Coaching: The New Buzz Word, but what does it mean?


Within our society we from time to time get buzz words, in government a few years back everything was about ‘community’, in sport it is all ‘Coaching’. The big problem is that one simple word can conjure up a very diverse image of what it actually means, and therefore what a ‘coach’ actually does to be ‘coaching’ someone is a rather grey area.

The Oxford English Dictionary definition: noun. , a trainer or instructor of sport. b, a private tutor. verb. a, to train or teach. b, give hints to; prime with facts. So whilst the dictionary uses the descriptors of teaching, training and instructing at Sport Coach UK they use the definition that, ‘A coach is someone who uses sport as a vehicle for development of individuals, both as performers and as people’ (What is Sports Coaching, Sports Coach UK, 2003).

However this still does very little to help us to understand what the difference is between a coach, teacher or instructor. What many people seem to be doing at the moment is branding the term coaching at anything that refers to helping people improve there performance, which fits within all of our definitions. However with no official coaching qualification it has meant that whilst well-known experience climbers have set themselves up as a ‘Celebrity Climbing Coaches’, other people less well known but arguably as well qualified coaches are unable to compete, despite offering comparable services.

Whilst some are ‘coaches’ are unqualified, it is important to remember that in the UK there is no requirement for official qualifications. The Health and Safety Executive instead say there are four ways to demonstrate competency, which are in house training, official qualification, equivalent qualification or appropriate experience.

What is important whether you are qualified or not as a instructor, coach or teacher is the legal and moral responsibility of your position. The need to be able to justify, if someone was to have an accident under your supervision and was to take you to court, that you were at an appropriate venue on an appropriate route using appropriate equipment, not to mention that you were managing the situation in an appropriate manner. Failure to do so will make it easy for someone to prove your negligence.

Now qualification isn’t a defence against negligence, however it will help you understand your legal and moral duty, as we as be aware of what appropriate practice is. Any accusers will call their own ‘expert witness’ to back their case up. So even the courts won’t recognise the difference between a qualified instructor or self declared coach, what they are interested in is good and appropriate practice that is backed up by a demonstration of the coaches/instructors competence under the HSE recommendations. So qualified or not, a coach or instructor still needs to be offering a service that has some underlying management of the students safety.

What qualification offers at present to students is piece of mind that the individual coaching or instructing has reached a level of ‘competence’ and therefore likely to offer a student a safe and appropriate course. To the coach or instructor they give piece of mind that they are using appropriate techniques, equipment, crags and routes. Where the current qualification fall short is the softer skills of the coaching process.

However in terms of coaching and instructing, my experience is most coaches instruct and most instructors coach, in that they both use good coaching practice even if they have come across by accident. To clarify this statement we need to understand the science of coaching, and that comes from much research into what is referred to as effective coaching.

Now in order for a coach to be effective they need to teach someone as efficiently as possible a new skill, and that skill needs to be what is referred to as robust, in that they can perform it in a variety of situation and more importantly when the coach or instructor isn’t looking over their shoulder, which in climbing can be quite challenging. To achieve this understanding of effective coaching we need to look at what we know about the psychology of learning and skill acquisition.

In order to learn something our brains have to take in various pieces of information, process that information and then store it ready to use again. This process uses three types of memory; short term sensory store (STSS), Short term memory (STM) and long term memory (LTM).

The STSS is where we receive all senses from physical feelings, hearing, vision, taste. There is evidence that has shown our STSS to have a capacity of around 25 to 30 items, but these can only be stored from a few seconds, before they disappear.

In order to cut down on unnecessary information the brain filters what we take in through the STSS and sends the ‘edited highlights’ through to our short term memory. This filtering process is often the reason that different people experience the same situation in different ways. Our STM has been shown to have a capacity of 7+/-2 ‘chunks’ of information and last up to 20 seconds.

That information is then sent to be stored in our LTM, which stores information as procedures, autobiographically and semantically it is this bridge between the long term and short term memory that is important to developing a skill, as whilst the STSS and STM are use to get the initial information, it is the driving of a skill from the LTM to the STM where it is used, and back again that helps create engrams or memories of movement skill.

In order to do this effectively many researchers have looked at a variety of learning paradigms. In these experiments they have shown that there are various underlying principles that help create the optimum learning through what has become know as effective practice. It is a coaches job to ensure that any practice is appropriate for the learning required, and based on the notion that it takes over 150 repetitions of a movement for it to become an ingrained in our muscle memory.

