Year 1 is also when students start steering more on their own. From the first
lessons, students can ask for songs they want to play, and a teacher can
usually simplify something to bring it within reach. What changes over the
year is the student’s own range. With more chords, more fretboard, and
the start of reading or playing by ear, they can explore on their own between
lessons and bring back what catches them. Classical, electric rock,
fingerstyle, and singer-songwriter playing each look different in the room.
The gap between students widens here. Those who practice regularly typically
have a repertoire of songs they enjoy playing, basic comfort moving around the
fretboard without looking, and the beginnings of being able to learn new music
from a chord chart or by ear. Less consistent students may still be building
basic fluency, and that’s fine too. Through the year, opportunities to
perform in Resonate recitals and to use the included recording studio sessions
come up several times for students who want to take them. The honest answer to
“where will I be after a year” is that practice frequency between
lessons matters more than almost any other factor. The difference between
students who play a little most days and students who play once a week is
significant.