Guest guest Posted June 9, 2008 Report Share Posted June 9, 2008 I am experiencing some learning challenges with my nine year old daughter and wonder firstly whether they are inter-related and secondly whether there may be an underlying developmental consideration. Sorry, the post is fairly long and may ultimately not have an answer in this forum, but at this point I want to look at the all angles and properly understand the issue before deciding what needs to be done(if anything at all). Caitlin has piano lessons and when it comes to reading the notes, beats per bar, etc we're getting nowhere. She plays beautifully, but entirely by ear, memory and copying. An important point to note here, would be that early on, there was a great deal of desire to be competing and playing on the same level as her older brother. Some important developmental building blocks were jumped over in her enthusiasm to compete. I believe we've taken stock of that and tried to go back and develop those stepping stones on which additional incremental learning can occur. Despite a great deal of attention and encouragement Caitlin appears unable to recognize when one note on a music score is written right next to the other (e.g. F, G for all you musos) that this translates to two notes next to each other on the piano. If she is able to refer back to a note on the same line she has previously been shown, she will make the connection. Take a break for a day and its start again from the beginning. She also has problems retaining what the count of beats per bar should be. Count it together, then two seconds later, she can't count them on her own. With basic maths; Addition and subtraction not too bad, but very slow, as if she is adding with fingers and toes. We've been over and over the tables. Retention should be kicking in with the amount of repetition we've done. Multiplication is painful. A sample conversation might go something like this... What's 4 x 8? 32, good. What's 8 x 4? 61. With the simple multiplication, not so bad. She appears not to see that forwards and backwards are the same. Retention period is limited, but just with maths and music reading. Caitlin in all other aspects functions well, is willing to please and tries hard. Another consideration is whether there is a competitive issue with an older brother again. His maths is excellent (above average). Once again, we've tried to take stock of that and ensure Caitlin does not jump ahead and then find herself without the learning blocks to connect new learning to. What is/are the 10/20 location(s) for maths? Are they the same for music? Can anyone confirm (or otherwise) whether there is a connection between maths and music? Thanks in advance. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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