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 16 Lessons – Erin P
Enjoy the long weekend everybody :)
Liam
Eb Major scale. Fingering: RH 312 3412 3. LH 321 4321 3
Star Wars. Be sure the LH is not so loud it drowns out the melody. Use the written RH fingering we worked on. Have fun with however much you have time to work on this week!
Prelude in A minor. Awesome job getting the 6/8 feel. Keep it up, and be sure to move the RH up an octave for the final part where both hands play in unison. Notice the form of this piece, play to the DC part, go back to the beginning and then take the little Coda portal to the coda.
Fiona
Forest Song – All. Great work! If you practice just the 2nd page you will be practicing all the components of the piece, so when having a practice session you can begin at m.12 and work towards the end. Next week I’ll hear page 2, and then the whole thing together.
Next week I’ll also teach you a new major scale!
Marita
*New piece* First 8 bars of The Snake. Notice the odd key signature creating a “harmonic minor sound”. Ensure that as one hand’s phrase ends, the other begins with no rest in between.
*New* B major scale. RH, thumbs on white keys B and E only. LH start finger 4, go 4321 4321.
Keep working on Mist (Awesome work today !!), and Minuet. You have all the skills and understanding to play both of these Hands Together slowly.
Sara
*New* Sunset at the Beach in level 4 book – HS practice however much you like. No expectations, just a fun new challenge piece to explore. Count carefully.
Great work on your other pieces. Start thinking about which List A, B, C, and which 2 etudes you’d like to do for the exam and start thinking of them with memorizing in mind.
*** My RCM teacher number is #130747. Deadline to register is the beginning of March.
Marco
E and D major scale. Same fingering as your other scales. E has 4 black keys, D has 2.
M. 17 onwards Boat of Tai Lake. This is because a lot of the phrases we’ve already learned repeat on this latter half of the piece so focusing practice on this area will bring the more unfamiliar stuff up to snuff:) Great counting this week, it was much more steady. For lines where the LH plays two notes at a time, practice these hands seperate.
Sina
Trumpet Voluntary. Careful counting and noticing of dynamics. In the last line the RH moves up an octave.
C Major triad and inversions. Here is a video showing the notes played in the RH. Here is a video showing how I’d like you to play them, she is using her LH. Notice how the hand crawls up the keyboard like a crab.
Daniel
Angelfish – m17-20 get in time so you’re not rushing your LH up. You could practice this pattern up the keyboard in time.
The Snake – good timing. Ensure ending has all notes
Ecossaise in Eb – m17 get comfy going to the A natural in the RH. Spot practice this measure. Great job smoothing out the LH fingering.
Detectives – more bouncy!! great notes and rhythms but need more staccato. Think a chicken pecking the keys. Can add more dynamics too!
Great work!!
January 14 Saturday Lessons – Erin P
Happy snowy days to you all! :) Have a fantastic week!!!
Isabella
You’re working on Rodeo and Russian Folk Song. Be sure to use the fingering written in the book, this includes using both thumbs! Remember to count 1-2 or 1-hold for the half notes. For Russian Folk Song, be sure to play with the dynamics. F stands for forte = loud, so start loudly, and p stands for piano = quiet, so make sure the last echo of the song is the quietest part. When counting yourself in, say “1-2-3-4” and then start on the imaginary 1.
Keep doing your LH C Major scale until it’s just as awesome as your RH is.
Jadon
Your new song is Crocodile Basking. *DOWNLOAD IT HERE*
This piece is all in the bass clef, so read accordingly. It starts alternating from C to G minor each bar – then halfway through it goes from F to C minor each bar. Notice the repetitive patterns and think of what chords each collection of notes is creating. Practice it hands seperate until it is comfortable, then combine.
The book we would like to get is Faber Adult Piano Adventures All-in-One Book 2. It includes access to a ton of online resources too!
Keep tooling around with Transformers. Try the 3 stages I suggested: 1) Just play beats 1 and 3 (so practicing just moving between chords and holding them longer than you really would) 2) Now add in the LH 8th notes, and the other RH quarter notes 3) Add in everything, including the fast little RH melody notes.
Marco
March of the Penguins…… Part 2. Most all of your practice sessions should be spent focused on page 2, but you should still play through page 1. Pay attention to the accented notes, staccato notes, and crescendos. Great reading today!
Never Gonna Give You Up – I would like you to do the exercise we did in class today where we isolate just a few beats of the bar. You’re going to play RH and LH together on beat 1, then beat 2 with LH, and then play the next RH chord on 2+ and stop. That’s the whole exercise! Repeat. This is to get used to how it feels to play the RH chord *after* both LH quarter notes. The same tactic can be practiced on measure 2. (Eventually we can expand this so the syncopated RH chord feels *between* the steady LH pulse, but for now, it coming *after* the 2 beats in an isolated situation is perfect!)
Daniel
Turkey Blues – work as much of this one out as you can on your own like last week. Practice going slow and steady like you will for sight reading in an exam.
Jurassic Park – Halfway through the week try and put it hands together. To get more used to how it will feel, try just playing a singular G note (or just tap your keyboard like menu area) with your LH whenever the LH will play. This will help with the coordination between the hands.
Chromatic scale – Let’s polish up this fingering. You’re great at the 1313 alternating between white and black notes (finger 3 always on black notes) but when we encounter 2 white notes in a row follow this rule: Use fingers 1 and 2 in the order of the direction you’re going. Ex: RH going up = 1 then 2, RH going down 2 then 1. This makes it so you don’t have to cross your fingers over each other at all.
Start putting your scales all 2 octaves. This involves the new feeling of crossing under/over finger 4.
I was looking for sightreading programs that listen to you as you play and it seems that there are unfortunately very few free resources that do that. Continue using sightreadingfactory.com for free excerpts, and if you want something that is a lottttt more game aligned you can check out the app Piano Dust Buster. Beware of in-app purchases as you would with any SimplyPiano-aligned software :)
Shelton
Eine Kleine Nachtmusik page 1 – the new concept introduced is the quarter rest. It gets 1 beat (like a quarter note) of silence. When playing this piece be sure to count in your head, or better yet, aloud to yourself. Your reading is improving lots, keep it up! This is the famous piece you are playing.
I also showed you the famous “I-vi-IV-V” chord progression in C (C-Aminor-F-G). It uses the C major triad shape (all white “skips”) built on C, then A, then F, then G. Experiment with ways to play this with both hands. The LH can also do just the root notes (C, A, F, G). Experiment and have fun! Try to build up your finger strength when playing solid chords as well :)
Julian
You’re polishing Moonlight Melody. Keep it up with the beautiful dynamic swells! I’m excited to hear this again next week. It is meant to be played slow, steady and beautifully. You can count 1-2-3 to yourself as you play.
I also showed you the great “I-vi-IV-V” chord progression. You could play it beginning on C, F or G today – awesome! Experiment with playing this with either hand. How does playing just the roots in one hand while doing chords in one hand sound? What about different rhythms and textures? Broken triads vs. solid? Experiment and have fun!
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


