Category: Uncategorized

Randy King & Erik Kondo: Stop Using Fear Based Marketing

Randy King of KPC Self Defense & Randy King Live and Erik Kondo of Conflict Research Group International:

If you’re not a good enough instructor to bring students in and retain them on your merits, if you have to scare the hell out of them to make them stay out of fear that when they leave your gym they will be attacked by random ninjas and vigilantes and rapists all the time… stop teaching! Just stop – you’re not doing anybody any favors. If you need to keep people in by making sure they leave terrified, or you bring them in by making them terrified…

Continue reading at Conflict Manager Magazine…

Short Barrel Shepherd: You Must Train With Different Instructors

Short Barrel Shepherd:

I’ve been saying / writing this for some time now, but I think the topic deserves its own post:

It is extremely critical that you train with different instructors.

Trainers all have different personal / professional experience, preferences, physical capabilities, region, and philosophies. This directly impacts what they teach, how to teach it, and most importantly, what they don’t teach.

For example…

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Yup. That goes at least as much for instructors as students who don’t teach.

Malcolm Knowles’ The Adult Learner: A Neglected Species

IDJ member Dann Sternsher of G4 Personal Safety writes:

An old classic on instructional design for adult learners from back in my grad school days of instructional design is available online… it does a great job of overviewing many classic learning theories and is surprisingly still relevant in discussing adult learning today… a good read for instructors… and an easy read for academic-type material… it’s also a reminder that much of what I see firearms instructors “discovering” in terms of best practices for instruction and training is already known and just being applied to this particular field…

Click here to read The Adult Learner: A Neglected Species (PDF)

Thanks Dann!

Andrew Tuohy: What Impact Does Bullet Setback Have on Function?

Andrew Tuohy of Vuurwapen Blog:

I have been conducting experiments relating to firearms for a number of years, some of them quite mundane and others rather unorthodox. Many of the unorthodox experiments have never come to light, either because nothing of value was learned, or because I had decided to compile their results over a long period of time before releasing the data.

One series of tests which falls into the latter category relates to what, exactly, makes guns blow up. We’ve all seen photos of exploded firearms and bloodied hands or faces that result from a “kaboom,” or catastrophic failure of a firearm or the ammunition it fires. As a result, a lot of people exercise an overabundance of caution relating to any ammunition that “looks funny” to them – even going so far as to discard cases with tiny dents in them, for fear of causing an explosion.

While it’s always a good idea to err on the side of caution when working with items that contain 1,000 times more pressure than a car tire, it’s also a good idea to have an understanding of what can really cause a catastrophic failure. And my experimentation has shown to me that the common knowledge relating to this topic is entirely wrong…

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This is a clickbaity sentence, but the results seriously surprised me. Amazing what happens when you actually test things.

Adam Grant: Stop Serving the Feedback Sandwich

Adam Grant on giving negative feedback:

When I went to colleagues for advice, they all told me the same thing. Put a slice of praise on the top and the bottom, and stick the meat of your criticism in between. It’s the compliment sandwich, as Stewie Griffin called it on Family Guy—a technique for giving feedback that’s popular among leaders and coaches, parents and teachers.

But when I looked at the data, I learned that the feedback sandwich doesn’t taste as good as it looks…

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via Anne Barkema

John Hodges on “Stay In Your Lane”

John Hodges of Active Self Protection:

Next gun community term I would love to see die and be buried: “stay in your lane.” Condescending and unhelpful, almost always meant derogatorily. Needs definition every time, except to other high speed operators.

I get the heart of it. But it’s used to belittle, and that makes it unprofessional IMO.

A better rule…

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Miguel Gonzalez: Instructors and Context of Experience

Miguel Gonzalez of Gun Free Zone:

First let me say that if you served in the Military my undying thanks. But we must address the fact that your experiences in the Sandbox did not prepare you one bit to train civilians in Defensive Shooting. We have come a long way from the times where a NRA basic Pistol class was enough for anybody to go packing in the real world. Now good instructors will cover not only the operation of a firearm but the mindset that goes along in both engaging a bad guy or avoiding engagement with a bad guy. And let us not forget what comes afterward.

If you still feel that I am wrong, please allow me the following mental exercise…

Continue reading Again on Instructors