Welcome to the Newschoolers forums! You may read the forums as a guest, however you must be a registered member to post. Register to become a member today!
Sorry boy but you're wrong, at 6 a kid doesn't care at all to learn technique, even the snow plow he'll have difficulties to associate the skiing position with the name you giving it. ASK ANY older instructor, the Basic Athletic Stance, is learn the sooner as possible, get the hand on the knee is going to be fine at their age. BAS is the most important thing to get on, so play game to associate the feeling, like jumping like bunnies, starting from the BAS, you can do like catching snow in the air (jumping) and clap on their knees when they caught some (BAS).
as you working from 4-7 years old kids, a nice game is the snake, get em all on their skis, stack em together as a snake, with their hand on the hips of each kid (BAS) the first got is hand on is knee (or your hand for the first class so you can control the speed)
ALWAYS, ALWAYS, REMEMBER TO ALWAYS have a flat surface to get em STOP, from the flat, walk about 7-8 meter higher (lil slope) so they get enough speed to UNDERSTAND they gotta keep standing in BAS and that the ski doesn't keep em up without working.
Ski instructor is maybe one of the best job you can have, seeing the improvement of each kid at the end of the season is so much a great feeling
you've said you're not expecting to get on lift before the end of the season, if you got a SMALL LIFT, like 200m alt. between the bottom and the top of the chairlift, you should get there bye the week 5-6 (that's what we're use to in my home resort, with teddy'S level (2nd out of 5 / 4-6years old kid lvl)
give the kids evaluation to the parents at the end of the day, because itll help you with tips, i can get 50 a day on a good day sometimes more but usually 25 a day, prob cause ive been around our program for like 6 years, and have kids who like me.
really depends on what the atmosphere is at the place you teach.
The last couple winters I have worked at 2 ski hills, Beaver Valley and Chicopee. Being a private club Beaver Valley is very family oriented, and for the most part everyone is pretty relaxed. You either get a member or a guest for a lesson. When it is a member you are most likely doing a babysitting job. Most often with a young kid the parents want some time to ski on their own, so they pay for the kids to be put in a lesson for an hour. Yes, you should teach them some things, but keep it fun and play games. With guests its a little different, as their parents may actually want them to progress, seeing as it is maybe their once a year ski vacation.
At chicopee the atmosphere is totally different. The parents are usually not skiers/riders themselves, and so many of them expect their child to be a champ after 2 hours of skiing. So here you have to still have fun and play games, but make sure that the parent knows that he kid has learned something. Easiest way to do this is before your last run talk to the kid and go voer what you have worked on. When you get to the bottom the parent (if they are a good one) will be waiting there. Ask the kid what you worked on and get them to repeat a thing or two in front of the parent. Chances are the kid will forget what they did by the time they get home and their parents ask them what they learned. Think back to when your parents used to ask you what you learned in school that day, most often you didnt really remember/care.
All of this comes with experience. Eventually you will be able to read the situation and learn to read the parent before taking the kid out for a lesson. Although it may seem stupid, at a young age your real customer is the parent. As long as you keep things fun the kid is guranteed to have a good time, but the parent may not see this as worth their money, so if you want return customers you have to make the parent believe that these lessons are good for their child.
A little late but hope that helps! Also, if your snow school offers sessions, attend them. Not only will this help with your skiing but also will greatly improve your teaching.