"You can't teach an old dog
new tricks". With many of us now coaching older adults who either want to
learn new skills, or in one case I'm about to start, to revisit long abandoned
ones. Research is clear, getting older is no reason not to learn 'new tricks'. We all know it takes a bit longer. There's a couple important ideas, however, that apply not just to older athletes but to coaches of elite athletes. First,
anything that has been learned can be unlearned. That's a combination of good
teaching and the athlete's desire to get better. Second, it's a judgement call for coaches whether the benefits of a skill done better outweigh the costs of doing so.
Many fine athletes defy all the 'rules' of how a skill
(closed or open) should be executed: famously, PGA golfer, Jim Furyk. Many world champions have become champions despite their poor form but
with a will to win that overcomes other deficiencies. So that's a coaching
judgement call - your ability to assess the critical or root
cause fault rather than the symptom.
Now
to those older athletes. Research shows that when older (50+) athletes) get
positive feedback (knowledge of results or KR) after a series of good vs poor
trials. They seem to learn better. So no surprise there .... because that's what
research tells us about young learners! In other words, good teaching counts
whoever you are coaching. My experience tells me the way young athletes
learn in class room (or in some cases struggle to learn) turns up in sports
practice. Long term, bad teaching/learning experiences stay with us for years. Older athletes
need plenty of reassurance that they can learn ("You're not at school any more!") - it just might take a few more
trials and a few more breakdown drills. Example of that research? Clark and
co-workers (2016) in a big sample in 2016 found that: "Our study
demonstrated that motor learning in older adults benefited from KR as well.
Although the 65year-olds in our study tended to be generally less proficient
relative to the 21-year-olds in Chiviacowsky and Wulfs (2007) study, the group
who was provided KR after good trials demonstrated more effective retention
performance than the group who received KR after poor trials." Hmm, time to review how I'm coaching again.😔
(photo source: National Geographic Channel)
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