Finding the Right Instructor
Finding the Right Instructor
by
Faith
Meredith
Director, Meredith Manor International Equestrian Centre
Finding the right instructor is essential if a rider wants positive,
satisfying, and safe equestrian experiences. The “best” riding
instructor may be a very different person for different riders. It
is an adult student’s responsibility to choose an instructor that
suits her current level of ability and her goals.
Choosing a riding instructor is as personal a decision as
choosing your doctor. The first step is clearly defining your
objective:
- Are you just beginning to ride and want to learn solid,
basic skills you can use for any riding discipline?
- Are you returning to riding after a period of years and want
an assessment of your current riding skills?
- Are you riding already but want to change riding
disciplines?
- Are you riding already but want to improve your skills or
work on specific problems?
Being clear about your riding goals right from the start will not
only help you evaluate the suitability of different riding
instructors but will also help any instructor understand your
expectations. If your goal is to excel in a particular equestrian
sport, you will want an instructor with a successful background in
that sport, one who knows how to develop and challenge her students
so that they can be competitive in the show ring. If your goal is to
ride confidently and safely while enjoying nature from the back of a
horse as you head out on trails, you would probably seek out a very
different type of instructor.
The second step is making a short list of the instructors
available to you. For most people, geography and economics are
important considerations in choosing an instructor. They want an
instructor who is reasonably close by and also within their budget.
Beyond these basics, however, you need ways to judge an instructor’s
competence or suitability. Unfortunately, there are no foolproof
benchmarks. For example, someone who is a successful competitor may
not necessarily have good teaching and communication skills.
Similarly, a university degree or recognition by an accrediting
organization may offer assurance that the instructor has solid
teacher training but does not necessarily tell potential clients
anything about their actual riding ability. Ideally, you want to
find someone who has both sets of skills.
So the third step involves visiting each of the facilities on
your short list and watching a lesson so you can make an informed
choice. Take a notebook along so you can jot down information about
the program’s nuts and bolts such as available lesson packages,
lesson times, the number of students in a class, cancellation
policies, whether riders are expected to tack up their own horses,
etc. Observe the barn routine and riding classes thoughtfully and
write down your observations for later review. As you watch, ask
these questions:
- Is the barn safety conscious? All equipment should be clean
and in good repair. Hard hats should be required, even in
Western barns. Ask if anyone at the barn is trained in first aid
and if the barn has an established plan for handling medical
emergencies.
- Are there lesson horses suitable for all levels of riders:
beginners through advanced? Riding a variety of horses helps
students develop their skills. As students’ skills increase,
horses with more advanced training should be available to help
them progress.
- Are there classes available for all levels and ages of
riders? If you are an adult beginner will you ride with other
adults? If available adult classes include riders of varying
abilities, will you be satisfied if others in the class are more
or less advanced than you are?
- Are things running on schedule? Are horses ready, equipment
set up, and the instructor prepared? Both instructors and
students should respect one another’s time commitments for a
smooth relationship.
- Is the instructor professionally dressed? A sloppy
appearance may indicate a poor attitude or lack of care in
preparing for lessons.
- Does the instructor act in a friendly yet businesslike
manner toward students? How do the other students act towards
the instructor and one another? A professional instructor should
consciously work to develop a sociable and welcoming atmosphere
at their facility.
- Does the instructor adequately assess students’ ability
levels in assigning horses and selecting exercises for the class
to work on? Students who are over mounted can quickly become
fearful. Those who are under mounted may become bored.
- Does the instructor work from a lesson plan? Does she have
an objective for each lesson and each student in the class? Or
does the class mill around for 15 or 20 minutes before everyone
decides what they are going to work on that day. A good lesson
plan includes short-term as well as long-term goals and the
instructor should make the progression of goals clear to
students.
- Does the instructor’s overall teaching style suit your
personality and learning style? Some students feel they progress
better under an assertive, even intimidating instructor who
continually challenges them. Others are more comfortable with an
instructor who has a more laid back approach to teaching
progressive skills.
- Is the instructor flexible? Does the instructor integrate
riding theory and practical, how-to suggestions? Can she change
her teaching style to suit timid riders, bold students, and
those in between? Does the instructor explain the same thing
several ways to accommodate students with different learning
styles? Does the instructor check periodically to make sure
students understand what she is asking or telling them?
- Does the instructor have sufficient riding ability to
correctly demonstrate anything she is teaching on a school horse
or, if necessary, on the student’s own horse?
The fourth important step is to create a simple evaluation system
that is relevant to you then use it to compare the places you’ve
visited. This could be as simple as using your observations to give
the barn and its lesson program an overall “grade” like A, B, C, or
D. You might give an automatic F to any instructor who fails to meet
a minimum standard you feel is essential. Or you could rate
individual observations that are important to you on a scale of 1 to
10 and add up the barn’s total score.
Doing your homework increases the likelihood that your riding
lessons will be positive and rewarding experiences. If your riding
goals change over time or you reach a skill level that the
particular instructor cannot take you past, you may need to change
instructors. If you have chosen an open-minded, professional
instructor to start with, the parting of the ways should be
amicable. The best of all possible situations occurs when both
instructor and students can enthusiastically recommend one another.
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