- Apr 11, 2011
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- #76
What age are mental blocks most common/last the longest?
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I don't have any facts, but I feel like about 11-14 when the child starts to understand fear and danger more. This happened to me, I could do a backbend with a "shadow spot" but not by myself (13).What age are mental blocks most common/last the longest?
I definitely agree @purplecheer with your assessment of the age breakdown... Although my daughter has never experienced a mental block, I did noticed her reluctance to learn or attempt certain skills, happened around age 11. When she was younger than 11, she will attempt skills on the grass or anywhere and I will force her to stop and often throw in the "break your neck" warnings... But at 11, she will not do any tumbling but bhsI don't have any facts, but I feel like about 11-14 when the child starts to understand fear and danger more. This happened to me, I could do a backbend with a "shadow spot" but not by myself (13).
@tumbleyoda Can you elaborate on Mismatched learning vs teaching styles ?
Learning vs teaching styles is what I suspect contributed to CP's longest block. More to the point, the frustration the coaches showed both verbally and in their body language, in addition with not changing how the world's most expensive BHS was taught were the biggest contributing factors. This is all based on hindsight, so it might be compete hooey, but it sounds right.
We all have different learning styles. Understanding how athletes learn and then adapting your teaching methodology to maximize that style generally yields the best results. IMO teaching tumbling effectively means learning to adjust your style. When people minimize this by saying teaching tumbling is easy so it don't matter who teaches it or where you learn it, it truly infuriates me because it shows their true lack and understanding of teaching tumbling.![]()
Learning vs teaching styles is what I suspect contributed to CP's longest block. More to the point, the frustration the coaches showed both verbally and in their body language, in addition with not changing how the world's most expensive BHS was taught were the biggest contributing factors. This is all based on hindsight, so it might be compete hooey, but it sounds right.
I agree with this so much. I'm a visual learner, I gain almost nothing from someone just trying to tell me something (which was exhausting for my parents but whatever). When coaching tumbling, I always keep my phone handy so I can record and actually show the athlete what I'm talking about and how to fix the problem. The slow motion video on the iPhone is the best thing ever for my private lessons.
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This also happens in school, and that's why some students find it hard to learn. Ex.
Amen!!! If I had realized this earlier, my CP's training would have been much different. Different coaches have different views, training, ETHICS, temperament, etc. ALL of these should be taken into consideration. Each child is different and respond/thrive/progress differently. It can make all the difference in the world to them. Thank you for this information!!!We all have different learning styles. Understanding how athletes learn and then adapting your teaching methodology to maximize that style generally yields the best results. IMO teaching tumbling effectively means learning to adjust your style. When people minimize this by saying teaching tumbling is easy so it don't matter who teaches it or where you learn it, it truly infuriates me because it shows their true lack and understanding of teaching tumbling.![]()
How long did her longest block last? We are at 4 1/2 months now, and it seems like forever, but I guess in the grand scheme of things, it really isn't that long at all.Learning vs teaching styles is what I suspect contributed to CP's longest block. More to the point, the frustration the coaches showed both verbally and in their body language, in addition with not changing how the world's most expensive BHS was taught were the biggest contributing factors. This is all based on hindsight, so it might be compete hooey, but it sounds right.