These forms of practice can be:
blocked – repeating an exercise over and over(1,1,1,1,1…….)
series – repeating different exercise in order (1,1,1,1,2,2,2,2,…)
varied – repeating different exercises (1,2,3,4,1,2,3,4….
random – repeating exercises in random order (1,4,2,3,3,1,2,4,1,)
bilateral – repeating the exercise left and right, up and down
augmented – having a rest in between practice
observational – extra information gained through observation

Each of these different forms of practice has pro’s and con’s; some are good for experts others for beginners. Some will create a skill quickly, however that skill won’t necessarily be transferable to a slightly different task. Others will produce a robust skill that will allow an individual to reconstruct and elaborate on the original skill and apply it to a different setting.

So how does a coach ensure that all of this is catered for during a session, well the answer is through experience and a lot of forethought. As well as a series of teaching models that help to ensure that all the necessary bases are covered.
Two of the most common are IDEAS and EDICT, both of which are acronyms. What these teaching models do is cater for the three major learning pathways (Visual, Auditory and Kinaesthetic – VAK for short)

IDEAS – INTRODUCE the skill, DEMONSTRATE the skill, EXPLAIN the skill, Allow the group some ACTION to practice the skill, SUMMARISE after the activity.

EDICT – EXPLAIN the skill, DEMONSTRATE the skill, Allow the group to IMITATE the skill, CORRECT any mistake, let the group TRY again.

Researchers have also investigated how best to apply these components of the model, so when explaining you have to remember the 7+/-2 chunks of information, otherwise you might overload your students. However because we chunk information we can use that to our advantage.

An example of this is belaying where at first, it is a very confusing series of instruction:

take the rope in by pulling down with the left hand and pushing up with the right, then lock the right hand by putting it down by your side, move your left hand down and grab the dead rope, and swap the right hand up to just below the belay plate on the dead rope, and return you left hand to the live rope just in front of your nose.

…this then becomes…

Take in, lock off, hand swap…..

…and then it just becomes belaying.

Other research has looked at how to give good demonstration, how to analyse performance and give appropriate feedback, as well as looking at your own teach/coaching and using reflective practice to constantly develop your own work.

On top of this a coach also needs to understand the physiological and psychological demands of a sport. In climbing there is a common opinion that research in other sports does translate to climbing, which is a bit of a myth. Many sports actually have used climbing based studies to research anxiety-performance problems. Similarly there are a growing number of studies that have looked into the physiological components of rock climbing. There is very little evidence to suggest climbing is a special case.

What is unfortunate at the moment is that the current qualifications all pretty much overlook the majority of this coaching process, they all concentrate on safety and group management rather than teaching/coaching skills. Many of the ‘climbing coaches’ may well have researched and taught themselves some of this coaching science/art but at present there is no official way of gaining recognition for your skills as a coach. At present many people who are coached prefer to be coached by someone who is a high performer themselves.

Whilst the elite coaches have the credentials that they have trained themselves to a high level, there is still no guarantee they can actually transfer that knowledge of how you can improve your performance effectively. Perhaps the best argument against this is that the majority of coaches that train Olympic athlete actually don’t out performs their athletes. Lynford Christies coach didn’t run quicker than him, he just knew how to analyse performance and design an effective coaching strategy.

At the moment British climbing is on the cusp of a revolution in teaching, coaching, instructing or whatever you want to call it. The Mountain Leader Training Boards are all looking towards the creation of a coaching structure, that will run alongside the current qualification, and cover the ‘coaching’ aspect of improving performance whilst the current awards will stay the same to allow the terrain where coaching can take place to be defined (CWA – Indoors, SPA – Outdoors Single Pitch (not lead climbing), MIA – Outdoors Lead Climbing).

It is anticipated that these coaching awards may well include levels 1 to 3 which might be inline with UKCC but might not. The coaching awards will also include coaching navigation and mountaineering skills, as well as traditional climbing skill, and the long term development of an athlete. None of this is linked to the the Olympics in 2012, its just happened that we have jumped on national push to develop a coaching structure that is second to none.

I for one believe that we all have a lot to learn, and that we will never finish that learning. I see new things all the time when i work, sometimes it is my students that show me, others times it is trainee instructors and sometimes it is the people who I consider my mentors. What I think people need to understand is that qualified or not, an instructor, leader or coach will use some of these ‘coaching skills’ however we can all get better at it, and at the end of the day it benefits anyone who wants to be learn and improve. A new qualification in these disciplines can only be of benefit to the thousands of children that are coached over an extended period in many after school clubs, by instructors with little to no understanding of the issues surrounding the long-term athlete development and climbing.

