The order of the following exercises or activities may change relative to the available terrain and snow conditions, and your students’ physical ability, age and fitness. All of these activities may not be needed in every lesson so make sensible decisions to maximise the student’s learning time.
Skating, Gliding, Climbing
What, Why, How
This is to get around on-snow with one foot strapped in and to get to and from the different types of lifts.
Skating
Gliding
Example
Climbing
Movements & Board Performance
Lateral & Vertical with Edging
Small amounts of vertical and lateral movement will be required to keep your COM centred and in balance. This comes in the form of constant adjustments in and out of balance, as the student develops the skills to remain upright. These movements keep the board flat when skating and gliding and allow the edge angle to increase to grip the snow when climbing.
Longitudinal
Longitudinal movement in these tasks is minimal. The COM will move no further fore than the front binding and no further aft than the back binding; however, some weight will change from foot-to-foot as your student skates.
Rotational
Rotation is only necessary when the students pick their snowboards up to turn around. Movement will revolve around the vertical axis of the front leg.
Terrain & Group Management
Example
Corrective Teaching
Student’s snowboard not sliding in intended direction when skating:
Student makes erratic and jerky movements: