freddy the beard said:".... Are you talkin' to me?"
the Beard
Beautiful!! :groucho:
freddy the beard said:".... Are you talkin' to me?"
the Beard
Cannonball55 said:Hi,
Now, don't get me wrong there are exceptions to this . Some players have the ability to teach and communicate effectively enough to make good instructors/teachers but from what i have found, the top players are'nt necesarily the top instructors ...
I think teaching is an art in and of itself, I guess if it was so easy Efren would be the most sought out Pool Instructor in the world ...
Another thing to consider is that many pool players, especially old school players come from the school of hard knocks . They are'nt breaking their necks to give up information. Some see it is as against the code to share too much information with younger or inexperienced players, after all the less you know, the easier mark you are .... Right?
Even today if you ask many old school players how to shoot a shot, they will give you a very vague answer ( if any answer at all ) or a "son, get outta here " look. It's as if unlocking the secret vault of information is prohibited ....
Just wondering what your thoughts are about this
kaznj said:For what it's worth SJM has a high P value. Very knowledgeable, explains well.
Swedgin said:Who's SJM?
Cannonball55 said:from what i have found, the top players are'nt necesarily the top instructors ...
Swedgin said:Who's SJM?
sjm said:What is it that makes a pool instructor a great one? Is it knowledge or communication skills?
I recall that when I was a college student, I took an economics class and the professor was a Nobel Prize winner. Unfortunately, his great scholarship wasn't enough to make him a great teacher, because he didn't seem to have the ability to communicate well with the students in the class. In other economics classes, though, professors having less scholarship taught me far more than the Nobel Laureate because they had superb communication skills.
What, then, is the perfect mix of scholarship and communication skills? In fact, it is really rather simple, it is all about maximizing P, where:
P = proportion of a subject that can possibly be taught by a given teacher
K = knowledge, the percent of a subject that is understood by the teacher
C = communication skills, percentage of the teacher's knowledge of a subject that they are able to relate to his/her student(s)
The basic idea is that P = K x C
For example, one who understands 80% of a subject and is able to communicate 60% of what they know is capable of teaching only 48% of a subject. A less knowledgeable teacher might only understand 70%, but if they have enough communication skills that they can convey 90% of what they know, they are capable of teaching 63% of a subject, and would qualify as the teacher you can learn more from.
The very best pool players tend to have very high K values, but most of them have a C value that is far lower than those who have superior communication skills (and who enhance their C values through diligent honing of teaching skills and careful preparation of teaching materials and lesson plans.) This explains why, in seemingly every sport, the best players are nearly never the best teachers. The best have a very high C value, and it's usually much more than enough to offset the fact that they may have slightly lower K values.
The instructor who can teach you the most is the one with a high P value, and the odds are that if you focus on the K values alone, you'll shortchange yourself in your quest to be the best player you can be.