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  #1  
Old 11-15-2006, 10:46 AM
Isk8NYC Isk8NYC is offline
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The Skater Shuffle

It's not a new ice dance; it's that problem beginners often have where they can't/won't pick up their feet. Often, it's just one foot, sometimes it's both!

The longer it goes on, the less progress the skater makes. IT MUST BE STOPPED!

Okay coaches/instructors, here's your assignment.
Answer these two simple questions:

What causes the shuffling (aka: scootering)?

-and-

How can we stop it?
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Old 11-15-2006, 10:54 AM
phoenix phoenix is offline
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As far as the cause, so long as their skates are holding their ankles enough, I think the main thing is fear of gliding on 1 foot, very foreign feeling at first.

With beginners I have them march & I want to HEAR the thump as the foot comes down. Do it at a stand-still at first, that should be pretty do-able. Then moving slowly but with BIG clump-clumps across the ice. Their knees should lift--could have them touch each knee as it comes up to make sure they're doing it.

If it's with little little kids, I do variations of a game that I've found are very effective.

Draw BIG BUGS all over the ice, lots of them close together......the kids go across that area & they have to STOMP on the bugs! Tell them you want to hear the stomp. They love it! And they're too busy stomping the bugs to be thinking "oh no I'm picking up my feet!"

Expanding on this, I draw whole obstacle courses, & with different actions to be done depending on what they come across: stomp the bug, hop on the frog, slide (glide) down the chute, swizzle over the jellyfish (don't get stung!), turn around on the 'tornado' (just a curly-cue swirl). You can use your imagination, really gets them moving.
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Old 11-15-2006, 03:29 PM
AshBugg44 AshBugg44 is offline
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I think that it is mostly just fear and that as the child becomes more comfortable being on the ice, it will go away. I tell kids that I want to hear their feet too, and it works as long as I'm there, but when I go away they go back to sliding their feet.
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Old 11-15-2006, 03:33 PM
Isk8NYC Isk8NYC is offline
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I think it's often caused by their skates being too big or too loose.

The marching drills sound like fun. I really like the bug stomp.
I sometimes draw 'logs' on the ice for them to step over, but the speedy ones are dangerous!

When they are able to push, I have them ride imaginary scooters across the ice by pushing with one foot only.
Of course, I always pick their "weakling" foot...
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Old 11-15-2006, 04:26 PM
dbny dbny is offline
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I agree with AshBug that it's primarily fear. I also do the bug stomp and stomping in puddles is good too. Another thing that sometimes works, and I always start them with this (learned it from Isk8NYC) is to tell them to pick up their knees, rather than their feet. I start them with that off ice and tell them to look at my knees and march with me. Every kid is different and you just have to keep trying new things until something works.
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Old 11-15-2006, 08:27 PM
Isk8NYC Isk8NYC is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dbny
(learned it from Isk8NYC)
Yeah? Really? Hmmm. I forgot that approach! LOL

ETA: Ah, I remember! It goes with my "Let's Have a Parade" routine. They pretend to be in a marching band - one drums, one plays the coronet, one has big cymbals. We march across the ice ("Let me hear your feet make noise! March, March, March!") playing in a band and making the sounds. "Knees High, Heads UP, doo da doo...."

I have a new script: we pretend to be clocks.
Our feet go "TICK! TOCK!" as we march, then "Shhhh..." then mouse runs down as we glide with "quiet feet."

I'm having fun, hope they are also! *chuckle*
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Old 11-15-2006, 08:31 PM
mdvask8r mdvask8r is offline
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I agree that the skates may be too big or improperly tied. Makes them feel very insecure.
Many times these are the same students who always have their feet spread wide apart. It's very difficult to shift the weight to one foot when the feet are so wide.
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Old 11-16-2006, 01:23 AM
AshBugg44 AshBugg44 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dbny
tell them to pick up their knees, rather than their feet.
I always tell them that as well, and it definately helps! I tell them to "lift your knees to the ceiling!"
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Old 11-16-2006, 12:50 PM
Isk8NYC Isk8NYC is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mdvask8r
Many times these are the same students who always have their feet spread wide apart. It's very difficult to shift the weight to one foot when the feet are so wide.
I know this is off-topic, but I've noticed that the "wide spread" skaters often have skates that look too narrow! These are the same kids that struggle when we do outside edges because they're constantly using their inside edges. When you look at the laced-up skate, the space across the laces is so wide, you can almost see the edges of the tongue.

I have the skaters do an exercise before we start working on swizzles (sculling). Line 'em up on one of the hockey lines and have them march 3x with both of their feet ON the line, then 3x with their feet OFF the line. It helps them balance with feet together and apart, which is necessary for sculling. (Otherwise, they get stuck! LOL) Once they've mastered that, add gliding - "Glide ON the line, glide OFF the line; feet together, feet apart."

