ARCT • Teachers’ Diploma (RCM) in-progress
Trained Music Together Teacher
Erin Plank (they/he) is a passionate young piano teacher. For their professional development, Erin received the highest exam scores in all of Canada last year for “Teaching Elementary Piano” with the RCM.
Erin’s main goal is to turn students into lifelong music lovers, not just pianists. I seek to provide them with the tools to practice efficiently at home, sight read a song at their friend’s piano, learn the melody to a song off the radio by ear, and nurture a technical foundation that lasts a lifetime so it’s “just like riding a bike” to play the piano. And even better, they’ll want to.
Get to know Erin…Beyond the Bio!
Hobbies: Piano, weightlifting, playing with my cat, and hanging out with friends
Musical influences: Ben Folds, Brad Mehldau, Edvard Grieg
Favourite food: Fried chicken sandwich
Least favourite food: snap peas, because I ate too many as a kid one time and threw up and now I dislike the smell
Favourite music: Romantic era piano music, Beach Boys and similar era music, math rock
Favourite song: “How Dare You Want More” by Bleachers
Favourite movie: Sing Street
Favouirite movie music: main theme for “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” or anything Star Wars
Favourite musical theatre/opera: Wozzeck
Best quote from your teacher: “Don’t show the audience you messed up, they won’t know! Keep going!”
Favourite quote: “That’s what life is, Happy Sad”
Favourite book: Recursion by Blake Crouch
Best thing about teaching at ABC: Getting to reach and connect with so many lovely people!
Latest Homework from Erin
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Thursday February 23 Lessons – Erin P
Happy snow day! Have fun and stay safe out there <3
Liam
Star Wars – Awesome progress! Wow! Points to remember are: bring the accented notes out more, play the B section a bit more mellow and smoother to give contrast, keep working on the pedal, for the final LH repeated notes experiment with using multiple fingers to play them fast enough.
Down in the Valley – remember to count yourself in with 3 beats. Use a rainbow motion of the LH wrist to ensure you’re lining up with each note and using your arm weight accurately. Try to play the melody slightly louder than the accompaniment.
Your new major scales are Ab and Bb. Ab has 4 black keys: Ab, Bb, Db, Eb. RH fingering is 341 2312 3. LH fingering is: 321 4321 3.
Bb has only 2, Bb and Eb. Fingers 3 and 4 will play the black keys, but the hands won’t use the same finger at the same time. LH fingering is 321 4321 2 – RH is 412 3123 4. Notice how the two hands alternate fingers 3 and 4 on the black keys when playing hands together. Great work!
Fiona
Grumpy Old Troll – First 8 bars. Play attention to the staccato markings and also to the dynamics. The italic text is the troll speaking, and it uses these crunchy changing intervals to quietly whisper while the other hand holds a long loud note. I am very confident in your ability to read this and learn this first half of the piece this week! There are many YouTube videos of teachers playing this if you wish to listen for extra help.
Hope to see you in person next week so I can teach you a new scale and give you a fun extracurricular piece :)
Sara
Great exam selection! Please confirm that you have registered :)
Sunset at the Beach – Awesome work on all the notes! We fixed some of the rhythms in class today, if in doubt just subdivide into 8th notes and see how it maths out :) When practicing hands together, go in small chunks and work on actually becoming fluent in tiny puzzle pieces. Then we can click them together in a way that your brain can remember, rather than trudging through the entire thing without your brain remembering the progress your fingers have made.
Continue to warm up with all your technique. A good technique to make sure everything is covered each week is to pick a key each day and do all the exercises for that one key that day. Repeat with a different key the next day etc.
Next week I will check two week’s worth of the Ear and Sight book :)
Marita
The Snake – awesome progress! Continue through the whole piece this week. I love how you always ensure you begin the next line when the other one ends, and not having any gaps between them. I circled the fingering that is specific and necessary, so note that. You can begin to add the dynamic swells, as that really seals the deal of painting a musical picture for the listener.
Mist – Practice moving between the chords more so that it can be done without hesitation. Playing the LH by itself may help accomplish this, or simply memorizing the order of the chords would too.
Minuet – I’m so proud of your hands together playing this week! Keep doing it at home, you have all the fingering locked in which is great. More practice is all it takes to elevate this one!
Your new scale is Ab Major. It has 4 flats = Ab, Bb, Db, Eb. RH fingering is = 341 2312 3. LH fingering is 321 4321 3. Enjoy!
Sina
QWERTY – Pay attention to the staccato notes, and the smooth groups of notes. The 3rd line gets louder each bar to add excitement, and you decided you like line 4 staying big so let’s stay forte right until the final note. Awesome reading on this one today.
C Major Triad pattern. This image below shows the notes you will be playing. Notice how they are the same 3 notes over and over again in different orders. They are the 1st, 3rd, and 5th notes of the major scale = C E G. Your hand will play them crawling up the keyboard like a crab. Watch this video to see how.
