Poi Fire Dancing Spinning Performance & Twirling (Hoop Staff Fans Also)

Finding Freedom Through Flow

What Makes a Teacher Credible?

Let’s face it — if you want to get repeat business with students you need some degree of believability. Marketing, testimonials and referrals certainly help get people through the door though a bigger factor in retaining students who want to study with you ongoingly is credibility. So, what makes an instructor credible?

First and probably most obvious is the ability to demonstrate the move/pattern/sequence you’re teaching. Though, I am also quite sure there are some things I can teach which I can not actually demonstrate (only because I have actually done this), being able to do the movement (to some degree) certainly helps.

The ability to demonstrate the movement ought not be confused with the ability to speak a step-by-step description — including hand, tool and body movements/positions — to the students. I won’t repeat everything I wrote in this blog entry distinguishing the different skills of technicians and teachers, but I will reiterate the premise: just because you can do a move doesn’t mean you can teach it step-by-step to someone else who can’t pick it up from a demonstration. This, for me, is often the crux of teacher credibility. I remember the first time I saw Zan break something down at FireDrums several years backĀ  I was really impressed because he did so much more than demonstrate it (which is what I had seen most of the time I was at the gathering) and actually explained the steps. In that moment, he was more than just another amazing performer and I hope more artists develop this skill so we can raise the overall quality of instruction in the industry.

Equally important to being able to speak directions is the ability to write the instructions down in a reproducible way so people can refer back to it — potentially with diagrams, tables and charts to aid in learning and expand on the basic movement to the theories it represents.

And then there is feedback. Being able to give the students feedback on what they are doing — both in terms of what they are doing the same as and differently from what you are teaching — is critical to instructor credibility. A video is a cool learning tool, and, when you’re in a classroom, if you don’t get direct feedback on what to change in order to better accomplish the desired goal one of the biggest motivations to take in person instruction disappears.

Now a lot of this points to learning a specific movement. If you’re instructor is teaching in a more theoretical way, I say the same thing applies in that a credible instructor will be able to distinguish their theory, then demonstrate a specific (probably several) example of the use of the theory with the ability to then break down that particular example(s) in detail. To be sure, I believe the best education will touch on both the specific and the theoretical so one can work in both the applied and abstract dimensions to improve their skills.

I share this as part of an ongoing series of articles to assist instructors in developing more skill and credibility as well as aiding students in developing criteria designed to pursue the highest quality, best value instruction available for them.

In flow,
GlitterGirl

2 Comments so far

  1. Marilyn Besasie February 9th, 2010 6:32 am

    Just last night I was instructing a class on a new move and I had to break it down for them in as many possible ways as I could figure out, demonstrating, speaking, musically, anything I could think of. I used every technique I learned in your certification course, and it all worked. Thank goodness YOU broke TEACHING down for me!

  2. PoiPriestess February 9th, 2010 7:07 am

    so glad its working for you! way to work the learning modalities! :)

Leave a reply