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Malcolm Gladwell's book, "Outliers", stated a hypothesis: becoming good at something takes about 10,000 hours of practice.

I've recently been wondering how long a typical piano student has practiced by the time they complete grade 8. Obviously there would be huge variation but an experienced piano teacher presumably would know roughly how much practice a student at grade X level is doing and how long they are typically at grade X before moving on.

For bonus points, I'd love to see an estimate of hours for each grade. e.g. perhaps grade 1 is 50 hours; grade 2 100 hours and so on.

If a grade 8 student is doing 3-4 hours a day, 6 days a week, for 50 weeks; that's 900-1200 hours just for grade 8. But are those numbers realistic?

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A previous question on this topic was closed as 'subjective' but this is a more specific, albeit related question that I hope is acceptable. – James Tauber May 5 '11 at 19:39
Can you please clarify which board/organisation offers the grades you are referring to? Here in Britain for example, grades usually refer to ABRSM grades, and other European countries will have their own predominant boards too. (You're American, I gather.) – Noldorin May 6 '11 at 15:26
(Australian but living in America at the moment.) Whether it's ABRSM, or AMEB or Trinity or whatever; I'm mostly interested in a ball park estimate. Or think of the question in reverse: at 100 hours, what sort of pieces are students typically playing? what about at 1000? or 5000? – James Tauber May 7 '11 at 3:59
Well in some cases geade 3 of board A could be equivalent to grade 6 of board B... there's nothing guaranteeing consistency. But as long as answers specify the board, fair enough. – Noldorin May 8 '11 at 13:29
This is a great question! – idober May 11 '11 at 13:08

3 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

It depends on the grading system used. I completed my grade 8 piano through the Royal Conservatory of Music, in Canada. I would consider my general musical aptitude to be about average for a "serious amateur" musician, so keep that in mind.

I practiced approximately two hours every day for a year (more towards the end than at the beginning), or around 750 hours total. That got me a high 60s on the examination, I believe. Definitely not super well, but enough to pass without being worried.

So I think your range of 900-1200 hours would be accurate to do well on the grade 8 exam. It also depends on your focus and your teacher. I had a good teacher, but I focused a lot on theory (separate study time, separate exam that I took around the same time) and didn't work particularly hard on keeping my tempo consistent throughout songs (that was a big problem on my exam). I also wasn't a great sight-reader.

The only formal exams I took were grade 6 and grade 8, and I'd say 2 and 3 hours a day respectively are probably enough for the average player, based on my experience. This is impossible to answer accurately for you, of course, but hopefully it gives you an idea.

As for the total from grade 1 to grade 8: If you assumed starting at 30 min/day and linearly increasing until 3 hours/day, you'd get just over 5000 hours total. So half of Gladwell's expected time. I think this is reasonable, being "half expert" at grade 8 :P

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Do you mean 2 hours a day for a year to get from grade 7 to 8? This sounds reasonable... just thought I'd clarify though. – Noldorin May 6 '11 at 15:28
@Noldorin Ah, yes. I didn't skip grade 7, I just didn't take the exam. – Matthew Read May 6 '11 at 15:33
Make senses. I've heard of others doing that. – Noldorin May 6 '11 at 15:34
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5000 to grade 8 would make sense and then another 5000 to professional level (whether sitting association + licentiate or not) – James Tauber May 7 '11 at 4:06

I'm someone who is currently learning the piano.

For Grade 8 AMEB, I slacked off quite a bit, I barely practiced in the beginning of the year (learnt songs around March), just the 1 hr a week in lessons, then did at most an hour a day for 4/5 days a week towards crunch time. Examinations were in November. Assuming I had 35 weeks to practice, I would've spent around 150 hours on 3 songs (and scales etc.) to achieve a B+.

Personally, I don't think your numbers are realistic, the most passionate person I know for music practices 1-2 hours a day, every day. You also might have to take into consideration that most pianists up to grade 8 are students, who play the piano for leisure. Sitting down for anything more than 1/2 an hour could be difficult, especially if they have homework/social life/sport/etc on their mind. However, everyone I know that plays, passes.

Currently, I'm working towards an A.Mus. I started learning the songs in May last year and will take my examinations in October this year. I have a very irregular practice regime, but I can estimate around 5 hours... a fortnight. Which takes me up to 130 hours. I have 5 months to go, assuming that I start playing more frequently, say 4 hours a week, I can squeeze in a total of 210 hours to memorise 6 songs.

Wow, first time looking at raw numbers, I hope this is of help to you guys. I won't mind answering any questions if you want to throw any at me.

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I think it's impossible to equate a flat number of hours with a certain growth in proficiency. Every student learns at a different pace.

I give students the following minimums for daily practice at the piano (these are Suzuki books in which books 1-3 correspond roughly to RCM grades 1-6 and books 4-6 roughly to RCM 7-9, and Suzuki includes massive listening time which is extra): 5 minutes a day for beginners, 10 minutes a day by the end of book 1, 20 minutes a day in book 2, 30 minutes a day in book 3, etc. By the beginning of book 6 students are ready for advanced literature and then we set practice times and goals individually. Times assume practice 6-7 days a week.

Among my consistent practicers whom I regard as talented, I have some who are in book 2 after over 5 years of study, and some in book 3 after less than 2 years of study. That's with roughly the same total number of practice hours per year. The ones who move faster aren't necessarily more talented, it's more that they like to challenge themselves with new material but have trouble taking the time required to make old material sound beautiful, while the slower-moving students are fearful of new material but sound like professionals on their current pieces before they move on. Your mileage will vary...

For someone who was preparing for college/conservatory performance major admissions I would suggest budgeting at least 2 hours practice per day on a normal day and 3-4 hours at least two days a week for extra detail work; and plan to practice at least 4 hours per day while at college/conservatory. My current teacher reports that she routinely had to practice 10-12 hours a day at Juilliard. I play professionally and practice anywhere from 1.5 to 5 hours depending on the day. 1.5 always feels like a very minimal rushed run-through.

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