Saturday January 21 Lessons – Erin P
Hi everyone! Great week! Boy is January flying by :) Have a good one.
Isabella
Come See the Parade. This includes a new note, the G below middle C. Today we played it with the “Practice tempo” video in the QR code, but there is a faster “Performance tempo” also. Try and play it with this by the end of the week.
G Major one octave scale. Same fingering as C Major but it has one black key, F#. Practice with both hands, hands seperate.
Parental help: Please constantly remind her to use rounded fingers. She should be playing with her fingertips. It is very important she does not play so close to the edge of the keys, with her thumbs hanging off. Now with this new G major scale, she has to play a black key after many white keys, and with her current habit has to slide her hand all the way in to reach it. This can be easily solved by simply have the fingers closer to the black keys always, and having them nicely rounded.
Below are two reference photos: ex 1. flat fingers and ex. 2 thumbs hanging off the edge. ex. 3 is proper position, rounded fingers and the “corner” of the thumb is on the keys :)


Jadon
Amazing Grace Lead Sheet. Experiment with using different inversions for your LH chords, for both sound and ease of hand movement. Remember a 7 beside a chord name means to add a FLAT 7 on top of the chord (so take the normal 7th note in the scale and lower it a half step).
C, F, G, D Major scales and triads. Try to keep a consistent fingering with your triads, it’s easier on the brain.
I’ll try and find the Avatar theme sheet music for you.
Grace
Variation 1 from Goldberg Variations – practice hands seperate! Listen to each line as it develops. Notice the sequences. Give Glenn Gould’s interpretation a listen here. Another fun “hands seperate” way to play would be to play each subject by itself so for example, the first 4 bars in the RH and then the same subject in the LH immediately after to help develop a sense of cohesion. Then the LH first 4 bars, followed by that same subject by the RH. Above all, stay slow and steady and trust the process! You’ve got this!
Colour code each “voice” (upper or lower) to see which melody to bring out in each section while listening.
Marco
Boat of Tai Lake, first 16 bars – “this piece describes a scene where a boat sails on Tai Lake near sunset. At first there is a feeling of stillness, evoked by the mountain and transparent water. Then comes with wind – making the reflections of the lake and the shadow of the moon, vibrate.” I was able to find this recording of the original folk tune on Spotify only, give a listen. 0:24 is equal to measure 9, it’s fun to follow along!
Notice how close the hands are together? This makes it so both hands are combining together to make one melodic line. If a person sung this, the whole first line would be one phrase, it would not break when we switch hands. Try and make it smooth and connected. Practice measure 8 into 9 to ensure you can do the LH position switch without missing a beat.
You can warmup with your C and G major one octave scales.

Daniel
Polish up The Snake, Angelfish and a List A piece of your choice. Try to pick one that is contrasting to the vibes of Angelfish and Snake. We’ll pick an etude next week.
Jurassic Park – hands together. Practice the notes where one hand plays alone. These are the ones you are struggling to coordinate. So practice simply holding down the one hand and then playing the other isolated note without releasing the held note.
Explore the I-vi-IV-V chord progression. Today we did it in C, and improvised over it – and you were able to figure it out in G as well. Figure out the chords in one other key of your choice, and remember all your triads will be made only out of notes that appear in the I chord’s scale.
When warming up with scales, be sure you are performing them two octaves.
Shelton
G Major one octave scale. Same fingering as C Major but it has one black key, F#. Practice hands seperate with both hands.
Last part of Eine Kleine Nachtmusik. This speed is the goal. Be sure to pay attention to the quarter rests and ensure they have one beat of silence. The notes with < under them can be played louder than the rest of the notes. Great reading today!
Julian
Kitchitkipi. Be sure to use proper fingering going up the chromatic scale and at a steady pace. With this piece be sure to do two very dramatic crescendos, one up the chromatic scale, and one in the chord section. Start super quiet to give yourself room to grow!
You can also prepare as much of the next Detective piece as you can work out by yourself. You read the first two bars so easily today in lesson! Great work!
G Major one octave scale. Same fingering as C Major but it has one black key, F#. Practice both hands, hands seperate.
Preferred Books for Erin Students
Click to buy them here, and they’ll come right to your house! What could be easier?
BOOK TITLE
COMING SOON
Faber Piano Adventures
The 2nd Edition Level 1 Lesson Book introduces all the notes of the grand staff, elementary chord playing, and the concept of tonic and dominant notes. Students play in varied positions, reinforcing reading skills and recognizing intervals through the 5th. Musicianship is built with the introduction of legato and staccato touches. This level continues the interval orientation to reading across the full range of the Grand Staff. The 5-finger approach is presented here in a fresh, musically appealing way.
Piano Safari


