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Old Mon Jun 04, 2007, 05:17pm
Old School Old School is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2006
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Camron Rust
I'm in the camp of letting the officials handle it w/o clinicians intervening.

The officials are there to learn. They need to learn to deal not only with the basic calls but with situations that they create when they screw up. With it basically blowing up in their face, they will never forget it....and neither will any other official that was paying attention to what resulted.
The clinician could have stepped in and asked a question. You don't have to correct the problem for them but you could steer them in the right direction in hopes that they will pick it up on their own. This is still training you know. I don't think letting things play out incorrectly really helps them to learn and then chewing them out after the fact does no one any good.

I think you missed a perfect opportunity to teach how to step up and ask a respectable question of your partner/s, and learn how to correct potential problems, dealing with the coaches, etc. As the clinician, I'm going to make them go explain their actions to both coaches. Then step back and see how they handle it.

Now, they are still in the game, still in the hunt to make the list. You let it play out incorrectly and you got 3 devastated officials in your camp who probably won't speak to each other again, have low self esteem, and they know they're not going to get pick up. Not the message you won't to send out in a camp, imho.
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