I was responding to the assertion that an inexperienced rider can learn by "following riders who knew what they were doing". I said that someone with next to no experience couldn't reliably know who was and who wasn't a good role model. Someone who is already well up the ladder of learning has insights that inexperienced riders don't have.Horse wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 4:22 am I fear you have misunderstood BY. I think - and will leave you to check back - that he later qualified his comment about riding with others (and the quality of their riding) when viewed from his existing knowledge gained from police advanced driving.
If that's what you're referring to. I may have misunderstood...
How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
"If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer." Henry David Thoreau
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
The difference is that CSS break down the overall goal into smaller, bite-sized pieces which are easier to chew and swallow. For each chunk, they cover the topic first in theory, then offer the opportunity to practice that particular technique in a controlled environment, followed by feedback on how you performed and what needs to be changed, then you get the chance to apply that correction, before moving onto the next topic. It's a way to structure coaching that aids the learning process immensely.
I use the same structured approach but without a handy track, I use the road, choosing the routes to set different challenges.
Your buddy may - or may not - have done the same. I don't know. But my experience (directly when I myself was a novice, and indirectly through talking to trainees) is that most new riders who are shown the ropes by more experienced riders are simply told "follow me and do what I do". How do they know what the rider ahead is doing if he / she doesn't explain? I certainly didn't. How do you know who is riding well enough to follow? I remember one ride on my 125 following a much more experienced (well, he'd passed his test two years earlier) rider who was busy telling me I was too slow, and cleared off into the distance. I passed him a few minutes later pulling his Norton Dominator out of a hedge.
Which is exactly why I long since divorced and distanced myself from the IAM and RoSPA. I do not respond well to being talked down to myself - I get quite arsy actually, which is probably why I respond to 'you instructors are all the same' comments! We're NOT all the same, and anyone who has prior experience of the IAM and has also experienced my approach (or Horse's back in the days when he was a trainer himself) would know that. [/quote]I think the issues is that too many IAM take a "know it all/god-like" approach to inflicting their 'knowledge on unsuspecting people, which results in those people grouping all instructors into the same brackets.
It's all about creating a relaxed learning environment.I've learnt that I learn better when it's with someone I can laugh with - my two French teachers are great and we laugh in every lesson, it makes it fun! I react badly to being 'instructed' from the 'know it all level'!! But if someone will talk to me and chat and laugh, then I'll learn loads
Slightly off topic, something I have discovered in the last fifteen months is that switching briefings to Zoom, rather than trying to do them on the day over a cuppa at a cafe and services, has achieved this in a way I really didn't expect. I actually thought that it would be the other way round, that people would find the Zoom environment alien and disruptive. In fact, quite a few people have remarked that being able to sit in comfort in their own home and at a time that suits them has really helped. They're not so nervous, they are comfortable with a cuppa and not sweating (or freezing) in bike kit, nor are they pressured to take things in immediately before riding - they have time for some reflective thinking before the course on the road.
Astute observation. Really all I can do is carry on doing what I try to do... to explain in a way that allows the reader to see the benefits for himself / herself, rather than say "this is what you will do and trust me, it's good for you".For you, part of the issue is that people read things in the tone of voice they expect. So whilst you write in a chatty helpful way, anyone who has been IAM'd will read what you write in a totally different tone of voice. Not sure how you address that tho!
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
In your mind you may have distanced yourself from them, but that doesn't mean your potential clients have.The Spin Doctor wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 9:13 am
Which is exactly why I long since divorced and distanced myself from the IAM and RoSPA. I do not respond well to being talked down to myself - I get quite arsy actually, which is probably why I respond to 'you instructors are all the same' comments! We're NOT all the same, and anyone who has prior experience of the IAM and has also experienced my approach (or Horse's back in the days when he was a trainer himself) would know that.
