This begins with learning how a more active position on the board will allow greater movement options to develop as a rider. Students will start to explore more challenging groomed terrain, develop earlier edging skills and the confidence to ride with more performance. In addition to this, introducing switch riding will help the student to become more versatile, enabling more options as they begin to explore freestyle and freeride skills. As students progress it is important to analyse and adapt the content and pathways to best suit their development and outcomes.
Active Stance & Blending Movements
What, Why, How
This will help with balance and being able to react with movement when riding more challenging groomed terrain.
Active Stance
Example
Blending Movements
Example
Movements & Board Performance
Vertical
Vertical movement through the ankles, knees and hips is used to lower the body a little into a more active stance. It is also the key to blending other movements efficiently in most cases.
Lateral
An active stance requires a little more flexion in the ankles and knees on the toe edge, and the knees and hips on the heel edge. Focus should be placed on the flexing and extending movement used to increase and decrease lateral movement and edging.
Rotational
Small progressive rotation of the whole body, but focused on the leading knee and hip, should be blended with the vertical flex and extension.
Longitudinal
Longitudinal movement in these tasks is minimal. Though time can be spent adapting and exploring how longitudinal and vertical movement blend together through separate tasks like nose and tail manuals, or making turns with more weight towards the nose or tail.
Terrain & Group Management
Hot Tip
Corrective Teaching
Student’s stance is over-flexed at the waist:
Student has difficulty blending movements: