TonyD said:John - I think you can see that the topic has flourished since your original post. Now I understand what you are referring to as intermediate, advanced, etc. Not knowing you, or your skills, personally I'll repeat what I've stated many times in the past concerning these high dollar schools and instructors before I'm finished.
As I stated, it's not necessarily a bad thing to require a new shooter to have a solid foundation when first learning basic marksmanship fundementals. However, I believe that as soon as a person demonstrates competent firearm safety they should be required to practice those fundementals during realistic training. This is one area where I differ from the big name instructors. Why? It loses revenue. It requires the student to pay more money to come back for yet another class and can become never ending.
I'm not sure I can agree with your statement that "it's not necessarily a bad thing". It seem to imply that it MIGHT be ok to skip the fundamentals and move right to the combat training. If I've misunderstood you, my apologies.
There's only one way to build a house. Put a solid FOUNDATION in first, then solid walls, THEN you put the roof on.
We agree, I think, that people who never progress PAST the square range fundamentals are kidding themselves if they think they are now ready for a lethal force encounter.
I would submit that IPSC/IDPA competitors are also kidding themselves.
(But that's a different thread)
That said, luck favors the prepared, and either or both are far better prepared than the average American citizen.
As for current training being driven by what put's the most money in a trainer's pockets, I would submit that the cost of liability insurance, and the highly litigous society we live in, are more likely to be the reason trainers find it necessary to keep pounding away at shooting and gunhandling fundamentals before allowing "real" combat training.
TonyD said:You have apparently spent a great deal of money attending a number of courses with some very recognizable names in the industry.
Spread out over ten years or so, yeah.
Clint Smith has refered to people who travel from school to school taking course after course as "gun camp kiddies". [lol]
Guilty as charged.
I work for the State of NY, I get four weeks paid vacation a year, and frankly, going off to one of these places for a week or two is a blast! The best possible way to spend a vacation, as far as I am concerned! And it doesn't end up costing me any more than a conventional vacation would.
TonyD said:Clint Smith has said that he is AMAZED at the number of people who want to come to HIS courses and pay HIM good money to teach HIM the way THEY shoot!
So I'm not troubled by schools in the beginning and intermediate levels expecting you to do things THEIR way. After all, you're paying them good money to teach you what they believe are correct, fundamental techniques.
I'm confused by the above statement. Are you saying you should, or should not, be required to do things the way the instructor demands?
I'm saying that, in the beginning, it may be a good idea to do a course with a Weaver guy and a different course with an Isosceles guy and then figure out for yourself what works for YOU. After THAT, it may be a bad idea to go to teachers who insist you do it the OTHER way than the one you've decided to use.
It takes thousands of reps to build long term muscle memory, and ten's of thousands of reps to break a habit that is already instilled and substitute a new one. (or so I've read).
Some instructors are flexible enough to let you use either, and they, of course, are fine.
But it's silly to go to a course, pay good money, and then ignore what the teacher is trying to teach you.
TonyD said:The fundemantals of marksmanship is not an ever changing animal. And, advanced marksmanship, personal protection, self-defense combat handgunning is merely the praticed refinement of the fundamentals as applied to a given situation. This refinement is up to the individual to practice the fundamentals they've been taught.
The fundamentals are a good grip, good sight picture, good trigger control. Beyond that?
Mindset. Legal Considerations. Tactics. Avoidance and De-escalation. Specialist courses like no/low light and CQB shooting. Shooting moving targets. Moving while shooting targets. Force on Force training . . .
I don't know that you ever run out of things to learn . . .
Regards
John