IMO a big chunk of the problem is the need to ride to a specific set of rules in order to pass the test.Scootabout wrote: ↑Sat Sep 18, 2021 10:56 pm I got the impression, from the observed rides I did and the stuff I read, that there are two potentially contradictory messages in IAM training: 1. "We want you to be a thinking rider"; 2. "In this situation, do this". The better observers seemed to emphasise the former, the more by-the-book ones the latter.
During my own personal time, I was constantly being told "you're not going to pass the test if you / if you don't"... at the same time, when I flipped the session around and started using the leading question technique on my assessors to try to get a handle on what THEY were thinking, there was a tacit admission that there was nothing wrong with my skills or decision-making, I just wasn't doing it in the way that they thought they should be seeing. -
Braking for bends was a good example - I was told that I was braking "because you're not reading the corner right", so I went through a series of question about entry speed / position / line and so on, to find out what he thought I was doing wrong. He had to admit that there was nothing actually wrong with my cornering... "but if you're using the brakes you're not reading the corner right..." was his conclusion even if I was clearly negotiating the corners fine!
My last assessment with BikeSafe (based on RoSPA principles) threw up a similar issue - "you're not making the progress I'd expect from an advanced instructor". Why do I have to? "Because you should be able to." Why? "Well, you just should". The copper was completely baffled that I wouldn't want to ride as fast as the road allowed.
I keep being told by IAM insiders "it's not like that any more" but the number of trainees I get who've had an unsatisfactory experience with the organisation is significant. Sometimes it's the kind of philosophical difference that I have experienced, but something that the IAM are not set up to deal with (but keep trying) is to 'fix' riding problems - with a standard syllabus, it's tough to do that.