PaddyMonty
Well-Known Member
I teach a small number of people (mainly jumping). I dont charge them a penny for lessons. I do it because I enjoy it.
All these pupils have said they get more out of a single lesson than they have during months with their previous instructors. Now I've often wondered why that is. I haven't had any formal training as a riding instructor or to be honest very much training as a rider.
Last weekend I started teaching a new pupil. Very switch on lady (airline captain) who again made the same comment as my other pupils. When asked why her comment was that I go straight to the root cause of the problem and focus on a SINGLE element which allowed her to concentrate on that alone.
I guess this comes from being a gliding instructor where I would always focus on the issue that was most likely to kill the pupil and eridicate that before moving on.
This got me thinking about the odd lesson I have had with really good instructors. Without fail they took the same approach.
For a period of time I did charge for lessons but found I became too hung up about giving 'value for money', modified the way i taught and became less effective as a result.
Watching a lot of other instructors teaching I notice that a great many of them seem to be doing the same thing and fire so many things at the pupil to work on that they become almost overloaded and fail to achieve anything really.
So my question is....does attempting to give 'value for money' really help the pupil or is there a danger that too much information is passed over (for all the right reasons) making progress much more difficult to achieve.
Your thoughts?
All these pupils have said they get more out of a single lesson than they have during months with their previous instructors. Now I've often wondered why that is. I haven't had any formal training as a riding instructor or to be honest very much training as a rider.
Last weekend I started teaching a new pupil. Very switch on lady (airline captain) who again made the same comment as my other pupils. When asked why her comment was that I go straight to the root cause of the problem and focus on a SINGLE element which allowed her to concentrate on that alone.
I guess this comes from being a gliding instructor where I would always focus on the issue that was most likely to kill the pupil and eridicate that before moving on.
This got me thinking about the odd lesson I have had with really good instructors. Without fail they took the same approach.
For a period of time I did charge for lessons but found I became too hung up about giving 'value for money', modified the way i taught and became less effective as a result.
Watching a lot of other instructors teaching I notice that a great many of them seem to be doing the same thing and fire so many things at the pupil to work on that they become almost overloaded and fail to achieve anything really.
So my question is....does attempting to give 'value for money' really help the pupil or is there a danger that too much information is passed over (for all the right reasons) making progress much more difficult to achieve.
Your thoughts?