Changing Program Views on Rider Education

A common thought, as discussed by Leonard Evans (2004), is driving skill increases over time with familiarity in a realm of decades, not hours or days. Although skill increases rapidly during initial learning, the real ability to drive and ride takes more than a few hours with an instructor or coach. The foremost contributor to elevated vehicle crash rates is human behavior, which is greatly influenced by inexperience as well as unconscious incompetence. …

Continue readingChanging Program Views on Rider Education

Tribe Talk – 19 April 2020

19 April Topic Highlights:

MSF’s 5 Core Messages and integrating them into classroom and range – with Lynne Vandewater.

Range Exercise #1 – the basis for all development on the range – with Michael Gentile.

Find a Mentor, Be a Mentor. Challenge and Support our tribe! …

Continue readingTribe Talk – 19 April 2020

The Thinking Rider

Riding a motorcycle gives a physical and emotional feeling unlike any other form of transportation and movement, one that “if you have to ask about it, you wouldn’t understand.” The wind pressing against our bodies and smells of the places we ride, a closeness to the road, the world, and other riders create a craving to get out there and do it again. …

Continue readingThe Thinking Rider


×
Verified by ExactMetrics