On topic:
I know there are more coaches/instructors lurking out there!
More tips to conquer the Skater Shuffle and the Wide Walker, please!
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Old 11-16-2006, 02:42 PM
mdvask8r mdvask8r is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Isk8NYC
. . . before we start working on swizzles (sculling). Line 'em up on one of the hockey lines and have them march 3x with both of their feet ON the line, then 3x with their feet OFF the line. It helps them balance with feet together and apart, which is necessary for sculling. (Otherwise, they get stuck! LOL) Once they've mastered that, add gliding - "Glide ON the line, glide OFF the line; feet together, feet apart."
Oh, I like this.
For the 2-foot glide I like to tell them "Feet together and hold and orange between your knees, but don't squeeze or you'll have orange juice." Helps to get the knees aligned and keep them off the inside edges. Once they feel the stability of the knees over the toes & the feet under the center of the body, they seem more willing to pick up the feet.
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Old 11-30-2006, 12:16 AM
mikawendy mikawendy is offline
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Another possible reason for scootering, at least when the skater is pushing only with one foot, could possibly be side dominance? When I first started skating, I could only stroke really well with my left foot, and I think it's because I've always been more comfortable with my weight on my right foot.

Ironically, when I stroke now, I feel better pushing with the left foot, but I'm told that my pushes with the right foot look better and use the blade better.
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Old 11-30-2006, 01:26 AM
Isk8NYC Isk8NYC is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mikawendy
Another possible reason for scootering, at least when the skater is pushing only with one foot, could possibly be side dominance?
Maybe, but how do they stroke/glide or even walk using only one foot? Not making fun of you, just a wry observation.
(Like "I can't skate because I have weak ankles." - "How do you stand or run, then?")

There are some kids who come to lessons with a definite side preference. They're usually not the scooters, though. That preference shows up when we start working on one foot glides, turns, and pushes. They can't position their "weak" feet to do t-starts on one side. (Most can't do them on either! LOL)

Interestingly, many of them tell me "I'm a lefty, I can't do anything with my right side." I don't know if that's self-fufilling prophecies, parental influences, or an actual disability (so to speak.) I know you're a southpaw, Mika. Were you a scooter skater at the beginning?
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Old 11-30-2006, 11:54 PM
mikawendy mikawendy is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Isk8NYC View Post
Maybe, but how do they stroke/glide or even walk using only one foot? Not making fun of you, just a wry observation.
(Like "I can't skate because I have weak ankles." - "How do you stand or run, then?")

There are some kids who come to lessons with a definite side preference. They're usually not the scooters, though. That preference shows up when we start working on one foot glides, turns, and pushes. They can't position their "weak" feet to do t-starts on one side. (Most can't do them on either! LOL)

Interestingly, many of them tell me "I'm a lefty, I can't do anything with my right side." I don't know if that's self-fufilling prophecies, parental influences, or an actual disability (so to speak.) I know you're a southpaw, Mika. Were you a scooter skater at the beginning?
I guess the only time the "weak ankles" argument would hold water is if the skater is referring to not being able to keep the ankles from rolling out/in. (But, um, then that also involves the leg muscles higher along the leg, so it's not just "weak ankles"....so, uh [in best Emily Litella voice] never mind... )

Yes, when I was a kid (and skated only at the occasional birthday party, in my mother's very old skates that are only one layer of leather and NO support) and then when I started skating outdoors at public sessions as an adult, I had scooter foot--I could only get a good push from my left foot onto my right foot. Once I started group lessons and worked through a few series of lessons, that started to go away. But for many months after that, I was very aware of preferring to push with the left foot and glide onto the right foot. And in general, my right foot prefers to do a lot of stuff and that's the foot I learn things much better on in general (3 turns, rockers, beginning attempts at counters). (And yes, I'm lefty in terms of handwriting and also I skate CW. But I cut and throw righty. I can't recall if I bat lefty or righty because I always get those two mixed up. Also, in high school, I did track and field. In the triple jump, I always did the hop taking off from the right foot (which I've started to wonder is maybe what led me to start jumping CW along with the fact that spinning CW on my right foot was easier).
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Old 12-01-2006, 02:34 PM
Isk8NYC Isk8NYC is offline
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One of my twin DDs is a lefty. She bats righty in softball and spins CCW.
One of my twin DDs is a righty. She's a "switch hitter" (but mostly righty) in softball and spins CW.

Whatever works.

I usually test the skaters to see which foot is dominant. I think I learned the technique here.