About Mark Reeves

Mark has been an active member of the National Source Group on who examined Coaching in Mountaineering, which made a series of recommendations to the Mountaineering Co-ordination group, who in turn recommended to the training boards many of the recommendations on a possible future for coaching awards, who have since made a commitment to look into the development of coaching awards.

Mark is also nearing the completion of a part-time MSc student studying Applied Sport Science, and has already passed units in effective coaching, performance physiology and sport psychology, and only has a thesis which is researching imagery and rock climbing. If you live in the North Wales Area and would like to be a part of this research and can boulder above V2 he would love to hear from you.

If you take part in the research then you also get a place on a coaching day that will look at mental, physical and technical aspect of climbing performance.

Phew!!! What a day for rescues

Well, I know it has been a bank holiday weekend, and for the most part I have been working however early today I blogged about me sitting around and doing nothing. Enjoying the Lake and watch people climb Comes the Dervish, I have since found out who that was but more of that later.

Just after I blogged about my very relaxing day my pager went off so I head to the Mountain rescue base and quickly walked into Cryn Las to help a walker with a broken ankle, as we waited for the helicopter to lift that casualty another call out came in so I was quickly airlifted to the otherside of the mountain, to help another casualty with a broke ankle. Having packaged them both off the hill a third incident was called in. As I walked back to a land rover at the bottom of the rangers path, I thought my day was over as a all jobs complete came in.

As we passed Llanberis the fourth job came through, and I stayed in the vehicle and headed up the Miners track to the pump house where I waited and manned the radio. Just as that casualty was about to be lifted the fifth incident came in, a suspected heart attack. The helicopter quickly responded and managed to get that casualty to A&E and return to pick up the fourth before getting them to Ysbyty Gwynedd and back to Valley before they ran out of fuel.

A drive back to Nant Peris and the North Wales Police had footed the bill for a meal in the Vaynol Arms. As I walked in Climbing legend Johnny Dawes was there who said he had watch my Amateur Hardcore video and really enjoyed it. He was there with the Hot Aches crew, and a yank called Matt Segal, who tore the grit a part a few months back. Matt had been the person I had watched drift up the Dervish. He then went onto climb Gin Palace.

If that wasn’t enough, I also heard that Ryan Pasquill (sorry if I spelt that wrong) had onsighted The Medium and Window of Perception on the seamstress slab a couple of days early. That is a fantastic effort, and really good to see a couple of visiting climbers going for it in the sleepy back water that is North Wales. Well done boys!

I wonder how long they are over here for and what else they have on the cards!

The main point is my day wasn’t very relaxing!

Quickdraw: This could save your live

There was an accident recently, and having spoken to the rescue team that were present at the scene, there was a question as to the cause of the accident, as it appear that the quickdraw had failed yet hadn’t. It reminded me of a problem that I had been shown a few years ago, when many climbers used elastic band to ‘retain’ the carabiner that clips into the rope. I still use this technique however this is a word of caution, and perhaps the reason for the recent accident.

What I would like to emphasis that this was just an accident, no one was to blame, however passing on this knowledge seems like a responsible thing to do, because even if it helps saves one person it seems better than waiting for it to happen again.

A quickdraw with a band to retain the carabiner that clips into the rope when climbing.

Now imagine that when in your bag it gets twisted up and the tape accidentally gets clipped into that retained carabiner.

You take the quickdraw out of your bag and straighten it up and it looks fine.

However, from the other side, the quickdraw isn’t fine!

All that is keeping the carabiner in place is an elastic band, so if you weight the quickdraw, then instantly it fails.

Most modern quickdraws are stitched through now so this can’t happen, however if like myself you like open loop quickdraws, and use elastic carabiners, just remember to check them a little more thoroughly, and take note of how they look when the they have messed themselves up.

Its a Ducks Life

Well having a day off, I thought I’d try and enjoy it as it was intended to laze around and do not very much, so I had a lie in and went for a stroll along the side of Llyn Padarn in the sun. Unlike the the weekend the bank holiday Monday always seems quiet, the ice cream shop is virtually bare, there is nothing left on the shelves of Spar.

