shootin4par
New
you can add butch harmon to that list, I bought his videos and found them to be filled with a lot of original and insightfull information
Leo, do I detect the faint whiff of brown lipstick, or a hint of irony?tongzilla said:Brian Manzella, Michael Finney, Tom Bartlett.
You get my point. But do you agree with post #17 or not?Brian Manzella said:Name seven more for a Leo top 10.
Or a whole new Leo top 10.
Brian Manzella said:The TEACHING BUSINESS should be about figuring out who gets the results, why they get the results and HOW they get the results.
Then everyone can study them. learn and improve on what they do.
Then GOLF would be better for all.
No?
rundmc said:Very good point and to add a bit . . . we should also study how good players and players who have made significant improvements LEARN not only how they are TAUGHT. IMO it is more of a learning issue than a teaching issue . . .
rchang72 said:Which is really hard when the apprentice could one day start stealing business from the mentor. Sorry for the long post. Just my long-winded 2 cenets.
rchang72 said:I think both the way people learn and how people are taught are both equally important. What about education research? There has been plenty of research on how to introduce ideas and concepts to people, but I don't see that is being used in either the AI curriculumn or the PGA. (I wish I knew more about this, maybe someone who is an educator could enlight us)
What is hardest about the whole debate is the lack of measurability and repeatability. How do you measure success in golf? Is it score? Is it hitting good shots? Is it hitting fewer bad shots? Is it hitting shots that go less offline? And everyone who plays knows that the stars align for a while and every swing is pure. But then the wheels fall off and we need to get more instruction or do more work. Was that result of poor instruction? Poor learning? Or just the rigors of a very exacting game?
The funny thing is that defining who is the best teacher is like defining who is the best family physician (which I know more about than education). There is a basic fund of knowledge and ability to diagnose problems that defines a good doctor(or instructor) from a really bad one. Definitely the one with the wider knowledge base is better than one who has limited or faulty knowledge. But beyond competence, what really sets the best doctors I have known from the rest is their ability to cultivate relationship with their patients. That relationship (usually in 5-15 minute chunks) is what cements reputations of physicians.
The question, "Can the best practices be identified?" seems to be answered yes and no. Pretty much everyone on this site agrees that TGM is the basic building blocks of the golf swing. What is debated is how to put that swing together. In medicine, there have been studies about what bits of information can be passed to a patient that will be retained. Golf instructors could do the same thing. I actually think that Golf Magazine tried that with different swing drills being given to a set group of golfers and afterward measuring the success of the tip to make a certain change.
Once you identify the best practices (or tips/drills), one could disseminate it through some forum, say this one.
I guess the hardest part about the instructor business is that learning how to be a good teacher is really best refined through a mentor/apprentice sort of relationship. Which is really hard when the apprentice could one day start stealing business from the mentor.
sorry for the long post. Just my long-winded 2 cenets.
rundmc said:BM had a very good post I think on the "other" forum where he said that he believed that the AVERAGE doofus was capable of shooting in the 70's. Now that is the kind of instructor people should want to work with REGARDLESS of whether they believe the head should move or not. If the teacher don't believe in the student it ain't gonna happen.
Play more golf (especially competitive golf), don't go to the range, don't work on your swing.Millrat said:"you practice to play swing and not to play golf"
How many of us do this? Count me in, =[.
How do we break the habit?
Brian Manzella said:"Originally Posted by rundmc
BM had a very good post I think on the "other" forum where he said that he believed that the AVERAGE doofus was capable of shooting in the 70's. Now that is the kind of instructor people should want to work with REGARDLESS of whether they believe the head should move or not. If the teacher don't believe in the student it ain't gonna happen."
?
Sorry, I have a water-logged vacation head.
Please explain this to me, someone.
Brian Manzella said:"Originally Posted by rundmc
BM had a very good post I think on the "other" forum where he said that he believed that the AVERAGE doofus was capable of shooting in the 70's. Now that is the kind of instructor people should want to work with REGARDLESS of whether they believe the head should move or not. If the teacher don't believe in the student it ain't gonna happen."
?
Sorry, I have a water-logged vacation head.
Please explain this to me, someone.
Brian Manzella said:Oh, Ok Birdie and Roger...
I thought it was a shot, as I am shot at a bunch.