Have the skater stand on both feet.
Drop a glove on the ice and ask the skater to GENTLY kick the glove.
If they ask which foot, say "Whichever's more comfortable."

If they kick with the right foot, they're a CCW skater; the left kicker is CW.

It's only failed me a handful of times.
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Old 12-01-2006, 03:25 PM
Skittl1321 Skittl1321 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Isk8NYC View Post
Have the skater stand on both feet.
Drop a glove on the ice and ask the skater to GENTLY kick the glove.
If they ask which foot, say "Whichever's more comfortable."

If they kick with the right foot, they're a CCW skater; the left kicker is CW.

It's only failed me a handful of times.
I would have failed your test (I can't even pass that, how will I ever pass pre-bronze?)

But if you had thrown it behind me and asked me to turn around and get it, I would have lead over my right shoulder.

-One of the reasons I was very nervous about being a CW skater is my right side is very dominant, but I just COULD NOT spin CCW. When I finally tried CW spinning worked great (it's also my better way for 3-turns, and backward crossovers), but I got scared i'd never be able to jump because my left foot was too weak to land on. The strength of my left foot caught up to my right quickly, but now I am still trying to do a CCW two footed spin (so I can do synchro) and can barely do a revolution, and still manage to get dizzy


Oops, sorry to butt into the coaching thread. I just really find the CW/CCW thing interesting.
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Old 12-02-2006, 10:48 AM
Emberchyld Emberchyld is offline
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I know that I'm also jumping onto a coaching thread, too, but the CW/CCW thing really is interesting (I agree with you, Skittl1321).

I'm a righty who prefers to skate like a lefty-- CW is a lot easier, and I had a coach once offered an interesting theory. I have a ballet background, and even though we're trained to turn and jump, etc, in both directions, there is a heavy bias towards CW turns (I know that in lots of classes I've taken, we have a tendency to go across the room to the right more times than to the left, and choreography in both my jazz and ballet performances had 99% pirouettes going CW). It does make a lot of sense...

Just thought I'd throw that into the mix.
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Old 12-05-2006, 07:03 PM
thumbyskates thumbyskates is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Isk8NYC View Post
Have the skater stand on both feet.
Drop a glove on the ice and ask the skater to GENTLY kick the glove.
If they ask which foot, say "Whichever's more comfortable."

If they kick with the right foot, they're a CCW skater; the left kicker is CW.

It's only failed me a handful of times.

I too would have failed your test. I jump CW but would kick with my right foot too. I'd turn around and pick up a glove and turn to the right.

However, since I've started coaching and teaching all students that I have CCW I think I was meant to go CCW because sometimes when I skate on my own now I get confused, and am unsure of which I'm supposed to use - momentary lapse of remembering
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Old 12-05-2006, 08:23 PM
Skittl1321 Skittl1321 is offline
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Wow. Now I'm really interested. Do you have any data (this made me laugh- thinking of you doing empirical studies on turn direction) of using this test to determine spin direction for kids vs adults?

I think, for me, the dance experience is what did it. I'm not a well trained dancer- I did drill team/competitve dance, which means 99% of the turns I did were rotated CW. When I switched to ballet as an adult "left" (CCW) turns were so hard for me to get a hang of.

For now, I generally learn it both ways and then practice it CW on my own time (because the CCW one never seems to work out as well). Since I take group lessons with the kids, it really confuses them that I go the wrong way. I don't think it hurts to keep trying both ways though. I still can't do a 2 foot CCW spin and I'm making good progress on the 1 foot CW ones.
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Old 12-06-2006, 04:25 AM
vesperholly vesperholly is offline
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Originally Posted by Isk8NYC View Post
I know this is off-topic, but I've noticed that the "wide spread" skaters often have skates that look too narrow! These are the same kids that struggle when we do outside edges because they're constantly using their inside edges. When you look at the laced-up skate, the space across the laces is so wide, you can almost see the edges of the tongue.
Interesting. I had a older girl in class this year who had what I called "frozen legs". She had good balance, but looked terrified to move anything. And she had a really tough time with swizzles because her feet were stuck so wide - wider than her hips. I tried to get her to step over the painted lines, but it didn't help much. Her foot would come half an inch off the ice and zoom back like it was magnetized. I think it will go away as she gets more comfortable on the ice (the class is Basic 1) but boy is it frustrating!

