Nick Ambrosino Learning Specialist - Author - Speaker
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Red Light Green Light...

1/25/2018

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Have you ever had anyone compliment you only to completely negate the compliment by following it with the word "but?"  Have you ever had a music teacher say something to you like, "You played that really well, but you forgot to use the dynamics." Did you ever notice that whatever you hear after the but negates whatever came before it?
                                                     
Think about it. Do you really remember what was said before the "but?"  Or do you only remember what came after it?  Using "but" after a compliment or validation, doesn't create an environment of encouragement.  In many cases, the compliment was put before the "but" so that what came after the "but" didn't feel so critical or negative.  Yet, there is an incredibly simple word change that will allow you to provide feedback to your students which will invite, encourage and enroll them to improve and become better musicians.

This is one of the most powerful Diamond Distinctions I will share with you.  Utilize it in your communications with your students and you will see an instantaneous change in their improvement and willingness to take on the next step of their education. 

Diamond Distinctions are small word or phrase changes that create
incredible leverage for change in your students.
Diamond Distinctions are small word or phrase changes that create incredible leverage for change in your students.  Many people are not aware of the emotional motivational content behind the actual words they are using.  Yet most of the communication we convey relies upon a person's perception of those subtle emotional cues.  A simple word change, such as the one I will share with you below, can be the difference between an emotional red STOP light for a student or an emotional green GO light. 

Instead of the word "but", try this. Replace the word "but" with the word "and."   "I really liked the way you played that, and now, you're ready to add the dynamics."  Say it out loud so you can hear and feel the difference. Do you feel how much more powerful invitation for change the word "and" provides?

The word "and", includes, it invites. The word "but," separates.  ​

The tips in this blog are culled from my two books, Coffee With Ray and Lessons With Matt.  If you would like  more strategies that will both nurture your students into self-directed learners while making your job less stressful and more rewarding, please check them out on Amazon.  ​
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Control or Enroll?

1/15/2018

1 Comment

 
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I must admit, I'm a little strange.  Many of my music teacher friends like students who are easy to teach.  Not me.  Many of my teacher friends like students who are obedient, who follow the rules.  Not me.  Many of my teacher friends like students who are easy to control.  Not me.  To my wife, this has never been surprising.  She'll tell you that I rarely take the easy way out.  I like challenges.  I actually seek out ways to expand my comfort zone.  It's what keeps my life fresh.  It's what keeps my teaching fresh. 

Sure, it's a lot easier to ride a pony then a stallion.  But, unless you're five years old, where's the fun in that?  The simple fact is, I find the students that fit in my comfort zone boring. They don't challenge me.  I like, as the title to one of  Malcolm Gladwell's books says, The Outliers.  The outliers are students who are out of my comfort zone.  They keep me on my toes.  They stimulate my creativity.  They force me to think outside of my box.  They are the reasons my two books were written. They challenge me to enroll them in their vision for their potential as opposed to controlling them into my vision.

That's an important Diamond Distinction for me.  The difference between enrolling them and controlling them. Controlling students takes perspiration, enrolling them takes inspiration.  I know, the ones who are easy to control are the ones who are also easier to teach.  They listen to you, the obey your direction.  So if you're going to teach a full lesson load of forty students a week, it might as well be easy money.  Right?  Perhaps, but not for me.  For me, it's boring money.  Boredom dis-enrolls me.  Boredom is the beginning of the end for me.  

Controlling students takes perspiration, enrolling them takes inspiration.
To be candid, I've never really grown as a teacher by teaching the "easy ones."  I've never learned anything about myself, as a teacher and a person, from the "easy ones."  My teaching knife only gets sharpened on objects harder then it.  Just as you want your students to take on musical challenges outside of their comfort zones, why shouldn't you take on teaching challenges outside of yours?

I like having to come up with language that inspires them to seek out their fullest potential as musicians, but more importantly, as people.   That's what enrollment is, inspiring them to take stock in their own greatness.  Aligning their actions with their visions.

What would you say to your students to enroll them in their own greatness?  How would you be a continued source of inspiration for them?  Tough questions.  But perhaps, the next question will guide you to find your answer.  What would someone need to say to you to enroll you in your own greatness?  What words and actions would inspire you?  Those are the same words your students need to hear.  Say them, to both yourself and to them.  Your studio will thrive and so will you.

The tips in this blog are culled from my two books, Coffee With Ray and Lessons With Matt.  If you would like  more strategies that will both nurture your students into self-directed learners while making your job less stressful and more rewarding, please check them out on Amazon.  ​
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More then just "Wishing" you a Happy New Year...

1/2/2018

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Happy New Year! I wish you and your families an incredible (in whatever manner that would translate for you) New Year.   Yet, wishing to me isn't good enough. As an Empowered Teacher, wishing is a tool I simply don't use.  So I feel an obligation to provide you with a strategy for actually insuring that you create a year which aligns with your greatest passions and brings you the most joy. 

I'll often hear from teachers with whom I work in private Empowered Teacher coaching practice or with whom I get to interact with in workshops, "Nick, that's a great idea, but when I'm in the heat of the moment, I fall back on old habits.  How can I change that so I can be more effective?"

Well, one of the key elements of making better choices is the difference between reacting and responding. When you react, you continue to create the environment in your lessons from the default mechanisms you have developed over years. Your actions are "knee-jerk reactions", and will continue to yield you the same results. So, if you don't like those results, you might want to take a GAP between the events that happen in your lessons, and whatever it is you do after that.
                                                     
In my book, Lessons with Matt, I speak about the power of the GAP, which stands for Grab Another Possibility. Take a moment to stop, and instead of just doing what you would normally do, think for a minute about the outcome you desire. That's called responding. Once you start responding instead of just reacting, you get to create your life and your lessons from choice. The choice to respond, in a conscious manner that provides you your desired outcome, is a one of the most powerful tools you possess to create the life of your dreams.  That's why most of us feel rejuvenated when we return from holiday.  The holiday gives us a GAP from the reactions through which we often create our lives.  The GAP creates an opportunity for us to reflect and respond by allowing us time to get clearer on what we want.
 
So, I do "wish" you an incredible, passionate, joy-filled year...through the power of the GAP and then responding with a choice that aligns with what you want.

The tips in this blog are culled from my two books, Coffee With Ray and Lessons With Matt.  If you would like  more strategies that will both nurture your students into self-directed learners while making your job less stressful and more rewarding, please check them out on Amazon.  ​

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    Nick Ambrosino is a renowned learning specialist, coach, and speaker known for his work with thousands of students, teachers and parents, on creating explosive growth in accountability, productivity and self-esteem.

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