Once a year I run a NRA Basic Rifle Instructor course that
is primarily for scouters. The NRA and
the BAS have joined forces to insure that the training scouts receive is
consistent and provided by well-trained instructors. All scouters that conduct the Rifle Merit
Badge training must be certified NRA Basic Rifle instructors.
Sooooooo . . . this past weekend found me at scout camp to
conduct the training for three current scout leaders and an “interested party”
who I suspect will be joining our ranks soon.
The first day was filled with the NRA Basic Instructor
Training course. I must say that of all
the coursework I teach for the NRA – this particular course surprises
Instructor Candidates (ICs) the most. They
typically expect it to be a “drag” and are surprised at its depth, at how much
they find they actually didn’t know and how much they learn about the art of
teaching. It is, IMHO, the absolute most
important piece of coursework in the entire sequence.
BIT is a long day. I’ve
mentioned that more than once. The
recommended minimum length is 6 hours . . . I typically find it takes 8. It introduces everything from basic teaching
principles to the concept of the coach/pupil method. Unless the individual has had
teaching/training experience in the past (we actually had a retired fighter
pilot who was a student pilot trainer as one time in his career) the BIT course
covers a lot of new ground. It takes
time to roll through the principles, to work through the exercises where the
candidates “build” short presentations to practice/learn an instructor skill
set and get some understanding of what this entails exactly.
The BIT course is also something you don’t want to rush
through. It is my opportunity to
introduce the ICs to how I present information – following the outline laid out
by the NRA training guide. I want the
ICs to truly experience the whole process of learning and becoming an “instructor”. As I said, it’s a full day and these four ICs
did a great job.
The
NRA Basic Rifle Instructor Course . . .
Just a few points of clarification for those looking at
taking this specific coursework. It’s “sports
shooting” . . . not tacticool, house clearing, butt kicking tactical
shooting. That’s not it’s purpose.
It’s “foundational” coursework . . . much time is spent on
safety, range protocols, nomenclature, a broad range of action types, shooting
positions and correcting issues with individual students.
It’s time consuming.
When was the last time you actually worked you way through the bench
rest, standing, kneeling, sitting and prone positions to the point you could
shoot a precise group at a specified distance?
Day 1
. . . Teaching ICs to teach the fundamentals.
Words mean things.
In a training community – they mean very specific things. I write things like “bore”, “lands”, “groves”,
“comb” . . . and if you are like me images appear in my head and a group of
words form around them describing exactly what they mean. They should mean the exact same things to all
of us. And that is much of what Day 1 is
about. Getting us all on the same track
. . . in agreement . . . clear on the meaning of the words . . . and clearer on
the words each individual IC will say to explain these things.
Again – long day, repetitive day but pretty interesting
because each IC would describe exactly the same thing but using their own
words. We all learned something. The ICs learned that PREPARATION is a very
big word. Tough to be smooth and clear .
. . if you’re not fully prepared, if you have not solidified in your own mind
what each item is and how you want to explain it.
I always start with the simplest firearm . . . in our case
a single shot, bolt action .22 savage rifle the scouts use at camp. (Were this a basic pistol class I would start
with a SA revolver). What I like to
stress here is that if they learn the “words” on a simple firearm . . . the IC
can show how the words don’t change when you get to a more complex firearm such
as my AR that I used to work through a long range shooting course last year.
A common “issue” is moving ICs from the word “weapon” to
using vernacular specific to the firearm in their hand. “This is a single shot, bold action, .22
caliber rifle.” It’s a little thing,
many TCs kinda go overboard to extent of a jar on the table with fines placed
in it for each infraction. My approach
is a bit different. Three of us are were
former military. The argument I use is
that the young scouts we will be training truly do not know the difference
between a “weapon” and the firearm in their hand when they are on the
range. I simply want to keep it that way
as long as I can . . . as we all can.
Sadly many will get the opportunity to hold a weapon in their hand
during their life to defend their country, their buddies or their
families. As I type this I have men I’ve
worked with when they were young scouts doing exactly that. So, that’s my argument “against” using the
word “weapon” . . . let’s allow them to be kids as long as we can.
While virtually all the ICs had shot rifles “all their life”
. . . I find it a great deal of fun to see lights come on as they hear new
words for the first time, learn from other ICs as they all presented their
piece of the coursework. By the middle
of Day 1, they are truly “in the game” and working hard.
This is their first opportunity to fire first shots from
the bench rest position. I like to use
this as an opportunity to talk about building a position, refining the words
they may want to use for sight alignment and sight picture. And, with only four, I can work each and
every one through the process acting as the “coach” to their being the “pupil”. Our range is 50’ so we are using targets scaled
down from a 25 yard target to represent the same sized target area on a 50’
range. The course of fire is 5 rounds
per target outline (there are five on each target). I begin with each round “by command” and end
with them firing the entire 5 round string on their own. And, while this is going on I am walking from
one shooter to the other “coaching” – demonstrating how that process works and
letting them experience what it feels like.
This also kicks some of the “mud” off in the form of nerves, anxiousness
and general fear of shooting really crappy.
They all did fine.
The day ends with a reminder that the next day is a full range
day, they need to study the positions, work on their words, practice what they
can . . . and be ready to roll at 8AM sharp.
Day 2 –
Range Day
I spend the entire second day on the range. For me it begins with a range safety brief .
. . and then each IC was required to do a range safety briefing as well. Again, it is instructive to watch the
progression from first presenter to last as the words become more refined,
clearer and each become more comfortable.
This is the 3rd day of instruction, the nerves are quieted,
the words come more easily, all are in their respective “roles” be it
instructor or student. And we can get
real work done.
Next are presentations on each of the shooting positions –
no live fire. They describe, demonstrate
without a firearm and demonstrate with a firearm – no live rounds are sent down
range.
With only four ICs there is time to allow each to make a
full presentation of each shooting position we will work through that day –
standing, kneeling, sitting and prone.
We work on the first one – standing – the most. The idea here is to make sure the “depth” of
what is taught and demonstrated is as effective as it can be. The first guy out of the chute has the
disadvantage of simply being first. The
last . . . reaps the benefit of all the preceding presentations. And we all learn.
This consumes the morning.
We had to lunch and come back for the live fire portion. I do this by dividing the ICs into two pairs –
one acting as the coach . . . and one the pupil. By this time, it’s rewarding to see that both
“coaches” are truly in their roles are the students. There is real teaching and learning going on. The course of fire is 5 rounds on each
target. The first 5 are by command only
and then the target is fully reviewed downrange. The last two are then shot, again 5 rounds
per target, with both being evaluated after the course of fire is
completed. Do this for two shooters per
target . . . for four positions . . . and you’re talking 60 rounds per shooter
or 120 rounds total per shooting position . . . 480 rounds for the day total
between all ICs. It’s a long range
session . . . but an incredibly valuable one.
Each IC has the opportunity to discover their weaknesses (and believe me
folks, we all have them), learned what they need to work on as they go forward,
and had the opportunity to coach a shooter through 4 different positions firing
a total of 60 rounds. It was a good day!
The range work a wrap they took both the Basic Rifle and
Basic Rifle Instructor exams. We graded
them (90% was the minimum acceptable score), reviewed them, did final exit
interviews . . .
. . . and it was a
Wrap!!!
Congrats to Tom, Jim, Jeff and Tim! Thanks for coming guys! Great job!!
Class Photos
I need to get up there and take that one from you!
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