KatB
Well-Known Member
Just a thought...
I have always been more bias towards eventing, and so have had lessons with a lot of eventing trainers who are BE accredited.
I have more recently been focussing on SJing and so have been having lessons with BSJA level 2 coaches.
Now, with the eventing people, a lot of them have had very different styles (as you'd expect) but some are excellent with good lesson structures and a real sense of working towards acheiving something at the end, and some have very little structure, and seem to have problems communicating what they want.
The Sjing people I have had have all been very structured with their lesson plans, and really summarise at the end of the lesson, as well as throughout the session. They have had excellent communication skills.
Now as part of my job, I train and coach a lot, and have had training in coaching and training session structures and soft skills required, and I recognise a lot of these skills in lessons I have had with the SJers, but tbh, very rarely see the same evidence of "trained skills" in eventing trainers...
So, thoughts?! Do you think the eventing accreditation could be tightened up? Does anyone know what is involved in the BE accreditaion? I know Sjers have to produce a portfolio to get a coaching certificate...
I have always been more bias towards eventing, and so have had lessons with a lot of eventing trainers who are BE accredited.
I have more recently been focussing on SJing and so have been having lessons with BSJA level 2 coaches.
Now, with the eventing people, a lot of them have had very different styles (as you'd expect) but some are excellent with good lesson structures and a real sense of working towards acheiving something at the end, and some have very little structure, and seem to have problems communicating what they want.
The Sjing people I have had have all been very structured with their lesson plans, and really summarise at the end of the lesson, as well as throughout the session. They have had excellent communication skills.
Now as part of my job, I train and coach a lot, and have had training in coaching and training session structures and soft skills required, and I recognise a lot of these skills in lessons I have had with the SJers, but tbh, very rarely see the same evidence of "trained skills" in eventing trainers...
So, thoughts?! Do you think the eventing accreditation could be tightened up? Does anyone know what is involved in the BE accreditaion? I know Sjers have to produce a portfolio to get a coaching certificate...