TEACHING REMEDIES
Giving Your Students the Right Dose
By Mike Levine
USGTF Level IV Master Teaching Professional -
Goiania, Brazil
As
any doctor knows, the right dosage of medicine can be a cure, whereas
an overdose can kill, or lessen a patient’s ability to recover.
Teaching golf is certainly less dramatic, but can be very similar.
While
working at a private club a few years ago, I recall hearing some
of the members’ comments regarding their recent experiences with
a golf school that they had just attended. Surprisingly, most of
the comments were negative in nature. The most common complaint
was that they were overloaded with information to the point of confusion.
This
answer surprised me and also made no sense to me. I thought, how
could a person be confused after spending five days with a golf
instructor? My recent experience as the director of an America’s
Favorite Golf School location in Pennsylvania helped to shed some
light on this issue of overload as it relates to the golf school
participant, so it is now apparent to me how this could happen.
Teaching golf in the golf school format is completely different
than that of the private environment. The golf school requirements
can awaken us to some harsh realities regarding the perceptions
of our skills and abilities as teaching professionals. The school
environment constantly tests our knowledge, patience and adaptability.
Leadership and organizational skills are also required due to the
long periods of time that we are present with the students.
I
have no doubt that there have been students (especially at the beginning
of my tenure) who have left the school somewhat confused. In my
attempt to cure their ills, I overdosed them with information. Inexperience
with this school format and my desire helped to make me overanxious,
so I fed these people with too much information in a well-meaning
attempt to help them.
For
a long time, I believed that technical knowledge of the golf swing
was the most important factor necessary for being a fine instructor.
I now know that, as necessary as technical knowledge is, it is more
important to an instructor to organize your teaching thoughts and
to be able to convey this knowledge so that it is easily understood.
This is where experience plays a key role in determining not only
what information to give, but even more importantly, how much to
give.
The
main and obvious difference between a private lesson and the golf
school format is time. There is more time to receive information
in a golf school, but there is less time to digest the information.
In contrast, in the private lesson format, a student has a week
or more to digest the information, and perhaps acquire the desired
skill. Since the lesson period is less, there is less time for
the student to become confused.
If
we are not careful, the golf school format can be counterproductive,
even though the students have the potential for a great learning
experience. A golf school format provides the instructor with the
opportunity to develop “the big picture” for his students, to slowly
and methodically build upon the knowledge necessary for swing repair
and improvement, and provide for the development of the various
shots necessary for game improvement. If you are careful, this can
be a very rewarding avenue for both student and instructor alike.
In a private lesson scenario, we are called upon to offer quick
remedies for some specific problems. Most often this is not an in-depth
approach. We offer some potential remedies, and the student has
ample time to rehearse and practice them. This is quite often less
stressful for both student and instructor.
Whatever
your teaching format, if you have a student for fifty minutes or
fifty hours, you must structure the lesson time accordingly so that
your students are given the right “dosage” of your teaching medicine,
and sufficient time for a “cure” to take place. This formula, together
with your enthusiasm and love for the game, is the prescription
necessary for your success as a teaching professional.
Enthusiasm
and love for the game will also go a long way to help you be patient
and creative with regard to your students. Your students will pick
up on this, and sense that you care about their progress and success,
all leading to more success for you as well.
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