The best thing I can hope for in a student is an open mind. Without that, nothing else is of any consequence. Most of us are pretty good at identifying the areas that need the most attention as we progress through a lesson. More often than not, the student may not even know what their needs are. I put more weight on what I observe a student doing, that what they tell me. I've seen students swear their stroke is just fine, until they see the video.
We (instructors) aren't immune either. I have asked other instructors to observe me, and have ended up learning something was wrong that I wasn't even aware of.
Steve
From an instructors point of view, what do you like to see or hear from your students at the onset of lessons?
Nothing. I want them to be themselves.
How do you assess what your student needs to concentrate on the most to become a more accomplished pool player?
That's proprietary information that I don't share.
Why not ask Coke for their formula while you're at it?
IMO sarcasm would not be a good teaching tool but maybe it works for you. Have a "fantastic" day! Quoted from one of the best instructors..
I wasn't being sarcastic. I was being truthful. You asked an unfair question.
I wasn't being sarcastic. I was being truthful. You asked an unfair question.
I like to hear that they have an open mind like Steve said; I also like to get the impression that they are "ready to take the nestea plundge" (fall backwards and trust me with their game). And I also like those who are more concerned with what they are going to learn rather than what they can do right now. But I CAN deal with just about anyone, I have taught people that are borderline "nuts" and some of those you just have to "do what you can" with them.From an instructors point of view, what do you like to see or hear from your students at the onset of lessons?
That is where video comes in at the start as Scott also pointed out, I tape them doing absolutely EVERYTHING I have a couple of hours of video of them and I watch it over and over; so when the 1st lesson comes along (the 1st session is the "evaluation" and that is different than lesson #1) I have a complete understanding of 1. what they can and can not do 2. what they do and do not know 3. "how" they view the game. It took me a long time to come up with this system and I get better as a teacher every year.How do you assess what your student needs to concentrate on the most to become a more accomplished pool player?