Coaching Through Questions
I
think we all have had that coach/teacher/supervisor that is an "Over
Coacher". The "Over Coacher" is constantly talking, repeatedly giving
advice and clogging the air and the learning process with their help.
The "Over Coacher" means well but in the end the thousand things they
tell you only make things more difficult. You see this often in people
newer to coaching/teaching/leadership positions who get really excited to share
knowledge. Another "Over Coacher" feel they must over compensate to
feel important or that they think they know best. We all have been an
"over coach" at sometime I'm no exception. It's exciting to learn
something new and gain knowledge and want to share it with others. If
you're really sharing that knowledge you should be doing this for the
students benefit not to feel important and boost your ego. Sometimes you can call the
"Over Coacher" the "Advice Guy". The "Advice Guy" just likes to give
their advice on everything and anything. Ironically the "Advice Guy" is the usually
the one that can't take advice.
Here's
a couple ways to stop being an "Over Coacher". This applies to any part
of life not just teaching someone how to Snatch, it can be how to teach
the new guy at your office how to change the ink on the printer. Or how
to teach your child to swing a bat.
If
you're teaching someone to do something for the first time you need to
show them how to do the task properly first. Before showing them the
task it's important to tell them the "why". Tell them "why" we do it
this way and "why" we teach it this way. Then you need to break down the
task into smaller segmented pieces and teach them step by step giving
only giving a couple cues/instructions at a time. Then slowly build upon the previous steps,
don't be afraid to let allow them to fail and fall on their butt. Failure is often a great teacher. As a
coach be there along the way only giving them encouragement and a couple
cues/instructions at a time to keep them focused.
An
important part of coaching is to STOP and observe. Don't fill the air
with nonsense. Actually watch, listen and care. Observing and asking
questions isn't a license for not being engaged in your athletes or
students. A coach must always be involved and invested in your athletes. The dichotomy of being invested in your athletes and students is that to
much help or doing things for people can be more hurting than helpful.
Nobody learned anything by someone else always doing it for them. This
is the time where you need to ask questions to coach. A conversations
might go like this.
Athlete: Can you help me with my Snatch?
Coach: What seems to be the problem?
Athlete: I don't know, I keep missing the bar out in front.
Coach: Ok Cool, let me see you snatch.
...... athlete misses Snatch in front.............
Coach: You are missing the bar forward. Have done changed anything from what you normally do?
Athlete:
No, well I guess I have been trying to move my hands in a little closer
because it feels better on my shoulders when I go over head.
Coach:
Bringing your hand position closer together can make you take off
sooner and cause you to miss forward. You can try to moving your hands
back out a little bit back out or you can try bending your arms a little
early to get the bar back into position. Give one of these a try.
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