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Golf Swing ImprovementRapid skill development with Old Way New Way® Learning |
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Golf Swing ImprovementRapid skill development with Old Way New Way® Learning |
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Image from our golf swing correction video for players and coaches.
Recipient of European Athletics Association Science Award for coaching excellence.
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This page announces that our published Old Way New Way® sports coaching research study on technique correction with Olympic athletes won second prize in the 4th European Athletics Association Coaching Science Awards, out of a record entry of 28 projects from 13 European countries.
A published Old Way New Way® sports coaching research study on technique correction with Olympic athletes won second prize in the 4th European Athletics Association Science Awards, out of a record entry of 28 projects from 13 European countries.
The winning project RAPID TECHNIQUE CORRECTION USING Old Way New Way®: TWO CASE STUDIES WITH OLYMPIC ATHLETES by Y. L. Hanin, T. Korjus, P. Jouste and P. Baxter was selected by a Jury chaired by EAA Vice President Agoston Schulek. The other members of the Jury were Dr Peter Tschiene (GER), Dr Jitka Vinduková (CZE) and Mr Peter Thompson (GBR).
According to the Jury, "This project has a high applicability and clear implications to the coaching of techniques and to coach education."
The Jury's selection criteria were:
The EAA Science Awards were initiated in 1998 and are given every second year.
This study examined the effectiveness of Old Way New Way®, an innovative meta-cognitive learning strategy initially developed in education settings, in the rapid and permanent correction of established technique difficulties experienced by two Olympic athletes in javelin and sprinting.
Individualized interventions included video-assisted error analysis, step-wise enhancement of kinesthetic awareness, re-activation of the error memory, discrimination and generalization of the correct movement pattern.
Self-reports, coach's ratings and video recordings were used as measures of technique improvement.
A single learning trial produced immediate and permanent technique improvement (80% or higher correct action) and full transfer of learning, without the need for the customary adaptation period.
Findings are consistent with the performance enhancement effects of Old Way New Way® demonstrated experimentally in non-sport settings.
The European Athletic Association (EAA), is one of the six Continental
groups of the International Amateur Athletic Federation (IAAF), a European
non-governmental non-profit organisation of unlimited duration in the
form of a constituent area association of the IAAF registered in Switzerland
(since 1 January 2004, before Germany).
The domicile of the EAA is located in Lausanne/Switzerland.
The objectives of the EAA are:
-- To maintain and develop friendly and loyal co-operation between all
the Members for the benefit of athletics, peace and understanding in
Europe.
-- To direct all technical, administrative and financial matters of
the European region in conformity with the rules of the IAAF and with
any special agreement to this aim which may be concluded between the
IAAF and the EAA.
-- To promote ethical values in sport and fight against all forms of
doping as well as racial, religious, political or other kind of discrimination
in athletics.
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For background information on the Old Way New Way® Learning method, please visit our home page.
Old Way New Way Learning improves your golf swing. Golf Australia, June 2006. "10 Steps to Kicking Your Bad Habit". Reproduced here in part, with permission.
Golf coaches and players try to get it right the first time but invariably end up spending a lot of time trying to correct technique faults and bad habits that somehow develop.
Once established, habit pattern errors like technique faults are hard to correct and can make a player uncompetitive and can lead to a career-threatening performance slump.
The typical advice to practice skill drills and train hard is usually not very effective. The player may appear to improve during training but repeatedly falls back to old ways under pressure of competition.
Transfer of training from skills coaching sessions and practice drills to competition is consequently poor.
Transition training, required when the player has to change over to a new code, new equipment, new techniques or new rules, presents similar adjustment difficulties. Old habits die hard.
Fortunately, a coaching science discovery called Old Way New Way® Learning offers:
(1) a new perspective on the transfer of training problem in golf.
(2) a fast and practical method of golf skill development.
(3) a cost-effective and user-friendly method for rapid golf skill and technique correction and habit eradication.
This page announces that our published Old Way New Way® sports coaching research study on technique correction with Olympic athletes won second prize in the 4th European Athletics Association Coaching Science Awards, out of a record entry of 28 projects from 13 European countries.