Its like the morning after a wild party, all that is left is the Detritus of a good weekend, and a hangover. Even the ducks seemed to reflect the way Llanberis operates, filling up on the tourists over the busy weekend, and today they are tired of all that eating and won’t even come to shore to take on anymore bread.

As the ducks weren’t taking anymore bread, I watched a lone figure make shapes on the Dervish, each pose getting them higher and higher.

Nothing quite like a day off, and doing nothing, after all I have another 7 days work to do from tomorrow!

Worshipping in Snowdonia’s Catherdral

ere are a selection of photos from my day worshipping in Snowdonia’s mind blowing mountain cathedral. Whilst others will have celebrated the resurrection in church I celebrated the easter bunny on the side of Snowdon, it was a proper bun fight up there! However it was a beautiful day as these images show, the plant os the rare alpine Purple Saxifrage.









H

Bank Holiday Madness


Well I have been working today, I taught four people the art of scrambling today, and we will continue tomorrow, as well. We started up the North Ridge of Tryfan, which wasn’t as bigger bun fight as Snowdon, as Pen Y Pass car park and the cromlech boulders were full at 8am this morning as I went to work. The police had a field day ticketing cars on the clearway that run down the pass. I always thought it was a really nice way for the police to say, welcome to snowdonia now f@*! off and don’t come back.

The photo was email to me direct from an IPhone on the hill, and is one of my group this weekend. I might get me a swanky phone one day, however i loose enough of my life blogging, so the thought of tweeting as well is just too much!

No sooner had I got home after work and I was back up the Snowdon on a rescue, at least it wasn’t as horrible as the call out early in the day. I will blog on the that, as there is one thing that is important for climbers to learn from what was a tragic accident, but I need a video to demonstrate. Anyway got off the hill at 9pm, a quick BBQ round a friends and now i am off to bed to get ready for the hill tomorrow.

Snuff Box

Well I am sure that many people out there will have heard about Snuff Box, so much so that I am probably a late arrival to the supporter of this dark and disturbingly surreal comedy show. It feature some of the supporting actors from the cult show The Mighty Boosh, as such it kind of fits into the same real/unreal zany comedy. If you liked the Mighty Boosh then Snuff Box will wet your cockles.

As you might guess by its name it has a rather sinister side that only the truly disturbed will actually find funny, most people will probably find that it crosses a few too many lines. Personally I loved every minute of it, I insisted that we watch 3 episodes back to back last night, when I was at a friends house warming. I was delighted when i realised that my friends have a dark and twisted sense of humour as well as me.

Whilst Snuff Box doesn’t have Noel Fielding or Julian Barratt who made there name with the Mighty Boosh, instead we have Rich Fulcher and Matt Berry, one a fine arts graduate the other a lawyer from chicago. Who meet up and wrote and starred in their very own sit-com with a difference. The pair play hangmen by day and sit in a posh gentlemen club at night, what occurs in between is sheer geniuos. I have attach the ‘boyfriend’ sketch that occurs during every episode to one extent or another.

Anyway get onto amazon and buy a copy, it was so controversial that it was only shown once on BBC3 in 2006, and then only after 11pm due to the content.

Random American Historic Climbing Videos

I found these random American historic climbing videos after someone posted it up on UKC, you really need to visit this guy ephartouni profile, as he has loads of great historical american climbing footage. I also recommend the video below about John Bachar being on the American TV Show – That’s Incredible, and soloing some pretty stout routes in Joshua Tree.

Belay Bunny 2: My Photos

A small selection of my photos from a day out with Pete Robins and Ian Parnell, taking photos for CLIMB magazine Stomping Grounds, in which Pete highlights some great pieces of Slate esoterica. Ian has some more photos of me and a brief description of his side of the story over on his blog, ian parnell photography. 
Anyway the photos Ian has of the quarryman groove are awesome, I am sure your see these iconic images in print in the next month or two. I literally can’t wait! 

Pete Robins uncharacteristically seconding me on Pitch 2 of Released From Treatment – Rainbow Slab E6 6b.

Rock over left, rock over right, the way of the rainbow

Pete on Released…


Pete psyching himself up for  the traverse of Release from treatment.

Pete hanging around throwing shapes for the camera on the quarryman grove.



The rather exposed take off point for the abseil into the groove pitch of the quarry man.


Ian parnell – The way of the photographer, loaded up with ropes and cameras, still good alpine training for those legs! He was the most ready for the shale approach after numerous Himalayan and Devonian shale fests.

