|
Post by kylem56 on Feb 7, 2009 9:39:57 GMT -6
For those of you who hold daily position group meetings, what is your sample agenda ?
How long do you typically hold your meetings ?
Is there anything special you do to keep the players interested after sitting in classes all day ?
Im looking to make my meetings more efficient and interactive. Ive gotten some good ideas from a Chris Peterson (Boise) clinic talk but Im always looking for more.
|
|
|
Post by redandwhite on Feb 7, 2009 10:13:36 GMT -6
We meet Team on Monday for 15 minutes - Wrap up previous game, Intro to new opponent, then meet full O/D for 30 minutes - opponent film and Game Plan intro. Tues/Wed - we meet either O/D or Position Groups for 20 minutes - agendas are very open - depends on opponent/game plan wrinkles, etc.; but always includes some film. Thursday we have Sp. Teams review meeting, before our Game Prep practice. Each Coordinator/Position Coach has their own style, but as HC I stress being organized and prepared (film, illustrations, etc). We also stress in our Coaching Philosophy to "Teach What, Teach How, Teach Why."
kylem56 - would you be willing to share Coach Peterson ideas/notes? You could either post them or PM me. Thanks.
|
|
|
Post by oguru on Feb 7, 2009 10:46:04 GMT -6
At the college level we have 30 minutes to cover what we need. For example as a running back coach the first day of fall camp. We go over the run game that is going in that day, on the whiteboard and then I show clips of the plays. We require the kids to write the plays down, so they get use to seeing it in their own writing. Then we go over protections on the board,and then show film,and then do the pass game on the white board and then film. During the season we go over any corrections we need to make,and show them film of it from the previous days practice. We then install anything new for that day on the white board.
|
|
|
Post by kylem56 on Feb 7, 2009 11:06:53 GMT -6
redandwhite- Here is Coach Peterson's notes
• Effective Meeting Tips: - Bullet points on your whiteboard of what you will be covering - Summarize how long your meeting will go - Have all needed visuals pre drawn before meeting - Have several different breakpoints (make them get up switch seats, pushups, etc.) - Your passion for the game must be communicated - Voice tone changes - Do not rush through material, cover it so they get it - Encourage questions - Ask them to grade a certain play - Put them on the board - Everyone from the first string to the redshirt players will get questions asked by them - All players will take notes in a notebook which will be randomly checked - Teach them what to do with notebook, writing helps crystallize thoughts - Show practice plan for next practice at end of meeting
|
|