Sports Thoughts
By Wayne Goldsmith Three important messages: * Coaches can get information anywhere - your job is to create an experience they can’t get online. * The way most coaching courses are run actively works against learning. * Anything that can be made practical should be made practical. This one is for the coach developers and coach educators - those of you running coaching courses, workshops, seminars and programs. You’re some of my favourite people in all of sport, because you’re out there coaching coaches to coach. So I want to throw a few things at you that I think will make your sessions more engaging, more interesting and far better at actually helping coaches learn. These are lessons I’ve learned delivering a lot of coaching courses over a long, long time. Most of them are traps I’ve fallen into myself. Let’s go. Drop the “let’s go around the room”: When you get the coaches into the room, don’t waste time going around the group asking everyone to stand up, say who they are, what club they’re from and why they’re here. We’ve all done those icebreakers. Trust me, they don’t work. The only person paying attention to whoever’s speaking is the next person in line - because they’re rehearsing their own turn. Everyone else is on their phone, or thinking about dinner. Nobody’s listening. It’s 20 or 30 minutes gone that you could have spent actually learning. Dump it. Watch groups becoming groups: When you break coaches into small groups, be careful. Groups become groups. They turn into their own little insular entities that stop sharing with the wider room. And here’s what typically happens at each table. The senior coach - (or the one who believes they’ve had the most success) - takes over, and the group becomes whatever that person thinks. Then they look around and, all too often, turn to a female participant and say, “You can take the notes.” Guys, that has to stop. We’re all in that room as coaches. Not “genderfied”, as my daughter would say. Just coaches, learning together. Here’s how I get around it. Whoever takes the notes - doesn’t matter who - after about ten minutes I say, “Everyone taking notes, stand up and move to another group.” Suddenly you’ve got a learning collective, not a room full of isolated little islands. Don’t make groups present back: When the groups have finished their work, don’t waste time asking each one to stand up in turn and present what they came up with. Same problem as the icebreaker. If there are ten groups, the moment one stands up to present, the other nine are asleep, on their phones or off getting a coffee. They only care about what their own group came up with. The whole point is a learning collaboration - where everyone shares ideas and information. Group-by-group presentations are the opposite of that. Cut your PowerPoint in half: PowerPoint can be useful. But next time you prepare a coaching course, look at your slide deck and cut it in half. If you’ve got 30 slides, you need 15. Trust me - you are presenting far more in slideshow format than any coach can absorb or wants to. And if it’s a big day with eight or ten sessions and everyone’s using PowerPoint, one deck after another? It’s dull, it’s boring, and nobody’s listening. Coaches can get just about any information they want, anytime, anywhere, online, for free. Don’t bore them to death with slide after slide and then wonder why they’ve disengaged. No more than 30 words a slide: If you are going to use slides, here’s the golden rule. No more than 30 words per slide. Ideally fewer. Paired with a great photo, a great illustration or a clear diagram. And mix it up. Sometimes a little PowerPoint. Sometimes none. Sometimes groups, sometimes one-on-ones, sometimes something written up on the board. Variety keeps people awake and engaged. The worst possible coaching course is one person standing still, delivering ten sessions of slides in a row. If it can be made practical, make it practical: This is the big one. Anything that can be made practical, make it practical. If it’s a skill-based topic, get the coaches doing it - coaching each other, learning from each other, sharing ideas. Anything you can lift off a slide and turn into an activity, do it. Get them up, moving around the room, talking to each other. Because we are doers. Coaches aren’t just talkers and thinkers - we’re doers. And the more a coach gets to do on your course, the more confident they’ll be when they walk out and coach for real. Summary: To all of you running coaching courses - I love you. You’re my brothers and sisters, my colleagues, because I love coaching coaches above almost anything else. But we’ve all fallen for the traps. So, quickly: Forget the go-around-the-room introductions. Nobody cares. Watch groups becoming groups - and never let the loudest coach take over or delegate the notes to a young or female participant. It has to stop. Don’t make groups present back to each other. It’s dull and nobody listens. Cut your PowerPoint by 50%. No more than 30 words a slide, ideally fewer, with a great image. And above all - anything that can be made practical, make it practical. The more your coaches do, the more they learn, and the better they’ll be for the athletes waiting for them back home. Three Practical Applications For Your Next Course: * Redesign your opening ten minutes. Cut the icebreaker and replace it with a genuine learning activity from minute one. Set the tone that this is a room where you do, not a room where you sit and wait your turn. * Take a red pen to your slide deck. Before your next course, halve the slides and cap every remaining one at 30 words plus an image. If a slide can become an activity instead, make the swap. * Build in movement and mixing. Plan at least one moment where people physically move - swap groups, pair up, get on their feet. A course where coaches move and do is a course they remember. Want to make your next coaching course genuinely engaging, memorable and effective? I work with federations, associations and clubs to design and deliver coach education that coaches actually turn up for - and I train the trainers, so your people can do it too. If you’d like help making your next course, workshop or program one your coaches never forget, let’s talk. Wayne Goldsmithwayne@moregold.com.au [wayne@moregold.com.au]WhatsApp +61 414 712 074 Thanks for reading, listening and watching. Wayne This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit waynegoldsmith.substack.com/subscribe [https://waynegoldsmith.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]
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