Belay Bunny

Mark Reeves on one of the moves he actually managed! Photo courtesy of Oli Barker.

I can’t remember the time last night, but i got a call from Pete Robins it went something like this:

‘Hi mark, do you want to go climbing tomorrow?’
‘Yeah Pete I was meant to do some school work, but what the hell?’
‘Cooool! There is a bit of an agenda though?
‘OK, whats on it?’
‘Well I need to get some pictures on a couple of routes…’
‘…and those couple of routes are?’
‘The Quarryman Groove and Released from treatment’
‘Shit, OK Pete I’ll come and belay you’

So with that I committed myself to some extreme belaying, as getting to the based of the quarryman groove is a little bit well, adventurous when it comes to abseil approaches. Although secretly I had a desire to attempt to top rope this historic pitch. For those of you born to recently who haven’t seen Johnny Dawes walk up this groove then you ain’t lived. See Pete throwing shapes for Ian Parnell, made it look pretty straight forward, in that you just back and footed like your wrestling a bear and then got into a few contortion that made it look like the bear was winning the fight before you unwrap yourself and swarm up the jug to glory!

So when Pete has finished his turn at the limelight, and boy you need to get the next copy of CLIMB magazine as these pictures are going to be phenomenal, I have wanted to take pictures of this pitch for ages, and have a fisheye that i thought would look mad as look out the groove, and down. By all accounts Ian had the same idea, as well as some other angles.

Anyway I was dead nervous stood at the bottom, probably because I knew that this single pitch was probably one of the most full on, insane and unorthodox pitches in the quarries if not the UK. As I layback up the bottom of the groove I felt good, and my progress seemed to at least be upwards. Then I had to commit to flicking into the groove, which was well unsuccessful, but we had to get another route done, so there was no hanging about. The next section is back and footing, but your left hand pinches the arete to get some extra purchase, before the arete disappears and you are left with a wall so smooth you can see your own grimace in it, and in my case that ain’t no pretty sight.

Mark Reeves making the crux shape, but essential failing to execute it. Photo courtesy of Oli Barker

I manage to make a couple of shape that were reminiscent of Johnny in the video, as well as a few sounds that were reminiscent of someone become burgled from behind (see Whitnail & I for reference). I had to stand on every bolt to rest as well as hang on the rope to rest, and both holds in the groove to rest. In fact I have only ever come that close to having a heart attack once in my life and that was tackling the top 8 ft of Winking Crack at Gogarth. I flopped onto the ledge like a fish that had lost the fight against the angler. Pete suggested I rest whilst he jumar out, I said ‘uuuuhhhhh!’.

Anyway the second route was one that I had been on a long time ago, it had become a thing, as I tried to make it out across the traverse of the first pitch. I took a couple of 40-50ft pendulums, and to a certain extent saw it as a rite of passage for a Rainbow Walker. Today though we wanted pictures of the second pitch, so rather than follow Pete I suggested that I give it a bash, I had after all only narrowly failed on the recalcitrance a few weeks back, and besides it is high enough not to be hitting the ground.

SO before I knew I had strapped myself in and arrange a few wires at the start of the traverse, and launched out across the immaculate purple swave of rock. Pete reckoned it to be E5 6b this pitch, sop I was surprised that I made it across with relative, ease, in fact I whooped with joy when I swung down onto the jug, to hold the crux. I was actually enjoying this pitch. Stepping on I felt my confidence grow, it felt like climbing had done years ago, when I was chasing the endless dream of self improvement, but this time I was just doing a route because to follow Pete again would be boring, and of course Ian was snapping away at me climbing. (the Narcissist in me just loves the attention).

Anyway, I can recommend the the 2nd pitch of Release from Treatment, with the top out up the finish of Cystitis by Proxy, as a very pleasant 2nd pitch to Poetry Pink, Pete was right it is about E5 6b, but reasonable 6b. Anyway, for a day that was meant to be all belaying, i had a great time and kicked my arse into gear by scampering up a reasonably hard route on the hallowed arch of the Rainbow. I must return to climb the recalcitrance.

POSTSCRIPT: I saw the photos late last night after going round to a friends house warming party, I was too messy to type, but the photos are amazing that Ian took of me I don’t want to display any of his work here because it is his, however he did blog it over on his site. Ianparnellphotography.

The other photos are by a Centre Assistant Oli Barker, he was out climbing on the combat rock area of the quarries with a few of the other Brenin CA’s. A big thanks to him