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5 Traits Of A Good Golf Instructor With the increasingly popularity of golf, the demand to fill related careers is also on the rise. Many amateur golfers turn to a instructor to help them develop their techniques, so teaching is a viable career choice for many enthusiasts. Teaching isn’t for everyone, though. See if you have what it takes to make your living as a instructor.
You know everything (or almost everything) there is to know about golf. You have to know a subject extremely well if you are going to be able to teach it. Although you may be counting on having only beginning students whose knowledge of the sport is next to nil, you will most likely have intermediate and advanced students too, and they will look to you to help them hone their skills. Before you pursue a career as a instructor, ask yourself honestly if you have enough expertise on the sport to assume the role of an expert.
You’ve played golf, taught golf, and/or worked in other areas of the industry. Part of knowing is playing it regularly. If you don’t play regularly, you probably don’t have what it takes to teach the sport. Also, it is very helpful if you have previously taught or worked in the industry. If you have, you are more likely to know a lot about it. Remember, as a instructor you are sending the message that you are an expert on the sport, so make sure you know your before you take the job.
You know the techniques and theories of teaching. Simply knowing a lot about a subject does not mean you will be a competent teacher. If you don’t believe this, think back on how many teachers you had in school that were really knowledgeable, but still failed to inspire their students. In order to be an effective instructor, you must understand basic teaching techniques. After all, you will need to be able to communicate with students of every skill
level, from the most bumbling beginners to the most assured intermediate and advanced students.
Your supply of patience runs exceptionally deep. Patience ought to be a prerequisite for any teaching job. Any time you are trying to teach knowledge or skills to someone who has next to no clue what they are doing, you are bound to run into a multitude of frustrations. A instructor who does not have a deep well of patience is likely to feel overwhelmed by stress and frustration every time he or she has a lesson with a truly clueless golfer.
You truly love the game of golf. You would think that a true appreciation for the game of would be a given for anyone looking for a job as a instructor, but that isn’t always the case. Other features of the job may attract prospective instructors: the flexibility of the hours and scheduling, a laid-back work atmosphere, or the nontraditional aspect of the job. However, if you don’t feel passionately about the sport you intend to teach, you will not last very long. A good instructor needs to be able to eat, drink, and breathe without getting sick of it.
Being a instructor may sound like an easy, fun job, but it takes a special kind of person to fill those shoes. A successful instructor needs to have not just one or a few of these characteristics, but all of them. Knowledge, experience, skill, patience, and passion are all necessary ingredients in the formation of an expert. Andy West is a freelance writer for SDGA. San Diego Academy is a premier school with five locations across the United States. For more information on becoming a golf instructor, please visit www.sdgagolf.com .
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