American Circus Educators Magazine Spring 2018 (Issue 1, Volume 12) | Page 6

V i e w : Point of We care because truth matters. Expertise matters. Not getting your body broken while pursuing circus matters. It really does. WHY DO WE CARE? Training circus comes with a number of inherent risks. The first is, of course—The Biggie—catastrophic injury: falls, breaks, sprains, dislocations, and worse. More commonly, though, it’s the smaller injuries often caused by poor technique or risky behavior that keep students out of the air. Add to that the crushing difficulty of changing bad habits—circus and otherwise—once they’ve taken hold, and it’s not hard to see why having the guidance of a qualified circus coach is essential. This week I was naughty. I eavesdropped on an amateur teaching session (a.k.a. the blind leading the blind). For the past few months, I’ve been paying copious amounts of money for experts to teach me the correct way to heave myself into a proper handstand, so my ears always perk up when I hear advice being tossed around. I heard such gems as, “sink more into your shoulders so it will be easier to balance” and “arch your back a little or bend your arms to correct your balance.” To top it all off, this was all being done on squishy mats. Now, none of this is likely to result in a catastrophic accident, but what is likely is a hand injury, shoulder issues, and increased time spent learning the skill because this advice contradicts current best practices for learning handstands. A qualified coach would have taught on a firm floor and cued to push the floor away (shoulders to the ears) and close the ribs as opposed to arching the back. That’s a big difference, friends! That difference is expertise. DIFFERING LEVELS OF AWESOME Teachers across all disciplines tend to come in different flavors: Master Teacher: This is the coach in any field people save their money to fly to see: The Handstand Whisperer, 6 LAURA WITWER The Trapeze Guru, The Juggling Sage. They are innovators in their field, and are widely considered the pinnacle of expertise. Expert in their Field: This professional is at the top of the class. They know their stuff but are also constantly working to up their game with new skills, techniques, and best practices in their chosen field. Teaching is a passion, not a side job. Good Instructor: This coach is fine. They offer solid instruction, appropriate safety parameters, and good movement vocabulary. They’re not going to kill you, but they’re probably also not getting you to the Olympics. Newbie: This is the brand new teacher. They may have completed a teacher training, or they may just be jumping into the fray. They have not had much hands-on time with students. Amateur/Hobbyist Teacher: There is a certain amount of professional training and experience required to legitimately put out your shingle as a teacher in any field; circus is no exception. The amateur or hobbyist is exactly that. They may be largely self-taught, not actively seeking to improve their skills, and/or just be looking to occasionally supplement their income. “Casual” best sums up their approach to teaching. Going to Kill You: This coach falls short of any and all meaningful standards of good teaching. They ignore best practices in safety, technique, and communication. They often see themselves as rogue, renegade gurus who are “bucking the system.” They don’t know (and don’t care) what they don’t know, and are actively resistant to new information. TEACHER TRAININGS Most education industries have meaningful standards of training and qualification, why shouldn’t we? Back in Ye Days of Olde when I began teaching (18 years ago!), there was no such thing as a teacher training; heck, if you wanted to learn circus, you had to pack up and move unless you lived in Montreal, San Francisco, etc. Teaching circus was like the Wild West—we figured things out on the fly, cobbled together bits and pieces from all over, and employed way more trial and error than 7