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
To add to that, I'd also say that after reading the conversations in Staying Alive: you (Spin) have not differentiated your methods of communication from the 'advanced-rider-norm' much, if at all. Sorry to say it, but it's true: which is why most of the forum members rarely visit Staying Alive, and why you (Spin) tend to get the responses to your posts that you do.weeksy wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 9:16 amIn your mind you may have distanced yourself from them, but that doesn't mean your potential clients have.The Spin Doctor wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 9:13 am
Which is exactly why I long since divorced and distanced myself from the IAM and RoSPA. I do not respond well to being talked down to myself - I get quite arsy actually, which is probably why I respond to 'you instructors are all the same' comments! We're NOT all the same, and anyone who has prior experience of the IAM and has also experienced my approach (or Horse's back in the days when he was a trainer himself) would know that.
I know I'm being rude here in this post, but there comes a time when things have to be put bluntly.
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
I would say I have distanced myself in more than just my mind - I'm happy to explain the differences to those who want to listen. And I've been cast as the devil incarnate by more than a few IAM and RoSPA types over the years One senior RoSPA examiner (he was from Scotland, I recall) told me I was "dangerous" because I didn't agree with some of his statements, and I couldn't possibly know as much about riding as him, an ex-police rider.weeksy wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 9:16 amIn your mind you may have distanced yourself from them, but that doesn't mean your potential clients have.The Spin Doctor wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 9:13 am
Which is exactly why I long since divorced and distanced myself from the IAM and RoSPA. I do not respond well to being talked down to myself - I get quite arsy actually, which is probably why I respond to 'you instructors are all the same' comments! We're NOT all the same, and anyone who has prior experience of the IAM and has also experienced my approach (or Horse's back in the days when he was a trainer himself) would know that.
But the perception in other peoples' minds - that's a very different problem. For everyone who gets a positive experience from the IAM, there seems to be another who has a thoroughly bad experience. And I definitely put myself in the latter category. The trouble is that unless those riders are prepared to look, they do assume that "all advanced training is the same". It's not, and I can easily demonstrate that. So can Horse.
But trying to chance that perception is why I do engage (or at least I attempt to) with people who have a negative view of what I can offer. I'm not going to persuade everyone, I know that, any more than I succeeded in explaining why I do what I do to that RoSPA examiner
But there will be some riders who are in two minds about whether or not post-test training can offer them anything, and more than anyone, it's those fence-sitters I hope to sway.
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
I don't think anyone is being rude yet..... i'm hoping we keep it that way
I'm ok currently with how this has gone/going.
I'm ok currently with how this has gone/going.
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
No, not rude at all. It's simply a statement of how you see it. I'm fine with that.Rockburner wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 9:30 am
To add to that, I'd also say that after reading the conversations in Staying Alive: you (Spin) have not differentiated your methods of communication from the 'advanced-rider-norm' much, if at all. Sorry to say it, but it's true: which is why most of the forum members rarely visit Staying Alive, and why you (Spin) tend to get the responses to your posts that you do.
I know I'm being rude here in this post, but there comes a time when things have to be put bluntly.
I'm disappointed you see it that way, but it's my problem to fix, not yours.
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
Isn't that likely to be because you're seen as a 'safety' thing ?The Spin Doctor wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 9:33 amNo, not rude at all. It's simply a statement of how you see it. I'm fine with that.Rockburner wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 9:30 am
To add to that, I'd also say that after reading the conversations in Staying Alive: you (Spin) have not differentiated your methods of communication from the 'advanced-rider-norm' much, if at all. Sorry to say it, but it's true: which is why most of the forum members rarely visit Staying Alive, and why you (Spin) tend to get the responses to your posts that you do.
I know I'm being rude here in this post, but there comes a time when things have to be put bluntly.
I'm disappointed you see it that way, but it's my problem to fix, not yours.
When i go MTB training it's seen as a jumping/trail progression/skills.... Which will essentially make me 'safer' but that's not how it's sold, it's sold as "learn to jump better" for example.
So how do you persuade people that you're not just going to make them ride the same roads slower than they'd want ?
My perception of 'you' as in the organisations we usually see, is fat old boring men who hold me up in traffic/roads and wear day-glo jackets and 'polite' vests... Until you can change that perception, there's a million riders who'll never use you.
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
Ironically, when we set up Blue Riband (as mentioned earlier) it was a deliberate action to not call it an 'advanced' course. Trouble was, that was what potential punters looked for.weeksy wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 9:40 am So how do you persuade people that you're not just going to make them ride the same roads slower than they'd want ?
