Bigyin wrote: ↑Tue Oct 18, 2022 12:03 am
I knew i shouldnt have bothered trying to explain what i meant in quick simple terms as i knew it would either get " fair enough, i understand where you were coming from" or more likely exactly what i got in response above where its all picked apart. <sigh>
I dont have either the time or inclination to finely pick apart each individual aspect of training and word for word debate on the internet. Its your ethos and how you make your living so fair enough i understand that. I know i am at the lower end of the training spectrum in comparison to others on here but i also know from feedback from my peers, students and now the local examiners i am quite good at what i do.
The point I was making was that I don't ride THAT differently from what I taught on DAS because GOOD riding isn't that different - it's in the interests of most advanced trainers to claim there are huge differences between a newly trained rider and an 'advanced' rider but the fact is, if you can pilot a bike from A to B without piling it into the scenery, you're not that bad.
I'm honest. I tweak stuff for post-test training, I correct things that slipped through the net, I spend a lot of time focussing on improving hazard perception, risk assessment and risk management, and I work on getting riders to use a systematic approach to cornering. And when I get trainees who have experience of other trainers like a well-known police run training school, those riders are usually surprised just how much more they learned with me.
But the fact is that unless a basic trainer taught someone to ride in the first place, the trainee would struggle to make it as far as the meeting point where I pick them up. In all the couple of thousand advanced courses I've run over the last twenty five years, I can think of just a couple where the person shouldn't have been on a bike and I had to go absolutely back to basics to give them the skills they should have had to pass the test in the first place. I still remember Marina... how she ever got a test pass on her 125 I have zero idea. She had no clutch control, she had no ability to get the bike to steer, and so she couldn't turn corners. Terrifying (hadn't stopped TVAM attempting to teach her advanced skills though - "I'm so bad I've had a dozen different observers and a couple of senior observers and they use me to train up their new observers"... I'm not kidding, that's what she told me.)
Seriously though, if you really believe that you only "teach riders to pass the test" and don't give them some serious skills to stay alive, you're kidding yourself... just like the IAM do when they claim that riders come out of basic training lacking competency. But I don't believe that for a moment.
When i read a few excerpts from your replies i think "thats what i meant but maybe its read wrong here" or "i already do that but i didnt type a huge long detailed response
Let's be fair. I wrote: "I absolutely, categorically and 100% disagree" in response to your claim that training only teaches you to pass the test and that you learn the rest afterwards. That was pretty short. It was your response that which needed more explanation.
but i havent spent the last 20 or so years presenting training in fine detail or writing books/articles on the subject with a degree in post test training. I am fairly reticent to get too involved in this particular part of the forum for those exact reasons
Everyone has a valid viewpoint. But if people post stuff that can - and SHOULD - be challenged, then challenge it I will. I know the forum's not as popular as the old days of VD when there were thousands of views of some posts, but there's always the risk that someone will read a statement like that and believe it. That's why people stop doing life savers.
I spent an extra 30 minutes this evening (we started at 0800, didnt finish till 1800 when it was getting dark) with a 17 year old on a moped who wasnt understanding exactly that and turning left from the right hand side of a left lane on a roundabout. The kid had some learning difficulties and instead of a 2 hour "just survive without crashing and sign him off" i kept him out doing multiple junctions and roundabouts till he could keep to the inside kerb, keep to the right lane for a 3rd exit etc etc ........ i might not type all this down but its part of my script to already build in e scooters, pushbikes, ebikes etc diving left right and centre on even the basic junctions lessons before we even start on roundabouts which he struggled with.
And that's exactly what I meant when I say that none of us teaching people to ride just cover 'passing the test'. Yes, it's the outcome goal we're after but we work far harder than that to impart skills.
I try and help people if i can on this part of the forum a little bit but I'll leave the fine detail stuff to you and Horse
Don't be silly. That helps no-one.