a helpful guide to them, but rather are “those scary sharps and flats that I hardly use”. However, teaching students to use the black keys instead as a guide will give them the same sense of security as does Middle C Position. Just as we use guide notes when teaching students to read on the staff, we need to use guide keys on the piano.
Therefore, teach C not as a white key, but as “the white key to the left of the group of 2”. Teach F as “the white key to the left of the group of 3”. Have her repeatedly find all of the C’s and F’s using this visual. Continue from this point with E and B and then gradually fill in the rest. Practice having her quickly move her right hand thumb to F, then to C, then to B, then to E etc. and the same with her left hand pinky finger. Once she can find the single note, then move into asking for two-note pairs (playing FG, CD, BC etc.) and then four-note groups. If you do this often enough then you’ll hopefully erase the “D is 2” etc. programming in her mind.
Remove Barriers With Fun!
There are many times in our teaching day when we need short excerpts of music at an appropriate level that focus in on one specific skill. But each time you reach for that old out-dated technical exercise book you might as well be hitting the “boredom” switch in your studio! Break through those barriers with technical exercises that are unbelievably fun and that provide those musical examples and practice your students need so frequently.
Joyce says
This is why I love Alfred’s new curriculum – the Premier curriculum…the first time they introduce C – they call the song “Change on C” and have different fingers playing C – the next songs keep changing – sometimes 1 on C sometimes 2 and sometimes 3 :>) I haven’t had this problem since changing to these books – where I had a lot of problems before. Good question and good answers :>)
Andrea says
Hi Joyce,
You’re right – your choice in method books has a huge part in preventing this Middle C dependency! The Alfred books are great, as are the Piano Adventures books. Thanks for posting!
Abigail Jackson says
I try to circumvent this from the very beginning by devoting the first few lessons to learning the “piano alphabet.” I work with each student until they easily recognize the patterns in the black keys and can find all the keys individually. I use the Piano Adventures books, and the book doesn’t teach notes until later, but I’ve found that giving them a head start on knowing the notes by name really boosts their confidence when it comes to playing on the white keys.
Andrea says
Great tips Abigail! Thanks for commenting!
C. Solis says
Faber series is very helpful for this too. They have to look for the note on right or left hand that starts the song. There is no starting position. Some young players do get very used to the notes as being a number.
Emily Tencent says
I started playing the piano by ear at 2 y/o and studied taking piano lessons at 10. have never played on any other piano except the one i used at home which i guess is the reason why my ears got stuck with just the sound of our piano. The note Do sound Re to me in other pianos and so on with the rest of the keys that i cant even play any instrument at all because their pitch is 1 pitch higher than what my ears got used to. I recently bought a piano organ with a transpose key just so i can play it with the sound of my old piano, having the right sound of do, re etc. I really find it strange why my ears are stuck with the correct sound of do, re, mi, etc. How do i fix this?