Don't be in too much of a hurry to ditch your own way of doing things (within reason) as it's the personal differences that make the lessons interesting.
As a fairly recently ex-student (PPL-2002, IMCR-2003), may I add my encouragement and also endorse the point behind
Flintstone's remark quoted above?
I had to privilege of flying with some really, really good instructors (in my view), as well as with some not quite so talented - though I might add, I flew with no bad instructors. Of course, with renewals, and checkouts, and differences training, type ratings, etc., one still has the benefit of instructor input at various times.
Some decry training with anything but one constant instructor. I am not one of those, I found the stimulus of the differing ways of doing and describing things from different instructors very valuable - and thoroughly to be recommended. Appreciation of difference is a facet of being human, and must be a vital component of any programme of learning, whether it be academic learning or the acquisition of a physical skill.