My perception of 'you' as in the organisations we usually see, is fat old boring men who hold me up in traffic/roads and wear day-glo jackets and 'polite' vests... Until you can change that perception, there's a million riders who'll never use you.
Later, I advertised one day 'coaching' sessions, to problem solve. Never had a single enquiry.
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
I'm quite surprised with the negative attitude to the IAM, a friend and I both did our advanced a few years ago and I couldn't endorse it enough. Sure I was sceptical at first, I'd rode for 30 years and knew it all (not). I even had a woman observer allocated to me, what - a woman riding a motorcycle better than me? We met up once, occasionally twice each week, all weathers and I learnt more in those few months than I had in the previous 30 years. None of the people I met came across as talking down to me.
I do think there is a lot of people that need to get the right attitude into their heads before they engage in any form of training, if you think someone is coming across as 'knowing it all' you've definitely got the wrong one! Having said that, there are many different ways of putting over a similar message.
You've got to want to be there and learn, trust me, I've been the most disruptive person in the class, I was among the youngest in my year at school and ended up being one of the oldest in my apprenticeship - unfortunately I'd been working for a year in between and was so much more mature than those straight from school (I thought). Can't say I'm particularly proud of the way I behaved but I digress.
You will learn a lot more if you go with an open mind and listen to what people say, even more if you participate and get some dialogue going. No-ones forcing you to go. My time with the IAM has definitely saved me from at least 1 serious accident and who knows how many more. You end up riding differently and don't tend to get in so many 'close shaves' because you're not riding where you would have been.
Look on the bright side, gotta be better than a speed awareness 'course'
I do think there is a lot of people that need to get the right attitude into their heads before they engage in any form of training, if you think someone is coming across as 'knowing it all' you've definitely got the wrong one! Having said that, there are many different ways of putting over a similar message.
You've got to want to be there and learn, trust me, I've been the most disruptive person in the class, I was among the youngest in my year at school and ended up being one of the oldest in my apprenticeship - unfortunately I'd been working for a year in between and was so much more mature than those straight from school (I thought). Can't say I'm particularly proud of the way I behaved but I digress.
You will learn a lot more if you go with an open mind and listen to what people say, even more if you participate and get some dialogue going. No-ones forcing you to go. My time with the IAM has definitely saved me from at least 1 serious accident and who knows how many more. You end up riding differently and don't tend to get in so many 'close shaves' because you're not riding where you would have been.
Look on the bright side, gotta be better than a speed awareness 'course'
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
There's no simple answer to that - apart from saying I've lost quite a lot of weight over lockdown, I don't wear hi-vis (see Science Of Being Seen if you want to know why) and you will set off a good rant if you try to tell me that POLITE jackets have any positive safety function whatsoever.weeksy wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 9:40 am
Isn't that likely to be because you're seen as a 'safety' thing ?
When i go MTB training it's seen as a jumping/trail progression/skills.... Which will essentially make me 'safer' but that's not how it's sold, it's sold as "learn to jump better" for example.
So how do you persuade people that you're not just going to make them ride the same roads slower than they'd want ?
My perception of 'you' as in the organisations we usually see, is fat old boring men who hold me up in traffic/roads and wear day-glo jackets and 'polite' vests... Until you can change that perception, there's a million riders who'll never use you.
Along with the Biker Down organiser, I got into trouble with the manufacturer of those POLITE vests as it happens, they sent a threatening letter to KFRS and I had to stop talking about them when I was delivering SOBS on Biker Down. Somehow they heard that I had responded to a question at one of the presentations.
What I will say is that I don't believe the 'slower is safer' mantra one inch. But neither do I agree that 'progress' in the IAM sense is the be-all of riding. It's all about intelligent decision-making.
Years ago, I had a VD'er out on a course in the Peaks. He admitted he was probably a bit too quick for his own good and wanted a course that allowed him to ride quickly but avoid killing himself. He turned up, and he was riding the road like the TT circuit. And when I suggested that he wasn't riding in a way that allowed him to cope with anything going wrong, he struggled. He switched to riding like a granny. He wasn't enjoying it, and I wasn't enjoying it either, frankly...
