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GOLF
TEACHING PRO MAGAZINE®
Taking A Page From Our Certification Courses
Career Path
If you are a member
of the USGTF or a WGTF member federation, think back to when you
attended the certification course. Whether you were an experienced
teacher looking for professional credentials or someone who never
taught before, you probably wondered what exactly was in store for
you.
For the first couple
of years of its existence, the USGTF was still finding its way in
attempting to solve that puzzle. After keeping concepts that worked
and discarding concepts that didn’t, the USGTF soon after
experienced explosive growth, to the point that today over 9,000
people have gone through our certification process, with another
9,000 having been certified by other WGTF nations.
Critics have
wondered, “How can you teach someone to teach golf in a week?” In
all honesty, coming from a traditional point of view where earning
some sort of professional credentials takes several years, that’s a
fair question. Coming from a pragmatic point of view, that question
is easily answered.
If you took a skiing
lesson from a certified teacher, would you be confident in that
teacher’s ability? How about a tennis lesson? Both sports have the
same teacher training model as the USGTF: going through a week-long
certification process. Neither of those sports requires its teachers
to serve a multi-year apprenticeship.
For the most part, the majority of candidates have participated in
these sports for most of their lives.
When candidates go
through the USGTF certification process, they are taught the
fundamentals necessary to teach the game to whatever certification
level they desire. Level I members, who go through a two-day
process, primarily learn about teaching the full swing. Level II and
III members learn all facets of teaching the game, with the
difference in membership levels is that Level III members are
considered fully certified and have passed the playing ability test.
All this brings up an
interesting question: how good do you have to be as a teacher in
order to achieve the level of certification you desire? After
considering this question over the years, the USGTF believes it has
found the desired answer. Examiners at each certification course are
charged with using their experience and being responsible for
knowing how to answer that question.
The Level I written
test has answers that are strictly objective, while the Level II and
III verbal teaching test have answers that are more subjective. A
candidate who fails the test is given another opportunity to study
up and re-take the test one final time.
Going back to the
question of how good someone has to teach in order to achieve a
specific certification level, Level I members who pass the written
test are deemed to be qualified to teach beginning players the golf
swing. Level II and III members are deemed qualified to teach
average level players every facet of the game. Going a step further
to the Level IV Master Teaching Professionals, they are deemed
qualified to teach all levels of players every facet of the game.
This is not to say
that Level I members cannot competently teach tour players, for
example. Their level of certification simply gives the public an
idea of the minimum abilities that this person has in teaching the
game. When a professional organization such as ours hands out
certifications, the public has a right to expect that the certified
person has reached a certain level of competence and teaching
ability. This is the mission that our examiners are charged with, to
determine if that level of competence and teaching ability has been
met.
To meet Level II and
III criteria, the candidate should possess a good working knowledge
of golf mechanics and basic instruction ideas. Fortunately, most
everyone who has been around the game for a few years has achieved
this. By talking to more experienced players, by watching
television, and reading books and magazines, this knowledge is
obtained fairly easily. It is rare that someone comes through the
certification process, has been playing a few years, and knows
little or nothing about basic technique or teaching ideas. In this
case, the Level I certification would be appropriate for this
individual.
On a final note, the
USGTF program is not designed to “weed out” people, although we know
that some of our members feel that it should. Instead, as an
educational organization, we strive to give people the best teaching
education in the business, and to help people get started in the
golf industry. Eighteen years of success since our founding in 1989
tells us that we’re still heading in the right direction.
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