Yes I am a skater. If I can't land something and I keep falling or putting my foot down or not rotating the jump or whatever my coach would never say "land the damn thing" she would tell me that my head is in the wrong place, I'm doing that weird arm thing again, my take off edge was wrong, I was swinging my free leg into the jump, I dropped my free hip. I could go on.
My coach does sometimes shout, and it is very encouraging and done because she cares about us, but when she shouts its a correction or if we do something super fantastic, like someone lands a double axel. I guess its why there are so many coaches so everyone can pick one with a style that works for them.
I took some time away because of final exams, and I'm kind of surprised to see how much this thread has grown. That said, I agree with IceFrog completely. Shouting is NOT helpful, constructive feedback IS. When I attempt to do anything on the ice, my goal is NOT to mess it up. Anyone who tells me I'm doing something on purpose can and will be fired on the spot because it is an insult to my capacity to use my time on the ice effectively, and is extremely presumptive for someone else to claim they know exactly how I am thinking (especially when they are wrong). I don't need an ice god, I need a person who can
effectively show me how to skate.
Sometimes I
know what needs to be done, however can't seem to wrap my mind around a block that prevents me from doing it correctly. Is yelling going to fix that? No, it's going to make me spiteful, angry, and non-productive. If the way something that is being explained clearly isn't working, then I need and expect my coach to take an active role in the learning process and come to the same point from a different angle to help me overcome the block. I am not paying someone for incompetence, and if the only way they know how to try and get their point across is hollering useless comments about the students's intentions and going home for the entire rink to hear, then they are incompetent.
More Information:Some people have said that we don't know the whole situation which is true, however as the only first hand eyewitness, I can say that these girls were not the rude, uppity or rebellious types. You should have seen the looks on their faces; at least two looked like they were about to cry. I'm sorry but there is no excuse for that. Skating is something that should be fun and enriching, not something that sends students during lessons to tears. Yes, people are serious about competing and such, but the fact is if a person thinks the sport sucks enough to feel upset, inadequate, shameful, or any other variety of unpleasantness on a regular basis, then the person SHOULD NOT BE COMPETING and drop the sport ASAP.
Look at some of the elite Olympic skaters over the past 10-15 years like Kim Yuna, Kristi Yamaguchi, Nancy Kerrigan, or Michelle Kwan. Did ANY of them look like they were going out on to the ice with a noose around their neck? That is how some of students looked after I heard shrieking from half way across a full sized rink (I was going around the perimeter of the rink). Meanwhile, the parents all sat around a table behind a nearly sound proof barrier drinking coffee and nibbling coffee cake.
I personally don't believe this coach should be permitted to teach children anymore, at least not without extensive anger management therapy.