To begin, I'd like to state that i'm not trying to bash anyone or put a bad light on pool instructors.
I am, in my eyes, a mediocre pool player, but I feel like I have good information to pass on to help players learn and hopefully spread my passion for the sport around.
My question is that with all the learning materials that can be found in stores, online, or at events like The Derby City Classic and Super Billiards Expo, what does an instructor do other than pass on information and learning materials?
Again, i'm not trying to trivialize teaching pool and those who do it. I simply want to teach what I can and wondering the best way to go about it instead of simply recommending this dvd or reading that book.
I if I needed to learn how to play, which I don't, but if i did, after the interaction I just had here on this site, I would rather scour every pool hall & bar in my state & every state around my state to find the best player that I could find that would LET me pay him (or her) to teach me before I'd pay
an Instructor! ......An instructor? ! An instructor? !! An instructor? !!! (Jim Mora)
So... you’re a decent player, have some nuggets to share, and want to help out lower level guys. OK, here’s the thing: very few of the guys you’ll run into are expecting to get to the finals of the US Open;
fewer have the time, drive, determination, and talent to put in the long hours of practice and competitive play to become a significantly better player.
They don’t need a coach, or instructor, or video.
Most of these guys are looking for a quick fix that’ll improve their play some.
So your job, as a decent player mit nuggets, is to recognize this and be able to effectively pass on stuff that they can absorb and take away, on both the physical side and the physics side. Stuff like improving their draw shot, and/or getting rid of excessive elevation; and explaining things like tangent line and/or half ball hits.
The thing you don’t want to do is tear their mechanics apart and try and rebuild it into picture perfect form and give them a long syllabus of stuff they’ll never work on and practice. Point to the most egregious flaws in their setup with a gentle suggestion or two and give them a simple drill or three that they can work on (almost any drill will do) and that’s it.
Lou Figueroa
I if I needed to learn how to play, which I don't,
but if i did, after the interaction I just had here on this site, I would rather scour every pool hall & bar in my state & every state around my state to find the best player that I could find that would LET me pay him (or her) to teach me before I'd pay
an Instructor! ......An instructor? ! An instructor? !! An instructor? !!! (Jim Mora)
Just because someone can play does not mean they can teach...two totally different things.
Just because someone can play does not mean they can teach...two totally different things.
Just because someone says they can teach does not mean that they know what to teach or that they WILL ACTUALLY TEACH excapt for what they WANT to teach.
Just because someone says they can teach does not mean that they know what to teach or that they WILL ACTUALLY TEACH excapt for what they WANT to teach.
To begin, I'd like to state that i'm not trying to bash anyone or put a bad light on pool instructors.
I am, in my eyes, a mediocre pool player, but I feel like I have good information to pass on to help players learn and hopefully spread my passion for the sport around.
My question is that with all the learning materials that can be found in stores, online, or at events like The Derby City Classic and Super Billiards Expo, what does an instructor do other than pass on information and learning materials?
Again, i'm not trying to trivialize teaching pool and those who do it. I simply want to teach what I can and wondering the best way to go about it instead of simply recommending this dvd or reading that book.
Here are some resources you might find helpful:Right. not so much on how to become a certified instructor as tips to being a better instructor on a small scale.So you're asking "how to become a pool instructor"? Yes?
You seem to be asking, "I'm a mediocre player, but I want to teach pool, and I'd like someone to tell me how to come up with a syllabus -- as well as a list of scenarios of how to respond to typical student requests for clarifications." Sort of a "Cliff Notes" version of how to become an instructor.
I think i will take the advice of trying to use some kind of video recording so they can see what they are doing from an outside perspective. I think i'll also take a notebook along so i can write some notes down and go over what I think some problems might be and see what they want to work on.
The number one reason to have a Pool Insturctor...is so the "Pool Instructor" can make money. NOTHING replaces experience. No instructor can sell that. How many paid "instuctor's" do you think Efren has had?
I'm sure he and his backers have paid, but it was for losing...no "formal instruction" was involved. That's the best way to learn.
The number one reason to have a Pool Insturctor...is so the "Pool Instructor" can make money. NOTHING replaces experience. No instructor can sell that. How many paid "instuctor's" do you think Efren has had?
I'm sure he and his backers have paid, but it was for losing...no "formal
instruction" was involved. That's the best way to learn.
The number one reason to have a Pool Insturctor...is so the "Pool Instructor" can make money. NOTHING replaces experience. No instructor can sell that. How many paid "instuctor's" do you think Efren has had?
I'm sure he and his backers have paid, but it was for losing...no "formal instruction" was involved. That's the best way to learn.
The number one reason to have a Pool Insturctor...is so the "Pool Instructor" can make money. NOTHING replaces experience. No instructor can sell that. How many paid "instuctor's" do you think Efren has had?
I'm sure he and his backers have paid, but it was for losing...no "formal instruction" was involved. That's the best way to learn.
I think i will take the advice of trying to use some kind of video recording so they can see what they are doing from an outside perspective.
With all due respect I think you and I see things a little differently and that’s ok; I have read some of your other posts and I think you have lots of great stuff to say, however:
I agree
Well I would say it’s the other way around; but I get the gist of what you’re trying to say. I don’t want to spend a lot of time around let alone work with people that don’t want to become significantly better players well at least I TRY not to, it does not always work of course.
I get what you are trying to say here to, but they do need all of the above they just don’t think they do, big difference.
For me (I can’t stress that enough) trying to teach those people is a waste of time for the most part. When I run into these guys I run away or keep my distance; it works out better (FOR ME!)
This may be his cup of tea, or may not be; it isn’t mine.
This is how most pool is learned, and it’s a shame.
Wow I would like to take lessons from someone that knows so much they don’t need to learn anything else.
That means you are not teachable.
ENGLISH does this make sense to you?