As for the CW/CCW discussion ... you'd all have a field day with me. I started out as a CW skater, learning up through lutzes, and then at 14 I switched to CCW because my new coach said I spun better that way. My old coach had a *lot* of CW skaters, so I wonder if she even bothered to test my preference. Now I jump and spin exclusively CCW, but because of the early learning, I can still spin CW - mostly backspins/back camels/flying camels. I used to be able to do decent singles CW but I don't practice them anymore because they mess up my doubles. Some of my turns are stronger CW, BI rockers the most notably. I really surprised my most recent coach when I did the fast rocker/choctaws from Novice MIF much, much better CW. But the 3-turn pattern was better CCW. I'm bizarre!!!
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Old 12-06-2006, 06:12 AM
Mrs Redboots Mrs Redboots is offline
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You'd have a field day with me, too. My outside and inside 3-turns are both better clockwise. I jump anti-clockwise, and my Mohawks are better in that direction.

When I started spinning, I automatically spun clockwise. My coach now makes me spin in both directions, and a friend pointed out yesterday that my clockwise spin is far better than the anti-clockwise one, as my posture is better! Which I had suspected.....

Oh well...
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Old 12-06-2006, 09:30 AM
Isk8NYC Isk8NYC is offline
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Originally Posted by vesperholly View Post
My old coach had a *lot* of CW skaters, so I wonder if she even bothered to test my preference.
I taught myself to spin CW as a teenager, but when I started lessons, the coach switched me to CCW. She was a CCW skater. I can do a simple one-foot spin in either direction, but I'm much stronger CCW. I have a very strong back spin, and I think it's because of my "first spins."

I've noticed many CW coaches have mostly CW skaters. I could understand the "moving" kids seeking a CW coach, but I wonder if you're right. Maybe coaches teach in their own direction and, as long as the skater doesn't complain, they stick with it.

I once watched a head pro dress down an instructor who allowed a student to spin CW and jump CCW in her class! The lecture was loud and embarrassing, the coach quit afterward. *shudders*
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Old 12-07-2006, 11:14 AM
Isk8NYC Isk8NYC is offline
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I had a new adult skater take her first lesson with me this week. Her edges and crossovers were so much stronger on one side, I assumed she was really a CCW skater.

I was suprised when she did a (shaky) CW spin.

Gave her the glove test and she did it as a CCW skater would. On a hunch, I had her try spinning CCW and voila! A strong two-foot spin with arm control! (Maybe she was just mixed up - she hasn't been in a class for months. She did say her last coach was a CW skater.)
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Old 12-07-2006, 01:03 PM
Skittl1321 Skittl1321 is offline
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Originally Posted by Isk8NYC View Post
I once watched a head pro dress down an instructor who allowed a student to spin CW and jump CCW in her class! The lecture was loud and embarrassing, the coach quit afterward. *shudders*

Our LTS director said when she skated competitively she turned and jumped in opposite directions. She said it caused her so much confusion, as well as always seeming as though she was on the wrong foot when she stepped out of a spin, she will not allow children to do it... but if an adult really wants to, she won't stop them.

Me- I hope I can eventually go CCW, because it seems like it would just make life easier. But for now I'm just practicing both ways and making much stronger progress CW.
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Old 12-08-2006, 08:23 AM
quarkiki2 quarkiki2 is offline
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I came from a very strong dance background (15 years of six-hours a week lessons, chorus in a semi-pro ballet company) and got on the ice and spun on two feet in both directions equally well, so I simply picked CCW to make life a little easier. Which turns out to be a little goofy as my RBO (landing edge) is easily my weakest, LOL!

My best turn off-ice would be a natural CW backspin.

The hardest adjustment for me wasn't the idea of turning or spinning, but the idea that the stinkin' floor moves. I'm reprogramming my body and my instincts to agree that when I push on the floor (ice) it's OK if it makes me move. I'm so used to the floor pushing back off ice... I just with the quarkiki v2.0 wouldn't take so long to program, LOL!
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Old 12-15-2006, 11:59 AM
Emberchyld Emberchyld is offline
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The hardest adjustment for me wasn't the idea of turning or spinning, but the idea that the stinkin' floor moves. I'm reprogramming my body and my instincts to agree that when I push on the floor (ice) it's OK if it makes me move. I'm so used to the floor pushing back off ice... I just with the quarkiki v2.0 wouldn't take so long to program, LOL!
*lol* As a "new" skater and an "old" dancer, I have a lot of the same problems... That, and little things like leaning forward in a spiral (versus keeping your foot "attached" to your head by an "invisible line"-- how my teachers first described arabesque).. and getting chewed out by a coach for not opening up my leg enough on the spiral (which feels like an "ala'ca'besque" (ala seconde meets arabesque!) to me.

And skating is killing me on spotting. I still have a tendency to spot on the ice and my spotting in ballet class has gotten shoddy .

*sigh* But that's what makes freezing my butt off on the ice fun, I think...
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