The Greatest Reward of Teaching: Knowing You Made a Difference

Every teacher knows that the true reward of our work doesn’t come from grades, competitions, or even applause after a concert. It comes in those quiet, unexpected moments when we realize we’ve helped shape someone’s life — when music becomes not just a skill but a lasting part of who they are.
A few days ago, I received an email that brought this feeling home again. It was from the parents of Alexis Maron, one of our former students, who shared the wonderful news that her first album was being released on Spotify and iTunes. Alexis wrote all the songs, lyrics, and piano parts herself. Though her music now leans toward pop, her foundation was built here at the Academy — through years of classical training, encouragement, and the guidance of her teachers, Nicole Feretti and Iryna Gendin. Her family wrote that “it was her training at the Academy that led to this.” Reading those words was one of those moments when you pause, smile, and remember why we teach.
And Alexis isn’t alone. Another one of our former students, Elisabeth Lopez, now a lawyer at a prominent New York law firm, continues to compose and record her own music under Elisabeth Lopez – Music. Even with a demanding career, music remains an essential part of her life — a source of balance, creativity, and emotional expression.
Whether our students become professional musicians like Alexis, or sharp legal minds like Elisabeth, the skills they developed—the discipline, the emotional intelligence, the patience, and the creative outlet—remain foundational. The music is their constant companion, their unique way of processing the world and finding joy, no matter how intense or demanding their daily lives become.
That is the lasting gift of a music education — and for us as teachers, knowing we’ve helped ignite that lifelong spark is the greatest reward of all. This is the profound truth: music is not an occupation; it is a part of life.
