Success Music Studio

color coding fingers for music - piano boy

Color Coding the Fingers for Music Learning Empowers Special Needs & LD Student’s Fingering Accuracy

Facebook
Twitter

Estimated reading time 3 minutes

Table of Contents

Why Color Code the Fingers for Music Learning?

Have you ever gotten confused on the fingering for a piece of music?  Has your student been unable to use the correct fingers? The main technical issue for both keyboard and guitar is fingering. Correct fingering allows for smoother playing and faster response time. Color coding the fingers for music learning enables special needsLD, ASD, and ADD students to accurately finger the music.

This article uses technical musical terms. For definitions, see the Glossary at the end of the post.

Traditional Fingering

color coding fingers for music - LH piano hand icon with finger numbers
color coding fingers for music - RH piano hand icon with finger numbers

Hand Icons (churien.deviantart.com/art/hand-template-blank-272630198) by Churien is licensed under CC BY (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0). Modified by Geoffrey Keith.

The score has an array of numbers in it: finger numbers, measure numbers, and counting numbers.

  • However, LD students with dyscalculia find the barrage of numbers overwhelming.
  • Students become particularly confused by finger numbers.
  • The finger numbers, written above or below notes in the score, helps the students know which finger to use.
  • Both thumbs are labeled number one.
  • However, the LD student’s penchant toward reversals means that many students reverse the order of the left hand finger numbers.
  • Namely, they see the right hand thumber as finger #1, but they see the left hand pinky as also being #1.

Simple hand icons with finger numbers may be enough to help some students. Nevertheless, color coding the fingers for music students helps combat mix-ups.

How to Color Code the Fingers for Music Learning on Keyboard and Piano

Color coding fingers for music - RH piano - color coding musical instruments - Color coding the hand RH

Color code the notes in the score:

  1. First, color code the notes on the instrument (more on this in the next post).
  2. Then, color code the student’s fingers to match the notes on the score and instrument.
  3. This pulls everything together.

Over the years, I have tried many methods for color coding the fingers:

  1. First, I tired yarn, but it kept falling off.
  2. Next, I tried chenille pipe cleaners, but they poked the student’s fingers.
  3. Then, I tired girl’s colored hair bands, but they cut off the student’s blood flow in the fingers.
  4. Finally, the dad of a special needs student suggested using colored masking tape. He recommended 20 ‘SLIM’ Colors (see the Glossary below for a link).

However, some students have bought other brands of colored masking tape. 

  • If the tape pack has enough colors that roughly match the color of the notes, that will be good enough.
  • Buy the colored masking tape and apply it to the student’s fingers in lessons and during practice.

The glove is an in-school application.

  • The masking tape is too slow to apply during class.
  • However, a non-latex glove can be pre-colored before class.

A white cloth glove can work as a substitute.

Color coding fingers for music LH piano - color coding hand LH

How to Color Code the Fingers for Music Learning on Guitar

color coding fingers for music - LH guitar hand icon with finger numbers

Hand Icon (churien.deviantart.com/art/hand-template-blank-272630198) by Churien is licensed under CC BY (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0). Modified by Geoffrey Keith.

On guitar, the thumb supports the hand while playing, but does not play any notes.

  • Therefore, the left hand fingers have different numbers compared to piano fingering.
  • The picture below shows how to color code fingers for music on the guitar.
  • Each finger can play more than one note.
  • Therefore, each finger has more than one sticker.

The photo shows the stickers applied for the first three strings.

Color coding fingers for music - guitar - color coding musical instruments

Conclusion

Color coding the fingers for music lessons is an effective multisensory teaching strategy It gets really good results by reducing the student’s confusion.

It’s an easy and inexpensive way to give your LD, autistic, and other special needs students success.

© 2020 Geoffrey Keith

Newsletter Signup

Join me for in-person or online lessons today!

Back to the Color Coding Blogs page

Back to the Successful Music Student Blogs page

Glossary

songwriting - let her scream - girl with glasses.jpg

Songwriting – Let Her Scream

Do your lyrics lack powerful emotions? Do you want to learn how to write using stronger images? Take Mark Twain’s advice, “Don't say the old lady screamed. Bring her on and let her scream.” The first of Twain’s sentences uses abstract language, but the second uses concrete images instead. Simply put, when you describe a scene, you need to show it rather than tell it. "Songwriting - Let Her Scream" shows you how. Estimated reading time 3 minutes.

Read More
Explore Bach’s Hypnotic Choral Music in Less Than Four Minutes - Hamburg Church

Explore Bach’s Hypnotic Choral Music in Less Than Four Minutes

Would you like to peruse Johann Sebastian Bach’s music but are short on time? Along with Mozart and Beethoven, J.S. Bach is one of the three composers that the person on the street will recognize by name. His music is celebrated for its intricate counterpoint and emotional intensity. Keep reading to explore Bach’s hypnotic choral music in less than four minutes. Estimated reading time 3 minutes.

Read More
Is There a Difference in Difficulty for Singing Specific Vowels - Women Singing - Tips for People Who Can't Sing in Tune

Is There a Difference in Difficulty for Singing Specific Vowels?

Is there a difference in difficulty in singing specific vowels? Yes, some vowels will be easier to sing in tune, and others will be easier to sing with a strong tone. Click to understand why there is a difference in difficulty for singing specific vowels, and how to do something about it. Estimated reading time 5 minutes.

Read More