We'd already overrun by half an hour when I decided to try one more approach, something I avoid for obvious reasons. I said "I'll ride the road as if there were no speed limits - tell me what you see".
At the end of the ride, he said "you were ballistically quick in some places, but much slower in others".
"Why?"
He finally twigged. "The places you opened it up were the places you'd looked for hazards and couldn't see any threats."
That's what I'd been trying to get over. We need to know what can go wrong, where it can go wrong, how it can go wrong, and why it can go wrong, because then we can do something to minimise the risks at that point.
But what I CANNOT do is tell YOU - or anyone else - what's the RIGHT level of risk to take. Riding isn't 'perfectly safe' (something that Scottish RoSPA examiner tried to tell me 30-odd years ago), it's simply as safe or as risky as we choose to make it. My point is that it's a damn sight riskier if we don't know what risks we're taking. All I try to do is get riders to a place where they are better informed to make their decisions.
I do say this often enough that I hope people WOULD understand my approach... maybe I've been saying it in SA too much and not enough here
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
Ditto... I originally called my courses 'extended training' to make the point that they carried on where DAS left off.Horse wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 9:56 amIronically, when we set up Blue Riband (as mentioned earlier) it was a deliberate action to not call it an 'advanced' course. Trouble was, that was what potential punters looked for.
Later, I advertised one day 'coaching' sessions, to problem solve. Never had a single enquiry.
Tumbleweed...
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
Hairybiker84 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 9:58 am I'm quite surprised with the negative attitude to the IAM, a friend and I both did our advanced a few years ago and I couldn't endorse it enough. Sure I was sceptical at first, I'd rode for 30 years and knew it all (not). I even had a woman observer allocated to me, what - a woman riding a motorcycle better than me? We met up once, occasionally twice each week, all weathers and I learnt more in those few months than I had in the previous 30 years. None of the people I met came across as talking down to me.
I do think there is a lot of people that need to get the right attitude into their heads before they engage in any form of training, if you think someone is coming across as 'knowing it all' you've definitely got the wrong one! Having said that, there are many different ways of putting over a similar message.
You've got to want to be there and learn, trust me, I've been the most disruptive person in the class, I was among the youngest in my year at school and ended up being one of the oldest in my apprenticeship - unfortunately I'd been working for a year in between and was so much more mature than those straight from school (I thought). Can't say I'm particularly proud of the way I behaved but I digress.
You will learn a lot more if you go with an open mind and listen to what people say, even more if you participate and get some dialogue going. No-ones forcing you to go. My time with the IAM has definitely saved me from at least 1 serious accident and who knows how many more. You end up riding differently and don't tend to get in so many 'close shaves' because you're not riding where you would have been.
Look on the bright side, gotta be better than a speed awareness 'course'
I think it depends enormously on your experience with interactions with IAM riders.
As I said earlier, I've seen some atrocious behaviour and attitudes from IAM riders, some genuinely dangerous and idiotic (arrogant and aggressive) riding and a genuine disbelief that they've done anything wrong when later questioned about it.
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
You'd probably be surprised just how many riders turn away from the IAM after negative experiences. I regularly pick them up on training courses after they "tried the IAM but didn't get on with them".Hairybiker84 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 9:58 am I'm quite surprised with the negative attitude to the IAM etc..
Yes, I agree an open mind is necessary to approach training...a lot of people that need to get the right attitude into their heads before they engage in any form of training, if you think someone is coming across as 'knowing it all' you've definitely got the wrong one!
... but the same applies to the coach. Too often, the response to a question is "because it's in the book / that's the way we've always done it / you won't pass the test unless...", none of which are constructive. And I've been having this debate with the IAM on the same topics for almost 30 years now.
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
At the school I work with one of the instructors was on the advanced register for a few years to provide post DAS training. They had 2 or 3 enquiries over that period so didn’t bother paying for the entry the following year.The Spin Doctor wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 10:02 amDitto... I originally called my courses 'extended training' to make the point that they carried on where DAS left off.Horse wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 9:56 amIronically, when we set up Blue Riband (as mentioned earlier) it was a deliberate action to not call it an 'advanced' course. Trouble was, that was what potential punters looked for.
