#8
Originally Posted by:
ChristopherSchlegel
I missed this earlier!
The benchmark for any given lesson is that you are done with it when you completely understand the idea being taught and, or can do the physical skill being taught. But that doesn't mean you should be able to play it perfectly every time going forward. You want to get the basic idea & be able to put the skill (chord, chord change, strumming rhythm, scale pattern, whatever it is) in your practice routine. You want to have a decent grasp of it, understand how to keep practicing it & how to refine it. Then go forward in the course your are working on.
You want to keep moving forward to keep improving & stay motivated, but not so much that you get overwhelmed & in over your head, then discouraged. Learning guitar is a constant process of repetition & refinement. For as long as you play you'll keep playing many of the same things over & again to keep them under your fingers while you gradually add new skills & improve your old skills.
Knowing how much & when to review is a very individual thing. It depends on your skill level, what you are working on & how much time you have in your daily practice schedule. If you have a specific question about any given lesson, please ask.
A standard practice session should start with warming up with something fun & relatively easy. Then gradually move into something new & challenging. Then eventually finish with something that is again fun & easy.
You specifically mention the extended C major scale. I'm guessing you are in Fundamentals 1 on chapter 3. As an example, if you have an hour to practice, then I would recommend:
Start by getting warmed up playing a song from earlier in the course that includes some chords & strumming you are already familiar with. This gets you playing with something fun & relatively easy. Then you can try some newer chords or strumming. Then spend time working on that scale. Picking individual notes is a challenging new skill if you've only previously worked on strumming chords. Then go back to some chord strumming song that's easy to end the session in a satisfying way.
The number of repetitions of any given skill is going to vary by individual. There is no specific number that works the same for everyone. We all have to do the same thing: practice it until it's right and sounds like music. It takes as long as takes. So we try to enjoy the process!
Hope that helps. Keep practicing!