Angling Trust's The Coaching Angle Issue 10 | Page 8

INSPIRE GOOD BEHAVIOUR THE CONDUCT OF YOUR PARTICIPANTS CAN MAKE OR BREAK A SESSION. WITH ALL THAT AT STAKE, IAN SLATTERY FINDS ANSWERS TO THE QUESTION OF BAD BEHAVIOUR. W e all like to think that when a coaching session goes wrong, it’s out of our hands. “She just turned up not willing to try.” “Every time I had my back turned they’d be messing around. They were impossible!” The truth is, nobody can affect people’s behaviour on any given day more than the coach. That’s you. You can’t change the people and personalities that are there, but with the right plan in place you can get the best out of everyone, and make it fun while you’re at it. Nicky Fuller is someone who is experienced in behaviour management, working freelance for a number of governing bodies of sport, and for her, nothing can compensate for a well-planned, correctly structured session. “It’s down to the coach to create the correct environment, not down to the participants to change themselves. Maybe the session is boring, it’s too slow to move forward, the coach is talking too much – these are all things that can be improved by the coach acknowledging them and altering the structure of the session,” Nicky says. “Even when a coach is saying ‘I sent them away with tasks to work on, and they’re just not doing it’, that’ll be because they’ve not got sufficient buy-in from the participant. Why is that? Look at it, analyse it. Then ask what you, as the coach, can do better. It can be the language you use, the way you set sessions up – there are lots of elements to it and it’s not easy, it’s not simple, but it all comes back to good coaching, to having sound ground rules in place. “You will get better at it all as you become a more experienced coach, but while you’re getting that experience work on the strategy: how you will manage behaviour and understand the things that create unwanted behaviours. 8 “There’s basics like turning up on time, being well-prepared, well-rehearsed about what you need to say in the transitions. Plan to the right level, make sure the plan stretches the most able and can be modified for those that aren’t progressing that quickly. If a coach understood all that, understood those key things, then the next step would be to have a mentor, someone who can work with you on those strategies. “I’m a firm believer that a fence at the top of the cliff is better than an ambulance at the bottom. For coaches starting out, you may not even want to look at how you discipline a group, it’s more important that you get the basics absolutely right: make sure that when you speak the group have stopped what they’re doing and are listening, and likewise when one of the group speaks everyone stops and listens to them, so you’re building a two-way respect.” With coaches increasingly working in more informal settings, with participants who are there on a casual basis, the nature of the sessions change, as do the rules. You wouldn’t want your top angler gossiping throughout every session, but in a pensioner’s walking group that’d be actively encouraged. “Even now, with coaches often working with people outside of a formal sports setting, just on a purely physical activity level, it all boils down to understanding your participants,” Nicky explains. “What are their motivations? Are they there for the social? To unwind? Do they have goals? There are many, many reasons and I think it’s critical for a coach to understand that. It’s impossible to get your session plan right unless you know the motives.” And without the right plan in place, you’re set up for an hour of stress, frustration and very little sport; from which, no one is a winner. Where next? UK Coaching run an eLearning module on inspiring positive behaviour, available at: goo.gl/AvbPAK