Taking
Guitar Exams - Do they help you?
Over
the past twenty years of teaching guitar exams and working as an examiner for
the RGT in the UK I have often pondered what impact taking guitar examinations
has to someone's rate of learning and can it in some way damage a player’s
creative approach to playing.
I
have become very sceptical in the past about examinations in other areas of
education especially when children are subject to the testing torture that the
education system in this country uses.
The
idea that all things can be measured is moved from the world of business and
the time management philosophy of Denning to the classroom as if everything is
under scientific scrutiny. Well, from the world of the arts and music we have a
message for you; not all things can be measured, welcome to the alternative
world of the creative unconscious.
As
musicians and artists we will be only too aware of the small things that happen
that have profound influence on us; a small idea that literally transforms our
lives and our playing. I am reminded of the pre 'enlightenment age' of
revelation where something can just suddenly be known. Often in music you will
simply ‘know’ what to do and within this I find a problem with the education
system because the lasting memories of my education and playing literally are
subtle things that are life changing and immeasurable.
So
back to the world of examinations and to the experience of the years of
teaching and what can be drawn from this. I recently looked at the pupils of
mine that did well and in some way great or small became ‘successful’ and I can
safely say that all of these took the guitar grades, not all to Grade 8 but
certainly to the upper grades and the ones that never took a grade did not fare
so well.
The
first thing to consider is that to take the grades you need to have a mind-set
that is organised and focused on a goal and is dedicated to put in the practice
to achieve the standards required and that of course is also the requirement
for you to achieve anything in the world of music.
Look
deeper into the way that examinations affect people and you might see that a
person is acquiring a particular way of thinking which is prescribed because of
the context and this is not in my opinion always for the better. However the
structure of examinations can give the pupil a goal and maybe this is practical
nature of the discipline, the preparation and the organisation to make the
journey and not its arrival.
Like
many aspects of learning what you actually learn certainly in the early stages may
not relevant as you move on, this is as true for science as it is for music
with much of what you learnt pre A level being 'wrong' but the mental approach
stays the same. The ideas that you used to play your early rock solos are not
the ideas that you will use to play some Jazz fusion solo as you progress but
what makes a good solo still remains the same, that of phrasing.
So
for my pupils the journey remains the most important aspect and grades seem to
help with this however when it comes to the diplomas then I am not so sure
because at this point the pupil is cutting their own way through the jungle of
music armed with the tools that they have picked up along the way, so if the
higher exams help with them becoming teachers then so be it but again I am not
so sure.
Make
sure that if you or your pupils decide not to take examinations then it is not because
of laziness but because you have something else that drives you on remember
there are lots of people out there playing guitar and you need to be in the top
five per cent of them if you want to achieve something with your playing.
Vic