Bantari wrote:
you expect the teacher's explanation to be in a very specific form - as an explanation, for example, rather than a set of examples.
I do not expect a very specific form, but SOME form that is a) clear to the teacher, b) clear to me when the teacher teaches it and c) much more generally applicable than just to one very specific example.
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You need them to give you a short and to-the-point *reason* rather than guiding you along the path by a series of questions,
Either (or something else) is ok.
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In short - you need them to answer you in the form which is the most acceptable to you rather than in form which they prefer (or which they think is the best for you.)
Teaching is always a compromise between the teacher's expression and the pupil's perception of it. "The most acceptable" is your caricature of my request for teaching being at least reasonably useful instead of almost totally useless.
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Now I think it is based on your strong preference to move within what I call your 'framework', or maybe even inability to move outside of it.
I lack the ability to learn much from a few unrelated examples and to guess my playing weaknesses from teaching, when the teacher is not teaching to avoid them, because he has not identified them.
Yes, I do have a strong preference for good teaching, and I am not willing to abandon it. Teachers overlooking most of my major weaknesses and instead teaching unrelated very specific examples are bad teachers. It is not my, the pupil's, fault to learn only very little from such very bad teaching.
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traditional teaching does not package and convey the knowledge in the precise way you prefer it to be packaged and presented.
Exactly. Traditional teachers are so unspecific in their teaching that pupils need to listen for many months or years to get a sufficient amount of unspecific examples.