TEACHING Prepper Skills, Passing Along Knowledge.

Teaching, it’s harder than one might think.  So YOU can shoot and are sexy when doing it (sick reloads for the win!), but can you take someone who has never held a gun before and actually help to make them a proficient shooter?  Can you not only get someone to follow your lead but show them ways to retain knowledge?  Do you have a methodology in place to check on learning and address shortcomings?  What if your first and second course of action just don’t work, how can you modify your style so that the audience is more receptive?  All great questions and just some thoughts I wanted to toss out there.  It’s one thing to be joe multicam prepper with a blog, velcro US flag on the ball cap, and 100k youtube views on the resume.  It’s entirely another thing to be able to teach the skills acquired to a diverse audience who might learn in various ways.

What Does This Mean?

So let’s keep it simple, where do you begin?  Family is the best option in that you can pass along your knowledge with practical exercises and not have to worry about OPSEC being compromised.  Start small and work your way out.  Before you know it you’ll be giving casual instructions or advice to others, be in on the range (if solicited for advice) or through normal conversation.  Of course OPSEC is always a priority so you have to be cognizant of who you choose to teach, rely on your intuition for that one.

Example 1: My brother.

My brother and I were out at the range shooting pistols a few days ago.  I’ve taken him shooting before and he has good natural skills, but like any newer shooter there are things which must be reinforced in order to set the stage for his success.

Upon arrival I told him to pick up a pistol (we had a few there) and go through a couple mags just to warm up, however he felt it needed to be done.  Slow aimed fire at a target which was at a distance of around 7 yards.  As he was firing it was immediately apparent to me that he had forgotten much of what we went over the last time we shot together over a year ago.  After he went through a couple mags we had a discussion about the fundamentals.  Proper stance, grip, sight picture/alignment and trigger squeeze.  I had to show him exactly what I meant a few times with respect to grip, this seemed to be his biggest challenge.  Once we had that down and dry fired a few times I told him to shoot another mag, there was INSTANT improvement.

Here’s where the teaching aspect goes to a new level.  Not only did I have to show him once, I had to continue to monitor and coach him to reinforce those concepts throughout our session.  Not only that, I believe it’s important to tell someone WHY they need to stand a certain way or hold the pistol a certain way.  The reason behind the action is just as important as the action itself, it’s never “because I told you to do it that way.”  I also had to recognize when I attempted to reach a bridge too far, I brought up the fundamentals associated with a good presentation shot  had to back off.  Just too much to cover in the little amount of time we had.

Here’s the thing.  If we only shoot together once a year do I expect him to retain ALL of the information he gained that day?  Mostly likely not, these are things that must be ingrained through consistent work at the range, no matter the level of the shooter.  Still I was able to impart basic vital information which helped him improve, to the point when we had the target out at 20 yards he fired a much better group than I did.  I wasn’t mad in the least, I was proud that I helped him do it!

Example 2: My daughter.

A few weeks ago my daughter went on a road trip with 4 of her best girlfriends, crazy I know.  They were traveling about 4 hours on the Interstate, enough distance from home that I had to have a pow-wow with my daughter to make sure she understood the implications associated with her journey and if indeed something happened…dad would not be able to simply show up to fix things.

Knowing this we broke out the white (dry erase) board and decided to brain storm.  I didn’t dictate to her what she should take but rather asked her input and dropped hints where necessary.

1- How are you getting there?  A car, ok what are some of the considerations with respect to your vehicle.

– Does it have a jack and tools

– Who has a roadside assistance number and is the service active?

– Pre-trip checks (oil, tire pressures, emergency kits etc)

2- What’s the route and can you identify it on a map?

– Yes you will be using GPS but what if that fails?

– Show me on this atlas your route, identify major cities or terrain features you expect to encounter during your journey

– What if you have to call in your location, are you tracking mile markers / direction / route in order to relay to the authorities?

3- You’ll be needing some clothes, let’s discuss baggage

– Of course you’ll need the emergency car bag out of your own trunk

– What other bag?  That’s right….a SHTF bag (which is currently in your trunk)

– Cold weather clothes and blankets

4- Misc supplies for your journey

– Self protection: pepper spray and knife

– Addresses to all medical facilities on the route and at the destination

– Proper identification (ID, medical card, license)

– Emergency cash in multiple denominations

5- OPSEC

– Don’t post any social media updates about the trip until your return

The Bottom Line

My daughter made it to her destination and enjoyed the trip with her friends, probably never giving a second thought to the SHTF bag in the trunk or the other items we discussed prior to her departure.  Yet with my coaching she was able to walk me through most of what was listed above, including tracing her route on a map and walk through scenarios which included finding her way home once off the beaten path.  Hopefully she will take these lessons with her as she continues to mature and eventually gets a family of her own.  It’s all about teaching and passing along the strategies and skills which keep us prepared and ready for the unknown.

 

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2 comments

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    • NRP on December 30, 2014 at 11:07 AM
    • Reply

    PJ

    As a man of 61 I know exactly what you’re saying. God knows I was not the most prominent student through the first 12 years of school. As I like to say 7th grade was the best 3 years of my life… LOLOL. It was amazing how much better I got when I actually had to start paying for college  And yessss I paid for my college.

    Having been married to an instructor/professor since my years in college it seems a never ending thing. This brings me to my point, actually two points.

    1. First we all are continually learning as we go through life and at the rate we absorb is directly correlated to the amount of interest we have in the subject. Meaning if we want to learn how to shoot we will retain the submattics a lot better than if we are drug out to the range, a firearm stuffed into out hand and told to pull the trigger —-or—- told to “prep”, same concept.

    2. Second point, when I was around 16-18 years old I was so convinced my father was the dumbest man alive, by the time I was 24-25 I could not believe how much he had learned. It was simply amazing how much he had grown up and became a man….

    I guess the point of my post is to remind us that people will only learn when they “want to” and are mature enough, not when forced or told to learn. I believe this comes back to the saying “people will only prep or develop skills the day after the SHTF” unless they have a true desire to do so; we all can talk till we are blue in the face, if they don’t want to hear it than I ask you, what can we really do, besides just keep trying?

    NRP

    PS; good for you with your daughter, I imagine your a lot like my father. All due respect PJ, all due respect.

    • Echo5Charlie on December 31, 2014 at 7:04 PM
    • Reply

    I tend to explain a concept. Let them get their hands on it and see why my instructions make sense. Then talk through it as they do it. Then repetitions of the skill all while I repeat the steps as they do them. I also, never explain something I don’t have a good grasp on. I may say I don’t know much about that, from the little I’ve read it’s because of xyz, but we will have to look into that more. Then I start researching it.

    I also break things down. For example, I never “teach someone to shoot” by handing them a loaded weapon pointed towards a target and have them pull the trigger. I teach them the parts first, usually while I clean. Next time they clean and describe the parts and what they do. Then dry fire with me talking in their ear. After those steps are mastered and seem natural to them then we go shooting. For a pistol I’ll start them with several mags of 3 rounds per mag. Focus on loading, chambering and grip. All while being safe. The last thing we work on is sights.

    Adult males seem to be the worst to work with, because every man “knows” how to drive, fornicat and shoot without help from anyone. I usually lay low with these types until I’m asked and then evaluate where they are at before picking up the instruction where needed.

    I still remember my first shooting coach repeating in my ear…correct sight alignment correct sight picture slow steady squeeze… correct sight alignment correct sight picture slow steady squeeze. Every time I shoot rifles I hear his voice.

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