We will approach the game of volleyball with plenty of visuals. Volleyball is a hard sport to simply just watch, it takes visuals and explanations to make things make sense! An example of visuals would be to work on foundational skills with colorful dots, hula hoops, cones and tennis balls in order for the learner to grasp the concept of volleyball.
This is where the lessons become more exciting! after 10 or more lessons, the learner should accomplish an incredible increase of their ball control and this will be seen in their ability to “pepper” with another person. Everything leading up to this point are simply the building blocks to achieve the bigger picture. The athlete will be able to aggressively serve the ball to specific targets, carry out more precise drills to sharpen their game and will be able to add more strategy to their tool belt to use in game like scenarios. It takes more than just 11 lessons to get good at volleyball, but as long as the person learning understands that repetition is key to creating good habits, they will be greatly rewarded!
Within the 4-10 lesson mark, the learner will be able to gauge how to improve themselves and rely on their knowledge (along with the knowledge i’d be giving) to correct themselves. Knowing the mistakes that you’ve made is half of the process to learning how to correct them. In these lessons, the beginner will learn how to see the game with greater court awareness such as situations like spot serving, hitting line or cross, setting to 3 different zones and being able to make athletic adjustments in defense.
In the first couple of lessons, the beginner will learn the basic fundamentals and techniques of volleyball. This includes an increase in visuals and explanations along with plenty of opportunities to increase repetitions with the ball. The more times you do something correctly, the more effective it is and more likely it is it translate into games!
We will approach the game of volleyball with plenty of visuals. Volleyball is a hard sport to simply just watch, it takes visuals and explanations to make things make sense! An example of visuals would be to work on foundational skills with colorful dots, hula hoops, cones and tennis balls in order for the learner to grasp the concept of volleyball.
This is where the lessons become more exciting! after 10 or more lessons, the learner should accomplish an incredible increase of their ball control and this will be seen in their ability to “pepper” with another person. Everything leading up to this point are simply the building blocks to achieve the bigger picture. The athlete will be able to aggressively serve the ball to specific targets, carry out more precise drills to sharpen their game and will be able to add more strategy to their tool belt to use in game like scenarios. It takes more than just 11 lessons to get good at volleyball, but as long as the person learning understands that repetition is key to creating good habits, they will be greatly rewarded!
Within the 4-10 lesson mark, the learner will be able to gauge how to improve themselves and rely on their knowledge (along with the knowledge i’d be giving) to correct themselves. Knowing the mistakes that you’ve made is half of the process to learning how to correct them. In these lessons, the beginner will learn how to see the game with greater court awareness such as situations like spot serving, hitting line or cross, setting to 3 different zones and being able to make athletic adjustments in defense.
In the first couple of lessons, the beginner will learn the basic fundamentals and techniques of volleyball. This includes an increase in visuals and explanations along with plenty of opportunities to increase repetitions with the ball. The more times you do something correctly, the more effective it is and more likely it is it translate into games!