I think I have trouble with accepting this concept of the learning cycle. I don't think I reflect enough on the movement or drill until someone else points out something I am doing incorrectly. I will have to work on this more this second time around.
I especially like the reflecting on something that I want to see how it looks. So many times I thought something was nice because it felt nice to me, then watching the video I was thinking it wasn't nice at all… Sometimes I'm just lazy about videoing myself to check how I look, and never I heard it in class about videoing and reflecting on how it looked…
What really helped me taking from you guys on the Spinability challange is the https://replay-mirror.web.app/run . Really great to make this cycle shorter and help me getting into the habbit of watching what I'm doing rather than just feeling what I'm doing
My partner and I usually spend a lot of time breaking down simple movements and techniques. Then when I try to write it down in words, it produces more questions, more reflecting, and more experimenting.
When I was learning West coast and was stuck on something I learned I would revert back to a video, then google some more. Over time I got down to other moves that can be tweaked a bit to perform move. What I learned is I needed proper technique before attempting to see something in a video because I did it incorrectly and got called out on it and was told it’s best to have a teacher show you this. So any moves I happen to stumble upon on, I would save the video and do a private of I want to learn this, and the teacher would go with the step by step on how this move is performed. Over time I got better in skills and did some experimentations on moves safely anyways, and even then a light bulb clicked on, “OH!!!! that’s how they did that move just by an accident of executing the purpose move.” With proper lessons your mind starts to wonder the what if and accidents happen of a move of something you saw from a social.
I love how you explain the principles over an example like the moonwalk. I believe this really helps understanding.
I think I have trouble with accepting this concept of the learning cycle. I don't think I reflect enough on the movement or drill until someone else points out something I am doing incorrectly. I will have to work on this more this second time around.
I especially like the reflecting on something that I want to see how it looks.
So many times I thought something was nice because it felt nice to me, then watching the video I was thinking it wasn't nice at all…
Sometimes I'm just lazy about videoing myself to check how I look, and never I heard it in class about videoing and reflecting on how it looked…
What really helped me taking from you guys on the Spinability challange is the https://replay-mirror.web.app/run .
Really great to make this cycle shorter and help me getting into the habbit of watching what I'm doing rather than just feeling what I'm doing
My partner and I usually spend a lot of time breaking down simple movements and techniques. Then when I try to write it down in words, it produces more questions, more reflecting, and more experimenting.
When I was learning West coast and was stuck on something I learned I would revert back to a video, then google some more. Over time I got down to other moves that can be tweaked a bit to perform move. What I learned is I needed proper technique before attempting to see something in a video because I did it incorrectly and got called out on it and was told it’s best to have a teacher show you this. So any moves I happen to stumble upon on, I would save the video and do a private of I want to learn this, and the teacher would go with the step by step on how this move is performed. Over time I got better in skills and did some experimentations on moves safely anyways, and even then a light bulb clicked on, “OH!!!! that’s how they did that move just by an accident of executing the purpose move.” With proper lessons your mind starts to wonder the what if and accidents happen of a move of something you saw from a social.