The Piano Teacher’s Posture


Supporting Your Piano Pathway
Written by ANDREW EALES


All good piano teachers are concerned to teach and monitor good posture to their students, and as players we are hopefully equally aware of our own posture at the piano.

But how about our posture when we are teaching? This, in my experience, can too easily be overlooked as a less important concern.

I am trying to address my own posture while teaching, so write this article to share my experiences and findings, while also suggesting a few easy tricks that other piano teachers can incorporate into their thinking and practice where helpful.

In this article I will hope to touch upon:

  • Should we sit less, and if so how?
  • What about good posture?
  • What other factors have an impact on our working environment?

Should we spend less time sitting?

Most people will be aware of advice and media stories suggesting that sitting down for too long each day can be, literally, fatal. According to the NHS Choices website,

For piano teachers, it also includes the time we spend sat next to our students listening to them play, and for some of us this alone adds up to seven hours some days!

For working age adults, the NHS site goes on to offer the following tips for spending less time sitting:

  • stand on the train or bus
  • take the stairs and walk up escalators
  • set a reminder to get up every 30 minutes
  • place a laptop on a box or similar to work standing
  • stand or walk around while on the phone
  • take a walk break every time you take a coffee or tea break
  • walk to a co-worker’s desk instead of emailing or calling
  • swap some TV time for more active tasks or hobbies

But most of these strategies are unable to help us while we are at work teaching the piano. So what’s to be done?

Complicating matters, and as so often seems to be the case, scientists are not agreed about the dangers of sitting. A longitudinal study published in 2015 in the International Journal of Epidemiology (and summarised in plain English by Science Alert here) suggests that prolonged sitting doesn’t, after all, appear to be killing us any faster than standing up would. Specifically, the study concludes:

And there are of course plenty of busy piano teachers who live to a ripe old age, and who don’t develop any of the conditions listed on the NHS site. So any sense of alarm must surely be tempered with healthy skepticism and a dose of common sense!

What about “good” Posture?

We probably all have an idea about correct sitting posture at the piano (and let’s park that question for another time!) but we must remember that the posture we aim for as players and teachers aims to allow for mobility at the piano, for healthy balance to be maintained, and all while considering general issues and the insights of performing arts medicine.

When we are sat listening, however, our physical needs are different and perhaps less complex. Should we choose to sit on a piano stool modelling the playing posture while we are in fact listening and essentially inert we need to exercise care, because the upright posture so often advocated isn’t necessarily suitable for long-time sitting, especially if the small of the back is curved inward.

Here, once again, scientists are not in unanimous agreement.

Research carried out at Woodend Hospital in Aberdeen by a team of Scottish and Canadian scientists a few years ago and reported by the BBC News site here suggests less strain is placed on the spinal disks and associated muscles and tendons in a more relaxed sitting position, as shown in this picture:


Backup.gif

News of the 135% tilt quickly spread around the internet and was widely reported, but not everyone was happy about the advice, noting that a reclining posture might put an increased strain on the lower neck. Once again, answers aren’t always clear cut for us as laypeople who are trying to understand the conflicting information that’s in the public domain.

The balance of advice appears to be that when sat at a desk it is best to sit fairly upright, but without inward curvature of the lower back, and without the neck craning forward to read the computer screen (or piano music desk).

More relaxed sitting (which would perhaps be more appropriate while listening to a student play through a whole piece, for example) may benefit from the reclining angle suggested by the Aberdeen research.

Teaching Postures

Trying to make sense of all this, my conclusions and advice are:

  • Don’t spend the entire lesson sat down. Get up, move around, switch places with the student at the piano, etc. and vary posture according to need.
  • While listening in a relaxed posture, use a chair that can recline while still supporting the back.
  • While looking at the music desk, or using a computer, sit more upright, but stay relaxed and balanced, and try not to lean forward.
  • Avoid crossed legs; keep feet flat on the floor where possible.
  • Get up between lessons, and if possible walk around for a few minutes, or do some simple stretches.

My Piano Qigong article Sit Up and Shut Down introduces a healthy and relaxed sitting posture that is used within Qigong and other mediative situations – have a read and practice the seated postures described. This will certainly help you become more aware of your own sitting posture.

Before signing off, I think it’s a good idea to consider a few other issues relating to the Piano Teaching Studio and the teacher’s health and welfare:

An Ergonomic Office

A few years back I found out that the mother of one of my students advised businesses about environmental issues. I initially assumed that she gave advice about carbon emissions, but it turned out that her advice was about the positioning of office furniture and ergonomics in the workplace.

Briefly enquiring about my room, she smiled and praised my studio as “fairly good actually”; I sensed that if I probed any deeper I might be presented with a bill that I couldn’t afford!

Thankfully, when it comes to considering the time we spend catching up with studio admin and sat at our desks, information about office ergonomics is pretty easy to find online. Some issues we might want to consider in our teaching environment are:

  • Light – is there sufficient light in all parts of the room (especially the music stand and piano keyboard as well as the spot where you may be writing in a pupil’s notebook)
  • Glare – is there TOO much light (fit blinds to minimise where necessary)
  • Temperature – is the teaching studio warm enough to prevent “cold hands” without being too warm (which is unhealthy)
  • Air Quality – is there regular fresh air, as well as air freshener to remove unwanted odours? What about negative ions? I’ve written about this in more detail in this post: The Pianist’s Air.
  • Space – is there plenty of room to move? Both student(s) and teacher need plenty of personal space and room to move.
  • Cleanliness – is the studio regularly cleaned thoroughly?
  • Tidiness – is the studio basically in a bit of a mess, making it hard to find stuff quickly when it’s needed?
  • Furniture – is everything in good repair, and selected with a view to the wellbeing of the teacher and students?

These are all factors that impinge on our wellbeing, and are fantastically important in terms of not just our ongoing health but also our effectiveness as teachers on a day to day basis, and our enjoyment of our career.


Supporting Your Piano Pathway


Published by

Andrew Eales

Andrew Eales is a widely respected piano educator, writer and composer based in Milton Keynes UK. His book HOW TO PRACTISE MUSIC is published by Hal Leonard.