Brand New to Music Lessons? Call Our 24 Hour Info Line: 972.480.5211

Guitar - Acoustic, Electric and Bass Lessons: Five years old and up for private lessons and seven years old and up for group lessons. Guitar playing requires a fair amount of pressure on the fingertips for pressing on the strings. Young children generally have small hands and may find playing uncomfortable. Bass guitar students are usually ten years or older.

Piano Lessons: At our school four years old is the youngest age that we start children in piano lessons. At this age they have begun to develop longer attention spans and can retain material with ease.

Guitar - Acoustic, Electric and Bass Lessons: Five years old and up for private lessons and seven years old and up for group lessons. Guitar playing requires a fair amount of pressure on the fingertips for pressing on the strings. Young children generally have small hands and may find playing uncomfortable. Bass guitar students are usually ten years or older.

Voice Lessons: Six years old is recommended as the youngest age for private vocal lessons. Due to physical nature (proper breathing techniques, development of vocal chords and lung capacity) the younger body is generally not yet ready for the rigors of vocal technique.

Violin and Strings: We accept violin, viola and cello students from the are of four years old. Some teachers will start younger children, but our experience has shown us the most productive learning occurs when the beginner is at least four year old.

Work At The Music Conservatory of Texas
Call 972.377.5977 For Current Openings

Teach The Music You Love and Leave The Rest To Us

Welcome!

Thank you for your interest in teaching positions with our school. This page will give you an idea of our philosophy of teaching and our ideas on how our school can best meet the needs of our students and teachers.

If you are interested in applying for a teaching position after reading this or viewing our website please fax, email or mail your resume to:

Fax: 972 377-4116 Attention: Teaching positions

Email: music@mcot.com

Music Conservatory of Texas
9255 Preston Road
Frisco, TX 75034

No Phone Calls Please.

We hire teachers with university training and/or real world performance experience in their instrument specialty. Only suitable applicants will be contacted for an interview.

School Background:

The Music Conservatory of Texas is a privately owned school that was founded in 2000.

We are the fastest growing music teaching school in North Texas with approximately 1000 students attending weekly classes between our 2 locations. We cater mainly to children. About 90% of our students are between 3 and 16 years old. We welcome adult students but our suburban market area has resulted in a student base of mainly children.

We realize that most of our students will not become professional musicians. We strive to provide a fun but educational environment with well organized administration and first rate equipment and facilities.

Music Teaching Positions:

The Music Conservatory of Texas is a privately owned school that was founded in 2000.

As music teacher you can either teach privately in your house or in students homes, or you can teach in a music store or school - both have upsides and downsides. If you teach in your home or students homes, the upside is you can keep all of the money you charge to the student. Since you have no expenses like rent, a receptionist or yellow pages advertising you do not have to pay out a percentage to overhead costs. There are also downsides of teaching in your home or your student's homes. It can be hard to keep your schedule constantly full with new students. Getting a full schedule can be difficult and expensive if you have to run classified ads or small newspaper ads. Even if you are a good, well-liked teacher, it can take a long time for referrals and word of mouth to fill your schedule. If you are driving to student's houses you also have to factor in the driving time between students which limits the amount of teaching you can actually do.

The other downside of teaching on your own can be the difficulty in enforcing your attendance and payment policies. No one likes being a collection agent. It can be difficult to concentrate on your teaching while trying to keep track of who owes money and to make sure you are paid.

If you are teaching on your own, it can also be difficult to enforce your teaching policies and have your time respected. For example, if a student tells you they are going to Disney World for the next two weeks, it can be difficult to still make them pay for their lesson time. Many students will refuse to pay for those missed lessons because they will think: "I'm not getting my lesson so why should pay?"

Chances are you can't book another student in that lesson time for just 2 weeks, so if you don't charge the student in Disney World, you have just lost 2 weeks of pay. If that scenario happens a couple of times per month it can greatly reduce your earnings.

Now let's look at teaching at a music school. The downside is you don't get paid as much per student. Teaching rates that in-home teachers and music schools charge are usually pretty similar. So the pay per student to the teacher is lower because of rent, instrument expenses, receptionists, advertising, taxes and other expenses. The upside can be having a consistently full schedule of students each day. Being paid a little less per student but having 10 or 11 students in a day will mean you earn more overall.

Another upside to teaching at our music school is that you do not have any collections hassles. You only have to focus on the teaching. Also our music school provides a professional educational environment that is stimulating to the students. It is also free from distractions found in a home such as ringing phones or doorbells, tv's and noisy family members.

Those are the general differences between teaching on your own and teaching in a music school or store.

Here are reasons why music teachers choose to teach at our school over all other choices:

1. A constant flow of new students to keep schedules as full as possible:

Over the course of the year, students can move or quit. This can leave a teacher with gaps or holes in their schedule. Most student register and start lessons in September. Most music schools only advertise in late August and September for new students.

At our school we spend a lot of money on advertising and marketing year round to keep our teacher's schedules as full as possible. Each year we spend over $80,000 on advertising through internet, yellow pages, direct mail, community publications and other media to constantly attract new students. We are continually registering new students for our private music lessons even during typically slower registration months like May or June.

2. Extras are taken care of - your only responsibility is to teach

At all of our locations we have full time front desk administrators to handle all of the "details" of teaching. From scheduling to collecting fees or arranging an accompanist for recitals, these details are handled by our administrators not the teacher. This means the teacher is free to focus on teaching and not get bogged down by administration.

3. Your time is respected and you are paid whether or not students show up

Teachers are paid for lessons whether students attend or not. If a student misses classes for school trips or holidays, the teacher is still paid. There are 3 scheduled make-up lessons throughout the year and these are taught as group lessons. If a student does not pay for their lessons or has an uncollectible debt, the teacher is still paid. Our priority for our teachers is to make sure that your time is not abused and your teaching day can be as productive as possible.

  • Piano
  • Guitar
       Acoustic
       Electric
       Classical
       Bass
  • Voice
  • Violin
  • Banjo
  • Mandolin
  • Flute
  • Percussion
       Drumset
       Mallets

Our FLOWER MOUND location (in Parker Square) serves our surrounding communities of Lewisville, Highland Village, Argyle, Copper Canyon, Double Oak, Bartonville, Grapevine and Coppell.

Our FRISCO location (Preston at Main Street) serves our surrounding communities of Plano, Allen, McKinney, Celina, Prosper, Little Elm, The Colony and Dallas.

700 Parker Square #105
Flower Mound, TX 75028
972.899.9330
9255 Preston Rd
Frisco, TX 75034
972.377.5977
Copyright © 2009 Music Conservatory of Texas. All rights reserved.