Later, I advertised one day 'coaching' sessions, to problem solve. Never had a single enquiry.
Tumbleweed...
We now only teach CBT up to DAS with a course for riders return to bikes after a long lay off
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
It's interesting, on track instruction is probably easier to sell than on road as it's seen as cool to go faster. I'm not sure how I could be sold on road instruction other than to make me safer which is what we all want but it just doesn't sound as good. But I'm not the person to be asking, the person that needs help the most is probably the person least likely to ask as it's seen as uncool, I've no idea how you get to those people but wish those that do it for a living good luck
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
I had both grandfather rights onto the RPMT (I had evidence I'd been running post test training) and also qualified as a DAS instructor - frustratingly my post-test training BTEC wasn't seen as a suitable qualification.Bigyin wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 10:43 am At the school I work with one of the instructors was on the advanced register for a few years to provide post DAS training. They had 2 or 3 enquiries over that period so didn’t bother paying for the entry the following year.
We now only teach CBT up to DAS with a course for riders return to bikes after a long lay off
I was close to parting with a large wodge of cash to join, but waited till some of the other post-test trainers began giving feedback about how much work they were getting from the ERS. Not much, was the answer. I held onto my cash.
The DVSA have done a big relaunch job in the last couple of years. I'm not sure it's sold to many more riders even so, but of course what it has achieved is flooded the market with 'advanced' riding courses.
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
I am aware of the relaunch but we (my colleagues) have not yet taken it up as the cost doesn’t seem to bring in any more revenue to the school but the regional DVSA supervisor is due for a visit soon so will speak to him about it thenThe Spin Doctor wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 10:51 amI had both grandfather rights onto the RPMT (I had evidence I'd been running post test training) and also qualified as a DAS instructor - frustratingly my post-test training BTEC wasn't seen as a suitable qualification.Bigyin wrote: ↑Fri Jul 02, 2021 10:43 am At the school I work with one of the instructors was on the advanced register for a few years to provide post DAS training. They had 2 or 3 enquiries over that period so didn’t bother paying for the entry the following year.
We now only teach CBT up to DAS with a course for riders return to bikes after a long lay off
I was close to parting with a large wodge of cash to join, but waited till some of the other post-test trainers began giving feedback about how much work they were getting from the ERS. Not much, was the answer. I held onto my cash.
The DVSA have done a big relaunch job in the last couple of years. I'm not sure it's sold to many more riders even so, but of course what it has achieved is flooded the market with 'advanced' riding courses.
I also noted the irony of my insurance costs that being a DVSA qualified instructor makes no reduction but IAM and Rospa , who have no instructor credentials, gets a discount
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
My insurance is loaded - "instructors ride more".
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Re: How many of you have had professional coaching to improve your road riding
One of my training mentors said "Find the compromise between scared and bored".
There's been a massive change in the car world. Years ago, only Volvo sold on safety. Now, though, not having Ncap 5* is a major sales handicap.
But riders often want the thrill. As part of that, I suppose there's a need to suspend reality. But unlike watching a film, there's no pause and rewind.
Perhaps the best answer I can give (over and above those 'easier' examples that I gave) is that you might get to ride for longer.
Potter made the point that he's fast and not dead. Do I need to state the obvious flaw in that?
No-one (well, a rare few) actually rides completely oblivious to the environment. They wouldn't survive the first bend if they did. So, somewhere buried in even the berserkly fast riders' minds, there's a bit that says "Whoa!". As Spin said, perhaps the difference is just a self-imposed dose of realism calibration about where it could go wrong, then GLF everywhere else?
One other point: when out training, I stuck to speed limits, etc. Just because a trainee might want to risk their licence, didn't mean that I had to. Also, on one occasion I had a trainee (with an undisclosed health problem) bin a bike. The driver of the car that had been following us stopped specifically to tell police that we had (until then) been riding sensibly and keeping to speed limits.
Even bland can be a type of character