Honey08
Waffled a lot!
Certainly at lower levels (up to stage 3) you get a chat with the examiner after about how it went. It's a good chance to "rescue" something that you realise you perhaps didn't get right - if you acknowledge it and address it... (Again though, I can't speak beyond 3)
It read to me like the candidate did what I call direct traffic - ie shoulder in up the long side then travers then half pass across the short diagonal. I don't like teaching that way personally, I prefer to chuck some thinking responsibility at my riders and teach what I see (like crookedness maybe)
Giving directions is all well and good, riders come away thinking they've done loads but it doesn't develop much.
R
Also I think @I'm Dun said about not training where you do the exam, I think it's only for a number of weeks beforehand and may not be in force at that level as there are so few centres training or examining
Is that still the case? It was decades ago when I did my Stage 3, but I thought they’d stopped face to face feedback because there had been too many cases of aggressive disagreements with the examiners? (could be wrong, I’ve not been involved in the BHS for years, but I got told a few years ago by a current instructor).
When I did my Stage 3 several fellow students failed when the instructors at our Eq Centre were convinced they should have passed. But that’s the way it was, they weren’t the examiners and needed to respect that.
I haven’t read the Facebook page but I am quite shocked that a FBHS would actually share something like that and start a shaming campaign. Incredibly unprofessional!! Perhaps she should indeed give up her FBHS. Most of her social media is on the embarrassing side nowadays. Nothing good ever comes from getting into a public spat on Facebook.