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Winning Flag Football

Learning Strategies in Coaching

6/27/2012

2 Comments

 
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Children, adolescents, and adults all learn in different ways.

While everyone has the same fundamental learning receptors, not everyone processes that information the same way.

Instructional design is my profession, and I've had a lot of success in applying my professional knowledge to my hobby of coaching football.  Here's a tip for any coach on applying the basic modes of learning to practices.

Basic Modes of Learning
Tactile
– Touching, hands-on learning (ex., holding/catching a football, turning pages in a playbook)

Visual – Seeing an activity performed (watching the proper technique, looking at a play from the playbook)

Auditory – Hearing about an activity (listening to a coach describe the technique, hearing the plays called out)

Kinesthetic – Engaging in full-body activity (running a route, pursuing the ballcarrier)

Olfactory – Sense of smell (doesn’t typically apply to football).

Some learners prefer to see information rather than hear about it. Some prefer hands-on learning while others want it modeled for them before trying it. To improve the effectiveness of your drills or activities, try to combine as many learning modes as possible into the event.  In that way, your chances are higher that your instruction will address the topic in a way that meaningfully engages each learner.

For instance, what would happen if you tried to teach players how to run a specific route using only your voice? While you might be able to describe a route with great precision, only those players who prefer to learn that way will successfully retain the knowledge.  The rest will be scratching their heads.

Coaching on a practice field naturally lends itself to engaging the player (learner) in multiple ways.  Players get to hear the route described (auditory), see the route drawn out on paper (visual) or draw it out themselves in the dirt (tactile), see the route performed by an expert (visual), then finally attempt to perform the route themselves (kinesthetic).

By employing as many of these learning modes as possible, you can improve the speed at which players learn and boost the chances of long-term retention.

What kind of drills work best for your team? Share your thoughts in the comments box or via Twitter @MyCoachArt, or on Facebook on the "Winning Flag Football" page.
2 Comments

Welcome to "Coach Art's BlogBook"!

6/24/2012

1 Comment

 
Fundamentally, flag football is a hobby.  We all know this.  And in the eyes of some, it might seem...well... childish or foolish to spend a lot of time discussing, adjusting, correcting, and perfecting your approach to flag football.

But I say anything you're passionate about, however marginal, should be done exceptionally well.  And I hope you feel the same way.

I have been passionate about football since age 6.  I taught myself a better throwing motion by researching it in books (age 7).  I wrote my first story about football with me as the coach, not the player (age 8).  And I know this sounds ridiculous, but I taught myself how to throw a football with my left arm in case I lost my dominant right arm in some freak accident (age 12).  The moral?  I must have had too much idle time as a kid.

Regardless, as a man in his late 30's, I can say that I derive endless joy from the strategic cat and mouse of well-executed football.  When I coach, I push my teams to perform like real professionals would - pay attention to details, know your assignments, understand why your route (which will never get thrown the ball on this play) is absolutely essential to the spacing of the defenders so that your teammate can get open.

Perhaps the biggest mistake in flag football is not having a strategy at all.  Some teams are so loaded with talent, they can call almost anything and it will work.  But when that talent comes up against a superior strategy, it's a coin flip whether the superstar will save the day.  An entire team's fate rests on the individual making an outstanding play, which is a lot like gambling to me.

I hope this effort - "Winning Flag Football" - is a collaboration among many different coaches, players, and fans of flag football.  There are a lot of ways to win.  I'll present my favorites and the strategies and tactics that have worked for me.  I hope you'll take the time to share with us all how you prefer to win.
1 Comment

    "Coach Art"

    Started coaching in New Orleans in 1992.  Won 3 flag city championships in 5 years.  Master strategist. Here to help you win! 

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