Just a LITTLE gun shy.
![]()
The 7 kinds of teachers
By Tom Stickney, The Learning Center, Sandestin Resort, Destin, Fla.
DESTIN, Fla. ? Over the years, I have examined my own teaching style as well as that of many other instructors in an attempt to become more adept at what I do professionally.
Through this analysis and self-introspection I have identified that there are basically seven types of teachers today. The list describes each type of instructor and his individual instructional traits which should help you to identify which is best for your game and which fits in with your personality most succinctly.
TOM STICKNEY
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The very best teachers can shift between different techniques but the following descriptions define the teachers? natural style. By recognizing this, you have a better chance of finding a teaching style and a teacher whose personality meshes with your 100 percent from the start.
Here are the seven types of teachers:
The Analytical Teacher
The analytical teacher uses technology as well as computers within their lessons and their desire is to help the student understand his or her own motion, as well as becoming a student of the game.
Planes, pivot, impact alignments, etc., are terms that are familiar to this teacher?s students. These teachers excel with players who need logical and not vague answers to their swing questions.
Usually, analytical teachers are best for intermediate to advanced players as they tend to move to quickly through the basics. Remember that the teacher?s job is to inform and explain the what?s and why?s of your swing, not to impress you with what they know.
The Feel Teacher
The feel teacher speaks of sensations and reactions of biomechanical motions that produce effective swinging motions. They tend to focus on the effects of swing flaws, but not always. They are great for the player who is sensation-oriented. Vague explanations are the complaint from most of their students when the instructor says, ?Just feel this??
Feel teachers can only tell you what they have felt personally or what they have been told is felt while working on certain motions. They don?t have all the answers, but they can get you started on the right track to feeling what it is that you need to do in order to improve.
The Psychological Teacher
Take a pill but don?t take the whole bottle, Harvey Penick said. He was a psychological teacher to the core. These teachers tend to focus on introspective techniques, allowing students to figure out what needs to be done.
These teachers tend to be ?old-school? players of the game. Sadly, we have all but lost this type of teaching style today thanks in large part to the advances in video and computers. Books by Tim Galloway, Bob Rotella, Richard Coop, etc., all have ideas as to improving your current game by just using your mind more effectively.
The Model Swing Teacher
This type of teacher is good for about 50 percent of their clientele but terrible for the other half. When you try and fit everyone into the same mold, it works great for some people, while others just can?t do it to save their life just because they simply can?t swing that way.
However, if you go to a model teacher and you do swing like that model innately, then you are in the right place. For the player who likes and agrees with the model taught and who has the physiology to do so, there is no better teacher in the world.
People who agree with position-based instruction should go to this teacher from day one.
The Flavor of the Month
This type of teacher reads all the latest magazines and listens to the professionals of today to understand what is the most popular trend and current trend on the PGA Tour.
If Tiger Woods is holding his hips to the top, then so too do all of this teacher?s current students, regardless of their normal hip motions or swing flaws. This teacher is very close to the Model Swing teacher but his ?model? changes monthly.
Lessons that have a random nature to them should be avoided. You must have a logical path to follow and it should not change too much over time since we all tend to do the same things incorrect over time. If we could only keep the model constant . . .
The What They Do Teacher
Most beginning teachers use this method since it is the only thing that they know at first.
Jack Nicklaus stated in his book ?Golf My Way? that the way he felt his motion working might not be best for others. He understood that it was his way and not necessarily others.
As this teacher matures, they usually move more into a swing model teacher since they already have their own model in mind. Once again, if they teach what you tend to do naturally, then you are not too far off here. But be careful because this teacher?s understanding of the game is limited so you might get stuck.
The Part-Time Teacher
The part-time teacher is the guy at your range or course that hits balls all the time, has read all the books, has taken lessons, etc., but doesn?t necessarily understand most of what he has read, seen and heard.
Sometimes, this is a good player but usually they tend to be low- to mid-handicappers who know a few instructional catch phrases and applies them to everyone?s swing.
You should steer away from this type of instructional advice because anyone who does something part-time can?t be good for the long term. Would you invest your life savings with someone who only worked in investment strategies part time?
This is not to say that they can?t be right but usually they are giving you tips concerning things that are results from previous swing flaws. Save your time and effort for the true professionals who teach daily.